zetta builds on the awesome foundation of exa so we can add more features. When exa becomes maintained again, features could be merged back.
For simplicity, only installation method for now is cargo install
.
this readme will be extended again, pending some rewrites / updates.
zetta is a modern replacement for the venerable file-listing command-line program ls
that ships with Unix and Linux operating systems, giving it more features and better defaults.
It uses colours to distinguish file types and metadata.
It knows about symlinks, extended attributes, and Git.
And it’s small, fast, and just one single binary.
By deliberately making some decisions differently, zetta attempts to be a more featureful, more user-friendly version of ls
.
zetta’s options are almost, but not quite, entirely unlike ls
’s.
- -1, --oneline: display one entry per line
- -G, --grid: display entries as a grid (default)
- -l, --long: display extended details and attributes
- -R, --recurse: recurse into directories
- -T, --tree: recurse into directories as a tree
- -x, --across: sort the grid across, rather than downwards
- -F, --classify: display type indicator by file names
- --colo[u]r: when to use terminal colours
- --colo[u]r-scale: highlight levels of file sizes distinctly
- --icons: display icons
- --no-icons: don't display icons (always overrides --icons)
- -a, --all: show hidden and 'dot' files
- -d, --list-dirs: list directories like regular files
- -L, --level=(depth): limit the depth of recursion
- -r, --reverse: reverse the sort order
- -s, --sort=(field): which field to sort by
- --group-directories-first: list directories before other files
- -D, --only-dirs: list only directories
- --git-ignore: ignore files mentioned in
.gitignore
- -I, --ignore-glob=(globs): glob patterns (pipe-separated) of files to ignore
Pass the --all
option twice to also show the .
and ..
directories.
These options are available when running with --long
(-l
):
- -b, --binary: list file sizes with binary prefixes
- -B, --bytes: list file sizes in bytes, without any prefixes
- -g, --group: list each file’s group
- -h, --header: add a header row to each column
- -H, --links: list each file’s number of hard links
- -i, --inode: list each file’s inode number
- -m, --modified: use the modified timestamp field
- -S, --blocks: list each file’s number of file system blocks
- -t, --time=(field): which timestamp field to use
- -u, --accessed: use the accessed timestamp field
- -U, --created: use the created timestamp field
- -@, --extended: list each file’s extended attributes and sizes
- --changed: use the changed timestamp field
- --git: list each file’s Git status, if tracked or ignored
- --time-style: how to format timestamps
- --no-permissions: suppress the permissions field
- --octal-permissions: list each file's permission in octal format
- --no-filesize: suppress the filesize field
- --no-user: suppress the user field
- --no-time: suppress the time field
Some of the options accept parameters:
- Valid --color options are always, automatic, and never.
- Valid sort fields are accessed, changed, created, extension, Extension, inode, modified, name, Name, size, type, and none. Fields starting with a capital letter sort uppercase before lowercase. The modified field has the aliases date, time, and newest, while its reverse has the aliases age and oldest.
- Valid time fields are modified, changed, accessed, and created.
- Valid time styles are default, iso, long-iso, full-iso, and relative.
zetta is available for macOS and Linux.
If you already have a Rust environment set up, you can use the cargo install
command:
cargo install zetta
Cargo will build the zetta
binary and place it in $HOME/.cargo
.
To build without Git support, run cargo install --no-default-features zetta
is also available, if the requisite dependencies are not installed.