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- .\" -*- mode: troff; coding: UTF-8 -*-
- .\"TOPICS "Topics:"
- .TH MC 1 "%DATE_OF_MAN_PAGE%" "MC Version %MAN_VERSION%" "GNU Midnight Commander"
- .\"SKIP_SECTION"
- .SH "NAME"
- mc \- Visual shell for Unix\-like systems.
- .\"SKIP_SECTION"
- .SH "SYNOPSIS"
- .B mc
- [\-abcCdfhPstuUVx] [\-l log] [dir1 [dir2]] [\-e [file] ...] [\-v file]
- .\"NODE "DESCRIPTION"
- .SH "DESCRIPTION"
- GNU Midnight Commander is a directory browser/file manager for
- Unix\-like operating systems.
- .\"NODE "OPTIONS"
- .\"DONT_SPLIT"
- .SH "OPTIONS"
- .TP
- .I \-a, \-\-stickchars
- Disable usage of graphic characters for line drawing.
- .TP
- .I \-b, \-\-nocolor
- Force black and white display.
- .TP
- .I \-c, \-\-color
- Force color mode, please check the section
- .\"LINK2"
- Colors
- .\"Colors"
- for more information.
- .TP
- .I \-C arg, \-\-colors=arg
- Specify a different color set in the command line. The format of arg is
- documented in the
- .\"LINK2"
- Colors
- .\"Colors"
- section.
- .TP
- .I \-\-configure\-options
- Display configure options.
- .TP
- .I \-d, \-\-nomouse
- Disable mouse support.
- .TP
- .I \-e [file], \-\-edit[=file]
- Start the internal editor. If the file is specified, open it on
- startup. See also
- .BR "mcedit (1)" .
- .TP
- .I \-f, \-\-datadir
- Display the compiled\-in search paths for Midnight Commander files.
- .TP
- .I \-F, \-\-datadir\-info
- Display extended info about compiled\-in paths for
- Midnight Commander.
- .TP
- .I \-g, \-\-oldmouse
- Force a "normal tracking" mouse mode. Used when running on
- xterm\-capable terminals (tmux/screen).
- .TP
- .I \-k, \-\-resetsoft
- Reset softkeys to their default from the termcap/terminfo
- database. Only useful on HP terminals when the function keys don't work.
- .TP
- .I \-K file, \-\-keymap=file
- Specify a name of keymap file in the command line.
- .TP
- .I \-l file, \-\-ftplog=file
- Save the ftpfs dialog with the server in file.
- .TP
- .I \-\-nokeymap
- Don't load key bindings from any file, use default hardcoded keys.
- .TP
- .I \-P file, \-\-printwd=file
- Print the last working directory to the specified file. This option is
- not meant to be used directly. Instead, it's used from a special shell
- script that automatically changes the current directory of the shell to
- the last directory Midnight Commander was in. Source the file
- .B %pkglibexecdir%/mc.sh
- (bash and zsh users) or
- .B %libexecdir%/mc.csh
- (tcsh users) respectively to define
- .B mc
- as an alias to the appropriate shell script.
- .TP
- .I \-s, \-\-slow
- Turn on the slow terminal mode, in this mode the program will not draw
- expensive line drawing characters and will toggle verbose mode off.
- .TP
- .I \-S arg, \-\-skin=arg
- Specify a name of skin in the command line. Technology of skins is
- documented in the
- .\"LINK2"
- Skins
- .\"Skins"
- section.
- .TP
- .I \-t, \-\-termcap
- Used only if the code was compiled with S\-Lang and terminfo: it makes
- Midnight Commander use the value of the
- .B TERMCAP
- variable for the terminal information instead of the information on
- the system wide terminal database
- .TP
- .I \-u, \-\-nosubshell
- Disable use of the concurrent shell (only makes sense if Midnight
- Commander has been built with concurrent shell support).
- .TP
- .I \-U, \-\-subshell
- Enable use of the concurrent shell support (only makes sense if the
- Midnight Commander was built with the subshell support set as an
- optional feature).
- .TP
- .I \-v file, \-\-view=file
- Start the internal viewer to view the specified file. See also
- .BR "mcview (1)" .
- .TP
- .I \-V, \-\-version
- Display the version of the program.
- .TP
- .I \-x, \-\-xterm
- Force xterm mode. Used when running on xterm\-capable terminals (two
- screen modes, and able to send mouse escape sequences).
- .TP
- .I \-X, \-\-no\-x11
- Do not use X11 to get the state of modifiers Alt, Ctrl, Shift
- .PP
- If both paths are specified, the first path name is the directory to show
- in the active panel; the second path name is the directory to be shown in
- the other panel.
- .PP
- If one path is specified, the path name is the directory to show
- in the active panel; value of "other_dir" from panels.ini is the directory
- to be shown in the passive panel.
- .PP
- If no paths are specified, current directory is shown in the active panel;
- value of "other_dir" from panels.ini is the directory to be shown in
- the passive panel.
- .\"NODE "Overview"
- .SH "Overview"
- The screen of Midnight Commander is divided into four parts.
- Almost all of the screen space is taken up by two directory panels.
- By default, the second line from the bottom of the screen is the
- shell command line, and the bottom line shows the function key labels.
- The topmost line is the
- .\"LINK2"
- menu bar line\&.
- .\"Menu Bar"
- The menu bar line may not be visible, but appears if you click the
- topmost line with the mouse or press the F9 key.
- .PP
- Midnight Commander provides a view of two directories at the same
- time. One of the panels is the current panel (a selection bar is in
- the current panel). Almost all operations take place on the current
- panel. Some file operations like Rename and Copy by default use the
- directory of the unselected panel as a destination (don't worry, they
- always ask you for confirmation first). For more information, see the
- sections on the
- .\"LINK2"
- Directory Panels\&,
- .\"Directory Panels"
- the
- .\"LINK2"
- Left and Right Menus
- .\"Left and Right Menus"
- and the
- .\"LINK2"
- File Menu\&.
- .\"File Menu"
- .PP
- You can execute system commands from Midnight Commander by simply
- typing them. Everything you type will appear on the shell command line,
- and when you press Enter, Midnight Commander will execute the
- command line you typed; read the
- .\"LINK2"
- Shell Command Line
- .\"Shell Command Line"
- and
- .\"LINK2"
- Input Line Keys
- .\"Input Line Keys"
- sections to learn more about the command line.
- .\"NODE "Mouse Support"
- .SH "Mouse Support"
- Midnight Commander comes with mouse support. It is activated
- whenever you are running on an
- .B xterm(1)
- terminal (it even works if you take a telnet, ssh or rlogin connection to
- another machine from the xterm) or if you are running on a Linux
- console and have the
- .B gpm
- mouse server running.
- .PP
- When you left click on a file in the directory panels, that file is
- selected; if you click with the right button, the file is marked (or
- unmarked, depending on the previous state).
