Scripts for setting solarized, base-16 and zenburn color schemes in gnome terminal
To be able to uninstall, we highly recommend that you create a new Gnome Terminal profile, using the menus in Gnome Terminal.
You need the dconf
command (if you run a recent Gnome version). With Ubuntu,
this can be installed by running
$ sudo apt-get install dconf-cli
Then clone the repository and you can run the installation script:
$ git clone https://github.com/gnumoksha/gnome-terminal-colors.git
$ cd gnome-terminal-colors
$ ./install.sh
And just follow the instructions.
To run this script remotely or via cron (or from any shell where
DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS
is not set), you need to start a dbus connection:
$ dbus-launch ./install.sh
Change to another profile in Gnome Terminal, then remove the Solarized profile by running:
$ rm -r ~/.gconf/apps/gnome-terminal/profiles/Solarized/
$ gconftool-2 --recursive-unset /apps/gnome-terminal
Be sure to have the dconf-cli package installed and do:
$ dconf reset -f /org/gnome/terminal/legacy/profiles:/PROFILE_ID"
Replace PROFILE_ID by your profile ID (you can get it in your profile configuration in gnome-terminal).
Each theme has is own folder in the colors
dir. It contains the following
files:
- bd_color: bold color
- bg_color: background color
- fg_color: foreground color
- palette: list of colors for all standard color codes.
No additional configuration is needed to add a theme, the installation script
just list at launch the children folders in the colors
dir.
The installation script will ask if a solarized dircolors is wanted. It will be
downloaded and installed as ~/.dir_colors/dircolors
. On CentOS, it can be an
issue (see issue #62), as the default setup use ~/.dir_colors
as dircolors.
In that case, you should manually move ~/.dir_colors
as
~/.dir_colors/dircolors
before starting the installation script.
If the dircolors is not applied, please check that your shell actually source your dircolors:
if [ -f ~/.dir_colors/dircolors ]
then eval `dircolors ~/.dir_colors/dircolors`
fi
This should not be necessary on major distributions (such as Ubuntu, Fedora, etc.) but could be on ArchLinux, Gentoo and others.
- Sigurd Gartmann sigurdga@sigurdga.no
- Anthony Ruhier anthony.ruhier@gmail.com
- Paul Thomson captbunzo@gmail.com
- Techlive Zheng techlivezheng@gmail.com
- Daniel Graña dangra@gmail.com
Use the 16 colors terminal option to get VIM to look like GVIM with solarized colors.
set t_Co=16