Noice is Not Noice, a noicer fork...
nnn in action! (click to play video)
nnn
is probably the fastest and most resource-sensitive file manager you have ever used. It integrates seamlessly with your DE and favourite GUI utilities, has a unique navigate-as-you-type mode with auto-select, disk usage analyzer mode, bookmarks, contexts, application launcher, familiar navigation shortcuts, subshell spawning and much more.
Integrate utilities like sxiv or fzy easily, or use it as a vim file picker; nnn
supports as many scripts as you need!
It runs on Linux, OS X, Raspberry Pi, Cygwin, Linux subsystem for Windows and Termux.
Quickstart and see how nnn
simplifies those long desktop sessions... Missing a feature? Want to contribute? Head to the rolling ToDo list.
Love smart and efficient utilities? Explore my repositories. Buy me a cup of coffee if they help you.
- Modes
- Basic, detail (default), disk usage analyzer (du)
- Vim (or neovim) file picker (as a plugin)
- Navigation
- Familiar, easy shortcuts (arrows,
~
,-
,&
) - Navigate-as-you-type with auto-select directory
- Contexts (aka tabs aka workspaces)
- Bookmarks
- Pin and visit a directory
- Familiar, easy shortcuts (arrows,
- Sorting
- Directories always listed on top
- Sort by file name, modification time, size
- Numeric order for numeric names (visit /proc)
- Search
- Instant filtering with search-as-you-type
- Mimes
- Open with desktop opener or specify a custom app
- Create, list, extract archives (needs (p)atool)
- Open all text files in EDITOR (optional)
- Information
- Detailed stat-like file information
- Media information (needs mediainfo/exiftool)
- Convenience
- Create, rename files and directories
- Select multiple files; copy, move, delete selection
- Batch rename/move/delete (needs vidir)
- Show directories in custom color (default: blue)
- Spawn a subshell in the current directory
- Run custom scripts in the current directory
- Change directory at exit (easy shell integration)
- Edit file in EDITOR or open in PAGER
- GUI app launcher (up to 2 space-separated args)
- Terminal locker integration
- Unicode support
- Highly optimized, static analysis integrated code
- Available on many distros
nnn
vs. ncdu memory usage in disk usage analyzer mode (400K files on disk):
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND 5034 vaio 20 0 71628 59932 2412 S 0.0 0.7 0:01.22 ncdu / 4949 vaio 20 0 14812 3616 2560 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.83 nnn -S /
nnn
vs. midnight commander vs. ranger memory usage while viewing a directory with 13.5K files, sorted by size:
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND 31885 vaio 20 0 139720 91220 8460 S 0.0 1.1 0:02.96 /usr/bin/python -O /usr/bin/ranger 30108 vaio 20 0 72152 12468 7336 S 0.0 0.2 0:00.06 mc 30168 vaio 20 0 16476 5072 2640 S 0.0 0.1 0:00.22 nnn -c 1 -i
Intrigued? Find out HOW.
nnn
needs libncursesw (on Linux or ncurses on OS X) and standard libc.
- Arch Linux (
pacman -S nnn
) - Debian (
apt-get install nnn
) - Fedora (
dnf install nnn
) - FreeBSD (
pkg install nnn
) - Gentoo (
emerge nnn
) - Homebrew (
brew install nnn
) - NixOS (
nix-env -i nnn
) - OpenBSD (
pkg_add nnn
) - openSUSE (and packages for several other distros) (
zypper in nnn
) - Raspbian Testing (
apt-get install nnn
) - Slackware (
slackpkg install nnn
) - Source Mage (
cast nnn
) - Termux (
pkg in nnn
) - Ubuntu (
apt-get install nnn
) - Ubuntu PPA (
apt-get install nnn
) - Void Linux (
xbps-install -S nnn
)
Packages for Arch Linux, CentOS, Debian, Fedora and Ubuntu are available with the latest stable release.
To cook yourself, download the latest stable release or clone this repository (risky). Then install the dependencies and compile (e.g. on Ubuntu 16.04):
$ sudo apt-get install pkg-config libncursesw5-dev
$ make
$ sudo make install
PREFIX
is supported, in case you want to install to a different location.
Search keyword and option completion scripts for Bash, Fish and Zsh can be found in respective subdirectories of scripts/auto-completion/
. Please refer to your shell's manual for installation instructions.
usage: nnn [-b key] [-c N] [-e] [-i] [-l]
[-p file] [-S] [-v] [-h] [PATH]
The missing terminal file manager for X.
positional args:
PATH start dir [default: current dir]
optional args:
-b key bookmark key to open
-c N dir color, disables if N>7
-e use exiftool instead of mediainfo
-i start in navigate-as-you-type mode
-l start in light mode
-p file copy selection to file (stdout if '-')
-S start in disk usage analyser mode
-v show program version
-h show this help
>
indicates the currently selected entry in nnn
.
Press ? in nnn
to see the list anytime.