- .PP
- Double\-clicking on a file will try to execute the command if it is
- an executable program; and if the
- .\"LINK2"
- extension file
- .\"Edit Extension File"
- has a program specified for the file's extension, the specified
- program is executed.
- .PP
- Also, it is possible to execute the commands assigned to the function
- key labels by clicking on them.
- .PP
- The default auto repeat rate for the mouse buttons is 400
- milliseconds. This may be changed to other values by editing the
- .\"LINK2"
- \&~/.config/mc/ini
- .\"Save Setup"
- file and changing the
- .I mouse_repeat_rate
- parameter.
- .PP
- If you are running Midnight Commander with the mouse support, you
- can get the default mouse behavior (cutting and pasting text) by holding
- down the Shift key.
- .SH ""
- .\"NODE "Keys"
- .SH "Keys"
- Some commands in Midnight Commander involve the use of the
- .I Control
- (sometimes labeled CTRL or CTL) and the
- .I Meta
- (sometimes labeled ALT or even Compose) keys. In this manual we will
- use the following abbreviations:
- .TP
- .B C\-<chr>
- means hold the Control key while typing the character <chr>.
- Thus C\-f would be: hold the Control key and type f.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-<chr>
- means hold the Meta or Alt key down while typing <chr>.
- If there is no Meta or Alt key, type
- .IR Esc ,
- release it, then type the character <chr>.
- .TP
- .B S\-<chr>
- means hold the Shift key down while typing <chr>.
- .PP
- All input lines in Midnight Commander use an approximation to
- the GNU Emacs editor's key bindings (default).
- .PP
- You may redefine key bindings. See
- .\"LINK2"
- .I redefine hotkey bindings
- .\"Keys_redefine"
- .PP
- for more info. All other key bindings (described in this manual) are relative
- to default behavior.
- .PP
- There are many sections which tell about the keys. The following are
- the most important.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- File Menu
- .\"File Menu"
- section documents the keyboard shortcuts for the commands appearing in
- the File menu. This section includes the function keys. Most of these
- commands perform some action, usually on the selected file or the
- tagged files.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- Directory Panels
- .\"Directory Panels"
- section documents the keys which select a file or tag files as a
- target for a later action (the action is usually one from the file
- menu).
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- Shell Command Line
- .\"Shell Command Line"
- section list the keys which are used for entering and editing command
- lines. Most of these copy file names and such from the directory
- panels to the command line (to avoid excessive typing) or access the
- command line history.
- .PP
- .\"LINK2"
- Input Line Keys
- .\"Input Line Keys"
- are used for editing input lines. This means both the command line and
- the input lines in the query dialogs.
- .\"NODE " Keys_redefine"
- .SH " Redefine hotkey bindings"
- Hotkey bindings may be read from external file (keymap\-file).
- Initially, Midnight Commander creates key bindings using keymap defined
- in the source code. Then, two files
- .B %pkgdatadir%/mc.keymap
- and
- .B %sysconfdir%/mc/mc.keymap
- are loaded always, sequentially reassigned key bindings defined earlier.
- User\-defined keymap\-file is searched on the following algorithm (to the first one found):
- .IP
- .br
- 1) command line option
- .B \-K <keymap>
- or
- .B \-\-keymap=<keymap>
- .br
- 2) Environment variable
- .B MC_KEYMAP
- .br
- 3) Parameter
- .B keymap
- in section
- .B [Midnight\-Commander]
- of config file.
- .br
- 4) File
- .B ~/.config/mc/mc.keymap
- .br
- .PP
- Command line option, environment variable and parameter in config file may
- contain the absolute path to the keymap\-file (with the extension \.keymap
- or without it). Search of keymap\-file will occur in (to the first one found):
- .IP
- .br
- 1)
- .B ~/.config/mc
- .br
- 2)
- .B %sysconfdir%/mc/
- .br
- 3)
- .B %pkgdatadir%/
- .\"NODE " Miscellaneous Keys"
- .SH " Miscellaneous Keys"
- Here are some keys which don't fall into any of the other categories:
- .TP
- .B Enter
- if there is some text in the command line (the one at the bottom of
- the panels), then that command is executed. If there is no text in the
- command line then if the selection bar is over a directory the
- Midnight Commander does a
- .B chdir(2)
- to the selected directory and reloads the information on the panel;
- if the selection is an executable file then it is executed. Finally,
- if the extension of the selected file name matches one of the
- extensions in the
- .\"LINK2"
- extensions file
- .\"Edit Extension File"
- then the corresponding command is executed.
- .TP
- .B C\-l
- repaint all the information in Midnight Commander.
- .TP
- .B C\-x c
- run the
- .\"LINK2"
- Chmod
- .\"Chmod"
- command on a file or on the tagged files.
- .TP
- .B C\-x o
- run the
- .\"LINK2"
- Chown
- .\"Chown"
- command on the current file or on the tagged files.
- .TP
- .B C\-x l
- run the hard link command.
- .TP
- .B C\-x s
- run the absolute symbolic link command.
- .TP
- .B C\-x v
- run the relative symbolic link command. See the
- .\"LINK2"
- File Menu
- .\"File Menu"
- section for more information about symbolic links.
- .TP
- .B C\-x i
- set the other panel display mode to information.
- .TP
- .B C\-x q
- set the other panel display mode to quick view.
- .TP
- .B C\-x !
- execute the
- .\"LINK2"
- External panelize
- .\"External panelize"
- command.
- .TP
- .B C\-x h
- run the
- .\"LINK2"
- add directory to hotlist
- .\"Hotlist"
- command.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-!
- executes the Filtered view command, described in the
- .\"LINK2"
- view command\&.
- .\"Internal File Viewer"
- .TP
- .B Alt\-?
- executes the
- .\"LINK2"
- Find file
- .\"Find File"
- command.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-c
- pops up the
- .\"LINK2"
- quick cd
- .\"Quick cd"
- dialog.
- .TP
- .B C\-o
- when the program is being run in the Linux or FreeBSD console or under
- an xterm, it will show you the output of the previous command. When ran
- on the Linux console, Midnight Commander uses an external program
- (cons.saver) to handle saving and restoring of information on the
- screen.
- .PP
- When the subshell support is compiled in, you can type C\-o at any time
- and you will be taken back to Midnight Commander's main screen, to
- return to your application just type C\-o. If you have an application
- suspended by using this trick, you won't be able to execute other
- programs from Midnight Commander until you terminate the suspended
- application.
- .\"NODE " Directory Panels"
- .SH " Directory Panels"
- This section lists the keys which operate on the directory panels. If
- you want to know how to change the appearance of the panels take a
- look at the section on
- .\"LINK2"
- Left and Right Menus\&.
