Alacritty is the fastest terminal emulator in existence. Using the GPU for rendering enables optimizations that simply aren't possible without it. Alacritty currently supports macOS, Linux, BSD, and Windows.
Alacritty is a terminal emulator with a strong focus on simplicity and performance. With such a strong focus on performance, included features are carefully considered and you can always expect Alacritty to be blazingly fast. By making sane choices for defaults, Alacritty requires no additional setup. However, it does allow configuration of many aspects of the terminal.
The software is considered to be at a beta level of readiness -- there are a few missing features and bugs to be fixed, but it is already used by many as a daily driver.
Precompiled binaries are available from the GitHub releases page.
- Announcing Alacritty, a GPU-Accelerated Terminal Emulator January 6, 2017
- A short talk about Alacritty at the Rust Meetup January 2017 (starts at 57:00)
- Alacritty Lands Scrollback, Publishes Benchmarks September 17, 2018
- Version 0.3.0 Release Announcement April 07, 2019
Some operating systems already provide binaries for Alacritty, for everyone else the instructions to build Alacritty from source can be found here.
pacman -S alacritty
Unofficial builds of stable tags can be found in Fedora Copr: pschyska/alacritty.
dnf copr enable pschyska/alacritty
dnf install alacritty
If you want to help test pre-releases, you can additionally enable pschyska/alacritty-testing.
emerge x11-terms/alacritty
urpmi alacritty
nix-env -iA nixos.alacritty
zypper in alacritty
If you're not running Pop!_OS, you'll have to add a third party repository first:
add-apt-repository ppa:mmstick76/alacritty
apt install alacritty
eopkg install alacritty
xbps-install alacritty
pkg install alacritty
brew cask install alacritty
Once the cask is installed, it is recommended to setup the manual page, shell completions, and terminfo definitions.
Via Chocolatey
choco install alacritty
Via Scoop
scoop bucket add extras
scoop install alacritty
Prebuilt binaries for Linux, macOS, and Windows can be downloaded from the
GitHub releases page. If your
desktop environment has trouble rendering the default SVG icons, you can find
a prerendered SVG as well as simplified versions of the SVG in the
extra/logo/compat
directory.
On Windows, Alacritty also requires Microsoft's VC++ redistributable.
For Windows versions older than Windows 10 (October 2018 Update), Alacritty
requires winpty to emulate UNIX's PTY API. The agent is a single binary
(winpty-agent.exe
) which must be in the same directory as the Alacritty
executable and is available through the
GitHub releases page.
You can find the default configuration file with documentation for all available fields on the GitHub releases page for each release.
Alacritty looks for the configuration file at the following paths:
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/alacritty/alacritty.yml
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/alacritty.yml
$HOME/.config/alacritty/alacritty.yml
$HOME/.alacritty.yml
On Windows the config file is located at:
%APPDATA%\alacritty\alacritty.yml
A full guideline about contributing to Alacritty can be found in the
CONTRIBUTING.md
file.
If you run into a problem with Alacritty, please file an issue. If you've got a feature request, feel free to ask about it. Please just keep in mind Alacritty is focused on simplicity and performance, and not all features are in line with that goal.
Before opening a new issue, please check if it has already been reported. There's a chance someone else has already reported it, and you can subscribe to that issue to keep up on the latest developments.
Is it really the fastest terminal emulator?
In the terminals we've benchmarked, Alacritty is either faster or way faster than the others. If you've found a case where this isn't true, please report a bug.
Why isn't feature X implemented?
Alacritty has many great features, but not every feature from every other terminal. This could be for a number of reasons, but sometimes it's just not a good fit for Alacritty. This means you won't find things like tabs or splits (which are best left to a window manager or terminal multiplexer) nor niceties like a GUI config editor.
macOS + tmux + vim is slow! I thought this was supposed to be fast!
This appears to be an issue outside of terminal emulators; either macOS has an
IPC performance issue, or either tmux or vim (or both) have a bug. This same
issue can be seen in iTerm2
and Terminal.app
. I've found that if tmux is
running on another machine which is connected to Alacritty via SSH, this issue
disappears. Actual throughput and rendering performance are still better in
Alacritty.
Alacritty discussion can be found in #alacritty
on freenode.
Wayland is used by default on systems that support it. Using XWayland may circumvent Wayland specific issues and can be enabled through:
env WINIT_UNIX_BACKEND=x11 alacritty
Alacritty is released under the Apache License, Version 2.0.