NAVIGATION
↑, k, ^P Up PgUp, ^U Scroll up
↓, j, ^N Down PgDn, ^D Scroll down
Home, g, ^, ^A First entry ~ Go HOME
End, G, $, ^E Last entry & Start dir
←, Bksp, h, ^H Parent dir - Last visited dir
→, ↵, l, ^M Open file/enter dir . Toggle show hidden
/ Filter Ins, ^I Toggle nav-as-you-type
b Pin current dir ^W Go to pinned dir
`, ^/ Leader key LeaderN Switch to context N
Esc Exit prompt ^L Redraw, clear prompt
^G Quit and cd q Quit context
Q, ^Q Quit ? Help, config
FILES
^O Open with... n Create new
D File details d Toggle detail view
^R Rename entry r Open dir in vidir
Y, ^Y Toggle selection y List selection
⎵, ^K Copy entry path ^T Toggle path quote
P Copy selection X Delete selection
V Move selection ^X Delete entry
f Archive entry F List archive
^F Extract archive m, M Brief/full media info
e Edit in EDITOR p Open in PAGER
ORDER
^J Toggle du mode S Toggle apparent size
s Toggle sort by size t Toggle sort by mtime
MISC
o Launch GUI app !, ^] Spawn SHELL in dir
R Run custom script L Lock terminal
Help & settings, file details, media info and archive listing are shown in the PAGER. Please use the PAGER-specific keys in these screens.
The Leader key (` or ^/) provides a powerful multi-functional navigation mechanism. It is case-sensitive and understands contexts, bookmarks and handy location shortcuts.
Key | Function |
---|---|
1-4 | Go to selected context |
>, . | Go to next active context |
<, , | Go to previous active context |
key | Go to bookmarked location |
~ | Go to HOME directory |
- | Go to last visited directory |
& | Go to start directory |
q | Quit context |
Contexts serve the purpose of exploring multiple directories simultaneously. 4 contexts are available. The status of the contexts are shown in the top left corner:
- the current context is in reverse
- other used contexts are underlined
- rest are unused
To switch to a context press the Leader key followed by the context number (1-4).
The first time a context is entered, it copies the state of the last visited context. Each context remembers its start directory and last visited directory.
When a context is quit, the next active context is selected. If the last active context is quit, the program quits.
Filters support regexes to instantly (search-as-you-type) list the matching entries in the current directory.
Ways to exit filter prompt:
- press ^L to clear filter followed by Bksp (to clear the filter symbol, like vi)
- at other prompts ^L followed by Enter discards all changes and exits prompt
- run a search with no matches and press Enter
Common use cases:
- to list all matches starting with the filter expression, start the expression with a
^
(caret) symbol - type
\.mkv
to list all MKV files - use
.*
to match any character (sort of fuzzy search)
If nnn
is invoked as root or the environment variable NNN_SHOW_HIDDEN
is set the default filter will also match hidden files.
In this mode directories are opened in filter mode, allowing continuous navigation. Works best with the arrow keys.
In case of only one match and it's a directory, nnn
auto selects the directory and enters it in this mode. To disable this behaviour,
export NNN_NO_AUTOSELECT=1
The following indicators are used in the detail view:
Indicator | File Type |
---|---|
/ |
Directory |
* |
Executable |
| |
Fifo |
= |
Socket |
@ |
Symbolic Link |
@/ |
Symbolic Link to directory |
b |
Block Device |
c |
Character Device |
External dependency | Operation |
---|---|
xdg-open (Linux), open(1) (OS X), cygstart (Cygwin) | desktop opener |
file | determine file type |
cp, mv, rm | copy, move and remove files |
mediainfo, exiftool | multimedia file details |
atool, patool (integration) | create, list and extract archives |
vidir (from moreutils) | batch rename, move, delete dir entries |
vlock (Linux), bashlock (OS X), lock(1) (BSD) | terminal locker |
$EDITOR (overridden by $VISUAL, if defined) | edit files (fallback vi) |
$PAGER | page through files (fallback less) |
$SHELL | spawn a shell, run script (fallback sh) |
-
To edit all text files in EDITOR (preferably CLI, fallback vi):
export NNN_USE_EDITOR=1
$ nnn -h
$ man nnn
To lookup keyboard shortcuts at runtime, press ?.
-
Install the utilities required for your regular activities.
-
Configure cd on quit.
-
Optionally open all text files in EDITOR (fallback vi):
export NNN_USE_EDITOR=1
-
Run
n
. -
Press ? for help on keyboard shortcuts anytime.
-
For additional functionality setup custom scripts.
Set environment variable NNN_BMS
as a string of key_char:location
pairs (max 10) separated by semicolons (;
):
export NNN_BMS='d:~/Documents;u:/home/user/Cam Uploads;D:~/Downloads/'
NOTE: Bookmark keys should be single-character to use them in combination with the Leader key.
Use ^K to copy the absolute path of the file under the cursor.