- .\"Left and Right Menus"
- .TP
- .B Tab, C\-i
- change the current panel. The old other panel becomes the new current
- panel and the old current panel becomes the new other panel. The
- selection bar moves from the old current panel to the new current
- panel.
- .TP
- .B Insert, C\-t
- to tag files you may use the Insert key (the kich1 terminfo sequence).
- To untag files, just retag a tagged file.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-e
- to change charset of panel you may use Alt\-e (M\-e).
- Recoding is made from selected codepage into system codepage. To
- cancel the recoding, select "No translation" in the dialog of encodings.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-g, Alt\-r, Alt\-j
- used to select the top file in a panel, the middle file and the bottom one,
- respectively.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-t
- toggle the current display listing to show the next display listing
- format.
- With this it is possible to quickly switch to brief listing, long
- listing, user defined listing format, and back to the default.
- .TP
- .B C\-\\\\ (control\-backslash)
- show the
- .\"LINK2"
- directory hotlist
- .\"Hotlist"
- and change to the selected directory.
- .TP
- .B + \ (plus)
- this is used to select (tag) a group of files. Midnight Commander
- will prompt for a selection options. When
- .I Files only
- checkbox is on, only files will be selected. If
- .I Files only
- is off, as files as directories will be selected.
- When
- .I Shell Patterns
- checkbox is on, the regular expression is much like the filename globbing
- in the shell (* standing for zero or more characters and ? standing
- for one character). If
- .I Shell Patterns
- is off, then the tagging of files is done with normal regular
- expressions (see ed (1)). When
- .I Case sensitive
- checkbox is on, the selection will be case sensitive characters.
- If
- .I Case sensitive
- is off, the case will be ignored.
- .TP
- .B \\\\ (backslash)
- use the "\\" key to unselect a group of files. This is the opposite of
- the Plus key.
- .TP
- .B up\-key, C\-p
- move the selection bar to the previous entry in the panel.
- .TP
- .B down\-key, C\-n
- move the selection bar to the next entry in the panel.
- .TP
- .B home, a1, Alt\-<
- move the selection bar to the first entry in the panel.
- .TP
- .B end, c1, Alt\->
- move the selection bar to the last entry in the panel.
- .TP
- .B next\-page, C\-v
- move the selection bar one page down.
- .TP
- .B prev\-page, Alt\-v
- move the selection bar one page up.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-o
- If the currently selected file is a directory, load that directory on
- the other panel and moves the selection to the next file. If the
- currently selected file is not a directory, load the parent directory
- on the other panel and moves the selection to the next file.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-i
- make the current directory of the current panel also the current
- directory of the other panel. Put the other panel to the listing mode
- if needed. If the current panel is panelized, the other panel doesn't
- become panelized.
- .TP
- .B C\-PageUp, C\-PageDown
- only when supported by the terminal: change to ".." and to the currently
- selected directory respectively.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-y
- moves to the previous directory in the history, equivalent to clicking
- the
- .I <
- with the mouse.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-u
- moves to the next directory in the history, equivalent to clicking the
- .I >
- with the mouse.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-S\-h, Alt\-H
- displays the directory history, equivalent to depressing the 'v' with
- the mouse.
- .\"NODE " Quick search"
- .SH " Quick search"
- The Quick search mode allows you to perform fast file search in file panel.
- Press
- .I C\-s
- or
- .I Alt\-s
- to start a filename search in the directory listing.
- .P
- When the search is active, the user input will be added to the search string
- instead of the command line. If the
- .I Show mini\-status
- option is enabled the search string is shown on the mini\-status
- line. When typing, the selection bar will move to the next file
- starting with the typed letters. The
- .I Backspace
- or
- .I DEL
- keys can be used to correct typing mistakes. If C\-s is pressed
- again, the next match is searched for.
- .P
- If quick search is started with double pressing of C\-s, the previous quick
- search pattern will be used for current search.
- .P
- Besides the filename characters, you can also use wildcard
- characters '*' and '?'.
- .\"NODE " Shell Command Line"
- .SH " Shell Command Line"
- This section lists keys which are useful to avoid excessive typing when
- entering shell commands.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-Enter
- copy the currently selected file name to the command line.
- .TP
- .B C\-Enter
- same a Alt\-Enter. May not work on remote systems and some terminals.
- .TP
- .B C\-S\-Enter
- copy the full path name of the currently selected file to the command
- line. May not work on remote systems and some terminals.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-Tab
- does the filename, command, variable, username and hostname
- .\"LINK2"
- completion
- .\"Completion"
- for you.
- .TP
- .B C\-x t, C\-x C\-t
- copy the tagged files (or if there are no tagged files, the selected
- file) of the current panel (C\-x t) or of the other panel (C\-x C\-t) to
- the command line.
- .TP
- .B C\-x p, C\-x C\-p
- the first key sequence copies the current path name to the command
- line, and the second one copies the unselected panel's path name to
- the command line.
- .TP
- .B C\-q
- the quote command can be used to insert characters that are otherwise
- interpreted by Midnight Commander (like the '+' symbol)
- .TP
- .B Alt\-p, Alt\-n
- use these keys to browse through the command history. Alt\-p takes you
- to the last entry, Alt\-n takes you to the next one.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-h
- displays the history for the current input line.
- .\"NODE " General Movement Keys"
- .SH " General Movement Keys"
- The help viewer, the file viewer and the directory tree use common
- code to handle moving. Therefore they accept exactly the same
- keys. Each of them also accepts some keys of its own.
- .PP
- Other parts of Midnight Commander use some of the same movement
- keys, so this section may be of use for those parts too.
- .TP
- .B Up, C\-p
- moves one line backward.
- .TP
- .B Down, C\-n
- moves one line forward.
- .TP
- .B Prev Page, Page Up, Alt\-v
- moves one page up.
- .TP
- .B Next Page, Page Down, C\-v
- moves one page down.
- .TP
- .B Home, A1
- moves to the beginning.
- .TP
- .B End, C1
- move to the end.
- .PP
- The help viewer and the file viewer accept the following keys in
- addition the to ones mentioned above:
- .TP
- .B b, C\-b, C\-h, Backspace, Delete
- moves one page up.
- .TP
- .B Space bar
- moves one page down.
- .TP
- .B u, d
- moves one half of a page up or down.
- .TP
- .B g, G
- moves to the beginning or to the end.
- .\"NODE " Input Line Keys"
- .SH " Input Line Keys"
- The input lines (they are used for the
- .\"LINK2"
- command line
- .\"Shell Command Line"
- and for the query dialogs in the program) accept these keys:
- .TP
- .B C\-a
- puts the cursor at the beginning of line.
- .TP
- .B C\-e
- puts the cursor at the end of the line.
- .TP
- .B C\-b, move\-left
- move the cursor one position left.
- .TP
- .B C\-f, move\-right
- move the cursor one position right.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-f
- moves one word forward.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-b
- moves one word backward.
