8
4
I have a colorful bash terminal (e.g. ls and vim show colors when configured to do so).
How can I have these colors when connecting to a remote server via ssh?
8
4
I have a colorful bash terminal (e.g. ls and vim show colors when configured to do so).
How can I have these colors when connecting to a remote server via ssh?
3
Read the dircolors.sh subsection from "Beyond Linux From Scratch" book:
This script uses the
~/.dircolors
and/etc/dircolors
files to control the colors of file names in a directory listing. They control colorized output of things like ls --color. The explanation of how to initialize these files is at the end of this section.cat > /etc/profile.d/dircolors.sh << "EOF" # Setup for /bin/ls and /bin/grep to support color, the alias is in /etc/bashrc. if [ -f "/etc/dircolors" ] ; then eval $(dircolors -b /etc/dircolors) if [ -f "$HOME/.dircolors" ] ; then eval $(dircolors -b $HOME/.dircolors) fi fi alias ls='ls --color=auto' alias grep='grep --color=auto' EOF
3
Using a combination of https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/9883/how-can-i-run-a-script-immediately-after-connecting-via-ssh and nik's answer you can do:
ssh host.example.com -t '. /etc/profile; . ~/.profile; /bin/bash'
This will execute your profile scripts on login, then open a bash shell. Your profile scripts are where the colors are defined.
Or, for maximum convenience, add the following to your ~/.ssh/config
file:
Host *
LocalCommand . /etc/profile; . ~/.profile; /bin/bash
9Can you expand your answer a little? The question has 2,800 views — would be great to add a little more context. – slhck – 2012-06-25T20:18:48.673
Fedora 20 also comes with a colorls.sh script.
– Cristian Ciupitu – 2014-05-30T02:32:37.563