To copy multiple absolute file paths:
- press ^Y (or Y) to enter selection mode. In this mode it's possible to
- cherry-pick individual files one by one by pressing ^K on each entry; or,
- navigate to another file in the same directory to select a range of files
- press ^Y (or Y) again to copy the paths and exit the selection mode
The files in the list can now be copied (P), moved (V) or removed (X).
To list the file paths copied to memory press y.
File paths are copied to the temporary file DIR/.nnncp
, where DIR
(by priority) is:
$HOME or,
$TMPDIR or,
/tmp
To see the path to the temporary copy file, run nnn
, press ? and look up copy file
.
To use the copied paths from the cmdline, use command substitution. For example, if DIR
above is /home/user
:
# bash/zsh
ls -ltr `cat /home/user/.nnncp`
ls -ltr $(cat /home/user/.nnncp)
# fish
ls -ltr (cat /home/user/.nnncp)
An alias may be handy:
alias ncp='cat /home/user/.nnncp'
so you can easily handle files together:
# bash/zsh
ls -ltr `ncp`
ls -ltr $(ncp)
# fish
ls -ltr (ncp)
To wrap each file path within single quotes while selecting:
export NNN_QUOTE_ON=1
This is particularly useful if you are planning to copy the whole string to the shell to run a command. Quotes can be toggled at runtime using ^T.
Note that the filename is not escaped. So copying may still fail for filenames having quote(s) in them.
Along with default copy, nnn
can pipe the absolute path of the current file or multiple files to a copier script. For example, you can use xsel
on Linux or pbcopy
on OS X.
Sample Linux copier script:
#!/bin/sh
# comment the next line to convert newlines to spaces
IFS=
echo -n $1 | xsel --clipboard --input
export NNN_COPIER
:
export NNN_COPIER="/path/to/copier.sh"
To quit nnn
and switch to the directory last opened follow the instructions below.
Pick the appropriate file for your shell from scripts/quitcd
and add the contents to your shell's rc file. You'll need to spawn a new shell for the change to take effect. You should start nnn
as n
(or modify the function name to something else). To change directory on quit press ^G
while exiting.
As you might notice, nnn
uses the environment variable NNN_TMPFILE
to write the last visited directory path. You can change it.
nnn
can be used as a file picker/chooser within vim or neovim. Find the plugin here.
nnn
can invoke custom scripts with the currently selected file name as argument 1.
Export the path to the custom executable script:
export NNN_SCRIPT=/usr/local/bin/nscript
Press R to run the script in the current directory.
It's possible to run multiple scripts with nnn
as long as the scripts are in the same location and share the same prefix. To enable multiple scripts,
export NNN_MULTISCRIPT=1
With the example of NNN_SCRIPT
above, some more scripts could be:
/usr/local/bin/nscript1
/usr/local/bin/nscript2
/usr/local/bin/nscriptcustom1
/usr/local/bin/nscriptcustom2
and so on...
Type the correct suffix when prompted on pressing the keybind R. To use the base script (NNN_SCRIPT
), just press Enter.
-
Open image files in current dir in sxiv:
#!/usr/bin/env sh sxiv -q * >/dev/null 2>&1
-
Fuzzy find files in fzy and open with xdg-open:
#!/usr/bin/env sh xdg-open $(find -type f | fzy) >/dev/null 2>&1
The default color for directories is blue. Option -c
accepts color codes from 0 to 7 to use a different color:
0-black, 1-red, 2-green, 3-yellow, 4-blue, 5-magenta, 6-cyan, 7-white
Any other value disables colored directories.
On systems where atool
is not available but patool
is, drop two copies of the Python3 script natool as atool
and apack
somewhere in $PATH
.
The rename prompt supports some bash-like command-line shortcuts - ^A, ^E, ^U. ^L clears the name.
The terminal locker is disabled by default. To set the wait time in seconds, use environment variable NNN_IDLE_TIMEOUT
.
Enable volume management in your DE file manager and set removable drives or media to be auto-mounted when inserted. Then visit the usual mount point location (/mnt
or /media/user
) in nnn
.
nnn
might not handle keypresses correctly when used with tmux (see issue #104 for more details). Set TERM=xterm-256color
to address it.
By default in OpenBSD & FreeBSD, stty
maps ^Y to DSUSP
. This means that typing ^Y will suspend nnn
as if you typed ^Z (you can bring nnn
back to the foreground by issuing fg
) instead of entering multi-copy mode. You can check this with stty -a
. If it includes the text dsusp = ^Y
, issuing stty dsusp undef
will disable this DSUSP
and let nnn
receive the ^Y instead.
nnn
was initially forked from noice but is significantly different today. I chose to fork because:
- one can argue my approach deviates from the goal of the original project - keep the utility
suckless
.noice
was rudimentary. In my opinion evolution is the taste of time. - I would like to have a bit of control on what features are added in the name of desktop integration. A feature-bloat is the last thing in my mind. Check out nnn design considerations for more details.
- Copyright © 2014-2016 Lazaros Koromilas
- Copyright © 2014-2016 Dimitris Papastamos
- Copyright © 2016-2018 Arun Prakash Jana