- .TP
- .B C\-h, Backspace
- delete the previous character.
- .TP
- .B C\-d, Delete
- delete the character in the point (over the cursor).
- .TP
- .B C\-@
- sets the mark for cutting.
- .TP
- .B C\-w
- copies the text between the cursor and the mark to a kill buffer and
- removes the text from the input line.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-w
- copies the text between the cursor and the mark to a kill buffer.
- .TP
- .B C\-y
- yanks back the contents of the kill buffer.
- .TP
- .B C\-k
- kills the text from the cursor to the end of the line.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-p, Alt\-n
- Use these keys to browse through the command history. Alt\-p takes you
- to the last entry, Alt\-n takes you to the next one.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-C\-h, Alt\-Backspace
- delete one word backward.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-Tab
- does the filename, command, variable, username and hostname
- .\"LINK2"
- completion
- .\"Completion"
- for you.
- .SH ""
- .\"NODE "Menu Bar"
- .SH "Menu Bar"
- The menu bar pops up when you press F9 or click the mouse on the top
- row of the screen. The menu bar has five menus: "Left", "File",
- "Command", "Options" and "Right".
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- Left and Right Menus
- .\"Left and Right Menus"
- allow you to modify the appearance of the left and right directory
- panels.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- File Menu
- .\"File Menu"
- lists the actions you can perform on the currently selected file or
- the tagged files.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- Command Menu
- .\"Command Menu"
- lists the actions which are more general and bear no relation to the
- currently selected file or the tagged files.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- Options Menu
- .\"Options Menu"
- lists the actions which allow you to customize Midnight Commander.
- .\"NODE " Left and Right Menus"
- .SH " Left and Right (Above and Below) Menus"
- The outlook of the directory panels can be changed from the
- .B Left
- and
- .B Right
- menus (they are named
- .B Above
- and
- .B Below
- when the horizontal panel split is chosen from the
- .\"LINK2"
- Layout
- .\"Layout"
- options dialog).
- .\"NODE " Listing Format..."
- .SH " Listing Format..."
- The listing mode view is used to display a listing of files, there are
- four different listing formats available:
- .BR Full ,
- .BR Brief ,
- .B Long
- and
- .BR User .
- The full directory view shows the file name, the size of the file and
- the modification time.
- .PP
- The brief view shows only the file name and it has from 1 up to 9 columns
- (therefore showing more files unlike other views). The long view
- is similar to the output of
- .B "ls \-l"
- command. The long view takes the whole screen width.
- .PP
- If you choose the "User" display format, then you have to specify
- the display format.
- .PP
- The user display format must start with a panel size specifier. This
- may be "half" or "full", and they specify a half screen panel and a
- full screen panel respectively.
- .PP
- After the panel size, you may specify how many listings to fit in the
- panel, side\-by\-side (in other words: how many times to repeat the
- fields horizontally). This defaults to 1. You may change this by adding a
- number from 1 to 9 to the format string.
- .PP
- After this you add the name of the fields with an optional size
- specifier. This are the available fields you may display:
- .TP
- .B name
- displays the file name.
- .TP
- .B size
- displays the file size.
- .TP
- .B bsize
- is an alternative form of the
- .B size
- format. It displays the size of the files and for directories it just
- shows SUB\-DIR or UP\-\-DIR.
- .TP
- .B type
- displays a one character wide type field. This character is similar to
- what is displayed by ls with the \-F flag \-
- .B *
- for executable files,
- .B /
- for directories,
- .B @
- for links,
- .B =
- for sockets,
- .B \-
- for character devices,
- .B +
- for block devices,
- .B |
- for pipes,
- .B ~
- for symbolic links to directories and
- .B !
- for stale symlinks (links that point nowhere).
- .TP
- .B mark
- an asterisk if the file is tagged, a space if it's not.
- .TP
- .B mtime
- file's last modification time.
- .TP
- .B atime
- file's last access time.
- .TP
- .B ctime
- file's status change time.
- .TP
- .B perm
- a string representing the current permission bits of the file.
- .TP
- .B mode
- an octal value with the current permission bits of the file.
- .TP
- .B nlink
- the number of links to the file.
- .TP
- .B ngid
- the GID (numeric).
- .TP
- .B nuid
- the UID (numeric).
- .TP
- .B owner
- the owner of the file.
- .TP
- .B group
- the group of the file.
- .TP
- .B inode
- the inode of the file.
- .PP
- Also you can use following keywords to define the panel layout:
- .TP
- .B space
- a space in the display format.
- .TP
- .B |
- add a vertical line to the display format.
- .PP
- To force one field to a fixed size (a size specifier), you just add
- .B :
- followed by the number of characters you want the field to have. If the
- number is followed by the symbol
- .BR + ,
- then the size specifies the minimal field size \- if the program finds
- out that there is more space on the screen, it will then expand that
- field.
- .PP
- For example, the
- .B Full
- display corresponds to this format:
- .PP
- half type name | size | mtime
- .PP
- And the
- .B Long
- display corresponds to this format:
- .PP
- full perm space nlink space owner space group space size space mtime
- space name
- .PP
- This is a nice user display format:
- .PP
- half name | size:7 | type mode:3
- .PP
- Panels may also be set to the following modes:
- .TP
- .B "Info"
- The info view display information related to the currently
- selected file and if possible information about the current file
- system.
- .TP
- .B "Tree"
- The tree view is quite similar to the
- .\"LINK2"
- directory tree
- .\"Directory Tree"
- feature. See the section about it for more information.
- .TP
- .B "Quick View"
- In this mode, the panel will switch to a reduced
- .\"LINK2"
- viewer
- .\"Internal File Viewer"
- that displays the contents of the currently selected file, if you
- select the panel (with the tab key or the mouse), you will have access
- to the usual viewer commands.
- .\"NODE " Sort Order..."
- .SH " Sort Order..."
- The eight sort orders are by name, by extension, by modification time,
- by access time, and by inode information modification time, by size,
- by inode and unsorted. In the Sort order dialog box you can choose
- the sort order and you may also specify if you want to sort in reverse
- order by checking the reverse box.
- .PP
- By default directories are sorted before files but this can be changed
- from the
- .\"LINK2"
- Panel options
- .\"Panel options"
- menu (option
- .BR "Mix all files" ).
- .\"NODE " Filter..."
- .SH " Filter..."
- The filter command allows you to specify a shell pattern (for example
- .BR "*.tar.gz" )
- which the files and directories must match to be shown.
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- input line
- .\"Input Line Keys"
- allow enter the pattern of file/directory names that will be shown
- in the panel.
- .PP
- When
- .I Files only
- checkbox is on, only files will be matched to the filter, and all
- directories will be shown. Otherwise, as files as directories will
- be filtered. When
- .I Shell Patterns
- checkbox is on, the regular expression is much like the filename globbing
- in the shell (* standing for zero or more characters and ? standing
- for one character). Otherwise, the matching of files/directories is done
- with normal regular expressions (see ed(1)). When
- .I Case sensitive
- checkbox is on, the filtering will be case sensitive characters. Otherwise,
- the case will be ignored.
- .\"NODE " Reread"
- .SH " Reread"
- The reread command reload the list of files in the directory. It is
- useful if other processes have created or removed files.
- .\"NODE " File Menu"
- .SH " File Menu"
- Midnight Commander uses the F1 \- F10 keys as keyboard shortcuts
- for commands appearing in the file menu. The escape sequences for the
- function keys are terminfo capabilities kf1 trough kf10. On terminals
- without function key support, you can achieve the same functionality by
- pressing the Esc key and then a number in the range 1 through 9 and 0
- (corresponding to F1 to F9 and F10 respectively).
- .PP
- The File menu has the following commands (keyboard shortcuts in parentheses):
- .PP
- .B Help (F1)
- .PP
- Invokes the built\-in hypertext help viewer. Inside the
- .\"LINK2"
- help viewer\&,
- .\"Contents"
- you can use the Tab key to select the next link and the Enter key to
- follow that link. The keys Space and Backspace are used to move
- forward and backward in a help page. Press F1 again to get the full
- list of accepted keys.
- .PP
- .B Menu (F2)
- .PP
- Invoke the
- .\"LINK2"
- user menu\&.
- .\"Edit Menu File"
- The user menu provides an easy way to provide users with a menu and
- add extra features to Midnight Commander.
- .PP
- .B View (F3, F13)
- .PP
- View the currently selected file. By default this invokes the
- .\"LINK2"
- Internal File Viewer
- .\"Internal File Viewer"
- but if the option "Use internal view" is off, it invokes an external
- file viewer specified by the
- .B VIEWER
- environment variable. If
- .B VIEWER
- is undefined, the
- .B PAGER
- environment variable is tried. If
- .B PAGER
- is also undefined, the "view" command is invoked. If you use F13
- instead, the viewer will be invoked without doing any formatting or
- preprocessing to the file.
- .P
- See
- .\"LINK2"
- parameters for external viewer
- .\"Parameters for external editor or viewer"
- for explain how you may specify an extended command line options
- for external viewers.
- .PP
- .B Filtered View (Alt\-!)
- .PP
- This command prompts for a command
- and its arguments (the argument defaults to the currently selected
- file name), the output from such command is shown in the internal file
- viewer.
- .PP
- .B Edit (F4, F14)
- .PP
- Press F4 to edit the highlighted file. Press F14 (usually F14)
- to start the editor with a new, empty file.
- Currently they invoke the
- .B vi
- editor, or the editor specified in the
- .B EDITOR
- environment variable, or the
- .\"LINK2"
- Internal File Editor
- .\"Internal File Editor"
- if the use_internal_edit option is on.
- .P
- See
- .\"LINK2"
- parameters for external editor
- .\"Parameters for external editor or viewer"
- for explain how you may specify an extended command line options
- for external editors.
- .PP
- .B Copy (F5, F15)
- .PP
- Press F5 to pop up an input dialog to copy the currently selected file (or
- the tagged files, if there is at least one file tagged) to the
- directory/filename you specify in the input dialog. The destination
- defaults to the directory in the non\-selected panel. Space for destination
- file may be preallocated relative to preallocate_space configure option.
- During this process, you can press C\-c or Esc to abort the operation.
- For details about source mask (which will be usually either * or ^\\(.*\\)$
- depending on setting of Use shell patterns) and possible wildcards in the
- destination see
- .\"LINK2"
- Mask copy/rename\&.
- .\"Mask Copy/Rename"
- .PP
- F15 (usually F15) is similar, but defaults to the directory in the
- selected panel. It always operates on the selected file, regardless of
- any tagged files.
- .PP
- On some systems, it is possible to do the copy in the background by
- clicking on the background button (or pressing Alt\-b in the dialog
- box). The
- .\"LINK2"
- Background Jobs
- .\"Background jobs"
- is used to control the background process.
- .PP
- .B Link (C\-x l)
- .PP
- Create a hard link to the current file.
- .PP
- .B Absolute symlink (C\-x s)
- .PP
- Create a absolute symbolic link to the current file.
- .PP
- .B Relative symLink (C\-x v)
- .PP
- Create a relative symbolic link to the current file.
- .PP
- To those of you who don't know what links are: creating a link to a file
- is a bit like copying the file, but both the source filename and the destination
- filename represent the same file image. For example, if you edit one of these
- files, all changes you make will appear in both files. Some people call
- links aliases or shortcuts.
- .PP
- A hard link appears as a real file. After making it, there is no way of
- telling which one is the original and which is the link. If you delete
- either one of them the other one is still intact. It is very difficult
- to notice that the files represent the same image. Use hard links when
- you don't even want to know.
- .PP
- A symbolic link is a reference to the name of the original file. If
- the original file is deleted the symbolic link is useless. It is quite
- easy to notice that the files represent the same image. Midnight
- Commander shows an "@"\-sign in front of the file name if it is a
- symbolic link to somewhere (except to directory, where it shows a tilde (~)).
- The original file which the link points to is shown on mini\-status line if the
- .I "Show mini\-status"
- option is enabled. Use symbolic links when you want to avoid the
- confusion that can be caused by hard links.
- .PP
- When you press "C\-x s" Midnight Commander will automatically fill in the
- complete path+filename of the original file and suggest a name for the link.
- You can change either one.
- .PP
- Sometimes you may want to change the absolute path of the original into
- a relative path. An absolute path starts from the root directory:
- .PP
- .I /home/frodo/mc/mc \-> /home/frodo/new/mc
- .PP
- A relative link describes the original file's location starting from the
- location of the link itself:
- .PP
- .I /home/frodo/mc/mc \-> ../new/mc
- .PP
- You can force Midnight Commander to suggest a relative path by pressing
- "C\-x v" instead of "C\-x s".
- .PP
- .B Rename/Move (F6, F16)
- .PP
- Press F6 to pop up an input dialog to copy the currently selected file (or
- the tagged files, if there is at least one file tagged) to the
- directory/filename you specify in the input dialog. The destination
- defaults to the directory in the non\-selected panel. For more details
- look at Copy (F5) operation above, most of the things are quite similar.
- .PP
- F16 (usually F16) is similar, but defaults to the directory in the
- selected panel. It always operates on the selected file, regardless of
- any tagged files.
- .PP
- On some systems, it is possible to do the copy in the background by
- clicking on the background button (or pressing Alt\-b in the dialog
- box). The
- .\"LINK2"
- Background Jobs
- .\"Background jobs"
- is used to control the background process.
- .PP
- .B Mkdir (F7)
- .PP
- Pop up an input dialog and creates the directory specified.
- .PP
- .B Delete (F8)
- .PP
- Delete the currently selected file or the tagged files in the
- currently selected panel. During the process, you can press C\-c or
- Esc to abort the operation.
- .PP
- .B Quick cd (Alt\-c)
- Use the
- .\"LINK2"
- quick cd
- .\"Quick cd"
- command if you have full command line and want to cd somewhere.
- .PP
- .B Select group (+)
- .PP
- This is used to select (tag) a group of files. Midnight Commander
- will prompt for a selection options. When
- .I Files only
- checkbox is on, only files will be selected. If
- .I Files only
- is off, as files as directories will be selected.
- When
- .I Shell Patterns
- checkbox is on, the regular expression is much like the filename globbing
- in the shell (* standing for zero or more characters and ? standing
- for one character). If
- .I Shell Patterns
- is off, then the tagging of files is done with normal regular
- expressions (see ed (1)). When
- .I Case sensitive
- checkbox is on, the selection will be case sensitive characters.
- If
- .I Case sensitive
- is off, the case will be ignored.
- .PP
- .B Unselect group (\\\\)
- .PP
- Used to unselect a group of files. This is the opposite of the
- .I "Select group"
- command.
- .PP
- .B Quit (F10, S\-F10)
- .PP
- Terminate Midnight Commander. S\-F10 is used when you want to
- quit and you are using the shell wrapper. S\-F10 will not take you
- to the last directory you visited with Midnight Commander, instead
- it will stay at the directory where you started Midnight Commander.
- .\"NODE " Quick cd"
- .SH " Quick cd"
- This command is useful if you have a full command line and want to
- .\"LINK2"
- cd
- .\"The cd internal command"
- somewhere without having to yank and paste the command line. This command
- pops up a small dialog, where you enter everything you would enter after
- .B cd
- on the command line and then you press enter. This features all the things
- that are already in the
- .\"LINK2"
- internal cd command\&.
- .\"The cd internal command"
- .\"NODE " Command Menu"
- .SH " Command Menu"
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- Directory tree
- .\"Directory Tree"
- command shows a tree figure of the directories.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- "Find file"
- .\"Find File"
- command allows you to search for a specific file.
- .PP
- The "Swap panels" command swaps the contents of the two directory panels.
- .PP
- The "Switch panels on/off" command shows the output of the last shell command.
- This works only on xterm and on Linux and FreeBSD console.
- .PP
- The "Compare directories" command compares the directory
- panels with each other. You can then use the Copy (F5) command to make
- the panels identical. There are three compare methods. The quick method
- compares only file size and file date. The thorough method makes a
- full byte\-by\-byte compare. The size\-only
- compare method just compares the file sizes and does not check the
- contents or the date times, it just checks the file size.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- "External panelize"
- .\"External panelize"
- allows you to execute an external program, and make the output of that
- program the contents of the current panel.
- .PP
- The "Command history" command shows a list of typed commands. The
- selected command is copied to the command line. The command history
- can also be accessed by typing Alt\-p or Alt\-n.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- "Directory hotlist"
- .\"Hotlist"
- command makes changing of the current directory to often used directories
- faster.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- "Screen list"
- .\"Screen selector"
- command shows a dialog window with the list of currently running
- internal editors, viewers and other MC modules that support this mode.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- "Edit extension file"
- .\"Edit Extension File"
- command allows you to specify programs to executed when you try to
- execute, view, edit and do a bunch of other thing on files
- with certain extensions (filename endings).
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- "Edit Menu File"
- .\"Edit Menu File"
- command may be used for editing the user menu (which appears by
- pressing F2).
- .\"NODE " Directory Tree"
- .SH " Directory Tree"
- The Directory Tree command shows a tree figure of the directories. You
- can select a directory from the figure and Midnight Commander will
- change to that directory.
- .PP
- There are two ways to invoke the tree. The real directory tree command
- is available from Commands menu. The other way is to select tree view
- from the Left or Right menu.
- .PP
- To get rid of long delays, Midnight Commander creates the tree
- figure by scanning only a small subset of all the directories. If the
- directory which you want to see is missing, move to its parent
- directory and press C\-r (or F2).
- .PP
- You can use the following keys:
- .TP
- .\"LINK2"
- General movement keys
- .\"General Movement Keys"
- are accepted.
- .TP
- .B Enter.
- In the directory tree, exits the directory tree and changes to this
- directory in the current panel. In the tree view, changes to this
- directory in the other panel and stays in tree view mode in the
- current panel.
- .TP
- .B C\-r, F2 (Rescan).
- Rescan this directory. Use this when the tree figure is out of date:
- it is missing subdirectories or shows some subdirectories which don't
- exist any more.
- .TP
- .B F3 (Forget).
- Delete this directory from the tree figure. Use this to remove clutter
- from the figure. If you want the directory back to the tree figure
- press F2 in its parent directory.
- .TP
- .B F4 (Static/Dynamic).
- Toggle between the dynamic navigation mode (default) and the static
- navigation mode.
- .PP
- In the static navigation mode you can use the Up and Down keys to
- select a directory. All known directories are shown.
- .PP
- In the dynamic navigation mode you can use the Up and Down keys to
- select a sibling directory, the Left key to move to the parent
- directory, and the Right key to move to a child directory. Only the
- parent, sibling and children directories are shown, others are left
- out. The tree figure changes dynamically as you traverse.
- .TP
- .B F5 (Copy).
- Copy the directory.
- .TP
- .B F6 (RenMov).
- Move the directory.
- .TP
- .B F7 (Mkdir).
- Make a new directory below this directory.
- .TP
- .B F8 (Delete).
- Delete this directory from the file system.
- .TP
- .B C\-s, Alt\-s.
- Search the next directory matching the search string. If there is
- no such directory these keys will move one line down.
- .TP
- .B C\-h, Backspace.
- Delete the last character of the search string.
- .TP
- .B Any other character.
- Add the character to the search string and move to the next directory
- which starts with these characters. In the tree view you must first
- activate the search mode by pressing C\-s. The search string is shown
- in the mini status line.
- .PP
- The following actions are available only in the directory tree. They
- aren't supported in the tree view.
- .TP
- .B F1 (Help).
- Invoke the help viewer and show this section.
- .TP
- .B Esc, F10.
- Exit the directory tree. Do not change the directory.
- .PP
- The mouse is supported. A double\-click behaves like Enter. See
- also the section on
- .\"LINK2"
- mouse support\&.
- .\"Mouse Support"
- .\"NODE " Find File"
- .SH " Find File"
- The Find File feature first asks for the start directory for the
- search and the filename to be searched for. By pressing the Tree
- button you can select the start directory from the
- .\"LINK2"
- directory tree
- .\"Directory Tree"
- figure.
- .PP
- The "File name" input field contains a filename pattern to be searched
- for. It is interpreted as a shell pattern or as a regular expression
- depending on the state of the "Using shell patterns" checkbox. An empty
- value is valid and matches any file name.
- .PP
- The "Content" input field contains a string to search for within the
- files. Leave this field empty to disable searching file contents.
- .PP
- Option "Whole words" allows select only those files containing matches that
- form whole words. Like grep \-w.
- .PP
- You can start the search by pressing the OK button.
- During the search you can stop from the Stop button and continue from
- the Start button.
- .PP
- You can browse the filelist with the up and down arrow keys. The Chdir
- button will change to the directory of the currently selected
- file. The Again button will ask for the parameters for a new
- search. The Quit button quits the search operation. The Panelize
- button will place the found files to the current directory panel so
- that you can do additional operations on them (view, copy, move,
- delete and so on). To return to the normal file listing, change directory
- to "..".
- .PP
- The 'Enable ignore directories' checkbox and input field below it
- allow one to set up the list of directories that should be skip during the search
- files (for example, you may want to avoid searches on a CD\-ROM or on a NFS
- directory that is mounted across a slow link). List components must be separated
- with a colon, here is an example:
- .PP
- .nf
- /cdrom:/nfs/wuarchive:/afs
- .fi
- .PP
- Relative paths are supported also. The following example shows how to skip special
- directories of version control systems:
- .nf
- /cdrom:/nfs/wuarchive:/afs:.svn:.git:CVS
- .fi
- .PP
- Attention: input field can contain a dot (.), this means the current absolute path.
- .PP
- You may consider using the
- .\"LINK2"
- External panelize
- .\"External panelize"
- command for some operations. Find file command is for simple queries
- only, while using External panelize you can do as mysterious searches
- as you would like.
- .\"NODE " External panelize"
- .SH " External panelize"
- The External panelize allows you to execute an external program, and
- make the output of that program the contents of the current panel.
- .PP
- For example, if you want to manipulate in one of the panels all the
- symbolic links in the current directory, you can use external
- panelization to run the following command:
- .PP
- .nf
- find . \-type l \-print
- .fi
- .PP
- Upon command completion, the directory contents of the panel will no
- longer be the directory listing of the current directory, but all the
- files that are symbolic links.
- .PP
- If you want to panelize all of the files that have been downloaded
- from your FTP server, you can use this awk command to extract the file
- name from the transfer log files:
- .PP
- .nf
- awk '$9 ~! /incoming/ { print $9 }' < /var/log/xferlog
- .fi
- .PP
- You may want to save often used panelize commands under a descriptive name,
- so that you can recall them quickly. You do this by typing the command on
- the input line and pressing Add new button. Then you enter a name under
- which you want the command to be saved. Next time, you just choose that
- command from the list and do not have to type it again.
- .\"NODE " Hotlist"
- .SH " Hotlist"
- The Directory hotlist command shows the labels of the directories
- in the directory hotlist. Midnight Commander will change to the
- directory corresponding to the selected label. From the hotlist dialog,
- you can remove already created label/directory pairs and add new ones.
- To add new directories quickly, you can use the Add to hotlist command
- (C\-x h), which adds the current directory into the directory hotlist,
- asking just for the label for the directory.
- .PP
- This makes cd to often used directories faster. You may consider using the
- CDPATH variable as described in
- .\"LINK2"
- internal cd command
- .\"The cd internal command"
- description.
- .\"NODE " Edit Extension File"
- .SH " Edit Extension File"
- This will invoke your editor on the file
- .IR ~/.config/mc/mc.ext.ini .
- If this file does not exist and you are not root, it will be copied from
- .IR %sysconfdir%/mc/mc.ext.ini .
- If you are root, you can choose the file to edit: user's
- .I ~/.config/mc/mc.ext.ini
- or system\-wide
- .IR %sysconfdir%/mc/mc.ext.ini .
- The format of this file is described in detail in it.
- .\"NODE " Background jobs"
- .SH " Background Jobs"
- This lets you control the state of any background Midnight Commander
- process (only copy and move files operations can be done in the
- background). You can stop, restart and kill a background job from
- here.
- .\"NODE " Edit Menu File"
- .SH " Edit Menu File"
- The user menu is a menu of useful actions that can be customized by
- the user. When you access the user menu, the
- file .mc.menu from the current directory is used if it exists,
- but only if it is owned by user or root and is not world\-writable.
- If no such file found, ~/.config/mc/menu is tried in the same way,
- and otherwise mc uses the default system\-wide menu
- %pkgdatadir%/mc.menu.
- .PP
- The format of the menu file is very simple. Lines that start with
- anything but space or tab are considered entries for the menu (in
- order to be able to use it like a hot key, the first character should
- be a letter). All the lines that start with a space or a tab are the
- commands that will be executed when the entry is selected.
- .PP
- When an option is selected all the command lines of the option are
- copied to a temporary file in the temporary directory (usually
- /usr/tmp) and then that file is executed. This allows the user to put
- normal shell constructs in the menus. Also simple macro substitution
- takes place before executing the menu code. For more information, see
- .\"LINK2"
- macro substitution\&.
- .\"Macro Substitution"
- .PP
- Here is a sample mc.menu file:
- .PP
- .nf
- A Dump the currently selected file
- od \-c %f
- B Edit a bug report and send it to root
- I=`mktemp ${MC_TMPDIR:\-/tmp}/mail.XXXXXX` || exit 1
- vi $I
- mail \-s "Midnight Commander bug" root < $I
- rm \-f $I
- M Read mail
- emacs \-f rmail
- N Read Usenet news
- emacs \-f gnus
- H Call the info hypertext browser
- info
- J Copy current directory to other panel recursively
- tar cf \- . | (cd %D && tar xvpf \-)
- K Make a release of the current subdirectory
- echo \-n "Name of distribution file: "
- read tar
- ln \-s %d `dirname %d`/$tar
- cd ..
- tar cvhf ${tar}.tar $tar
- = f *.tar.gz | f *.tgz & t n
- X Extract the contents of a compressed tar file
- tar xzvf %f
- .fi
- .PP
- .B Default Conditions
- .PP
- Each menu entry may be preceded by a condition. The condition must
- start from the first column with a '=' character. If the condition is
- true, the menu entry will be the default entry.
- .PP
- .nf
- Condition syntax: = <sub\-cond>
- or: = <sub\-cond> | <sub\-cond> ...
- or: = <sub\-cond> & <sub\-cond> ...
- Sub\-condition is one of following:
- y <pattern> syntax of current file matching pattern?
- (for edit menu only)
- f <pattern> current file matching pattern?
- F <pattern> other file matching pattern?
- d <pattern> current directory matching pattern?
- D <pattern> other directory matching pattern?
- t <type> current file of type?
- T <type> other file of type?
- x <filename> is it executable filename?
- ! <sub\-cond> negate the result of sub\-condition
- .fi
- .PP
- Pattern is a normal shell pattern or a regular expression, according
- to the shell patterns option. You can override the global value of
- the shell patterns option by writing "shell_patterns=x" on the first
- line of the menu file (where "x" is either 0 or 1).
- .PP
- Type is one or more of the following characters:
- .PP
- .nf
- n not a directory
- r regular file
- d directory
- l link
- c character device
- b block device
- f FIFO (pipe)
- s socket
- x executable file
- t tagged
- .fi
- .PP
- For example 'rlf' means either regular file, link or fifo. The 't'
- type is a little special because it acts on the panel instead of the
- file. The condition '=t t' is true if there are tagged files in the
- current panel and false if not.
- .PP
- If the condition starts with '=?' instead of '=' a debug trace will be
- shown whenever the value of the condition is calculated.
- .PP
- The conditions are calculated from left to right. This means
- .nf
- = f *.tar.gz | f *.tgz & t n
- .fi
- is calculated as
- .nf
- ( (f *.tar.gz) | (f *.tgz) ) & (t n)
- .fi
- .PP
- Here is a sample of the use of conditions:
- .PP
- .nf
- = f *.tar.gz | f *.tgz & t n
- L List the contents of a compressed tar\-archive
- gzip \-cd %f | tar xvf \-
- .fi
- .PP
- .B Addition Conditions
- .PP
- If the condition begins with '+' (or '+?') instead of '=' (or '=?') it
- is an addition condition. If the condition is true the menu entry will
- be included in the menu. If the condition is false the menu entry will
- not be included in the menu.
- .PP
- You can combine default and addition conditions by starting condition
- with '+=' or '=+' (or '+=?' or '=+?' if you want debug trace). If you
- want to use two different conditions, one for adding and another for
- defaulting, you can precede a menu entry with two condition lines, one
- starting with '+' and another starting with '='.
- .PP
- Comments are started with '#'. The additional comment lines must start
- with '#', space or tab.
- .\"NODE " Options Menu"
- .SH " Options Menu"
- Midnight Commander has some options that may be toggled on and
- off in several dialogs which are accessible from this menu. Options
- are enabled if they have an asterisk or "x" in front of them.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- Configuration
- .\"Configuration"
- command pops up a dialog from which you can change most of settings of
- Midnight Commander.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- Layout
- .\"Layout"
- command pops up a dialog from which you specify a bunch of options how mc
- looks like on the screen.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- Panel options
- .\"Panel options"
- command pops up a dialog from which you specify options of file manager panels.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- Confirmation
- .\"Confirmation"
- command pops up a dialog from which you specify which actions you want to
- confirm.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- Appearance
- .\"Appearance"
- command pops up a dialog from which you specify the skin.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- Display bits
- .\"Display bits"
- command pops up a dialog from which you may select which characters is your
- terminal able to display.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- Learn keys
- .\"Learn keys"
- command pops up a dialog from which you test some keys which are not working
- on some terminals and you may fix them.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- Virtual FS
- .\"Virtual FS"
- command pops up a dialog from which you specify some VFS related options.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- Save setup
- .\"Save Setup"
- command saves the current settings of the Left, Right and Options
- menus. A small number of other settings is saved, too.
- .\"NODE " Configuration"
- .SH " Configuration"
- The options in this dialog are divided into several groups: "File
- operation options", "Esc key mode", "Pause after run" and "Other options".
- .PP
- .B File operation options
- .PP
- .I Verbose operation.
- This toggles whether the file Copy, Rename and Delete operations are
- verbose (i.e., display a dialog box for each operation). If you have a
- slow terminal, you may wish to disable the verbose operation. It is
- automatically turned off if the speed of your terminal is less than
- 9600 bps.
- .PP
- .I Compute totals.
- If this option is enabled, Midnight Commander computes total byte
- sizes and total number of files prior to any Copy, Rename and Delete
- operations. This will provide you with a more accurate progress bar
- at the expense of some speed. This option has no effect, if
- .I Verbose operation
- is disabled.
- .PP
- .I Classic progressbar.
- If this option is enabled, the progressbar of Copy/Move/Delete operations
- is always grown form left to right. If disabled, the growing direction
- of progressbar follows to direction of Copy/Move/Delete operation:
- from left panel to right one and vice versa. Enabled by default.
- .PP
- .I Mkdir autoname.
- When you press F7 to create a new directory, the input line in popup dialog
- will be filled by name of current file or directory in active panel.
- Disabled by default.
- .PP
- .I Preallocate space.
- Preallocate space for whole target file, if possible, before copy operation.
- Disabled by default.
- .PP
- .B Esc key mode.
- .PP
- By default, Midnight Commander treats the Esc key as a key prefix.
- Therefore, you should press Esc code twice to exit a dialog. But there is
- a possibility to use a single press of Esc key for that action.
- .PP
- .I Single press.
- By default this option is disabled. If you'll enable it, the Esc key
- will act as a prefix key for set up time interval (see
- .I Timeout
- option below), and if no extra keys have arrived, then the Esc key
- is interpreted as a cancel key (Esc Esc).
- .PP
- .I Timeout.
- This options is used to setup the time interval (in microseconds)
- for single press of Esc key. By default, this interval is one second
- (1000000 microseconds). Also the timeout can be set via KEYBOARD_KEY_TIMEOUT_US
- environment variable (also in microseconds), which has higher priority
- than Timeout option value.
- .PP
- .B Pause after run
- .PP
- After executing your commands, Midnight Commander can pause, so
- that you can examine the output of the command. There are three
- possible settings for this variable:
- .PP
- .I Never.
- Means that you do not want to see the output of your command. If you
- are using the Linux or FreeBSD console or an xterm, you will be able to
- see the output of the command by typing C\-o.
- .PP
- .I On dumb terminals.
- You will get the pause message on terminals that are not capable of
- showing the output of the last command executed (any terminal that is
- not an xterm or the Linux console).
- .PP
- .I Always.
- The program will pause after executing all of your commands.
- .PP
- .B Other options
- .PP
- .I Use internal editor.
- If this option is enabled, the built\-in file editor is used to edit
- files. If the option is disabled, the editor specified in the
- .B EDITOR
- environment variable is used.
- If no editor is specified,
- .B vi
- is used. See the section on the
- .\"LINK2"
- internal file editor\&.
- .\"Internal File Editor"
- .PP
- .I Use internal viewer.
- If this option is enabled, the built\-in file viewer is used to view
- files. If the option is disabled, the pager specified in the
- .B PAGER
- environment variable is used.
- If no pager is specified, the
- .B view
- command is used. See the section on the
- .\"LINK2"
- internal file viewer\&.
- .\"Internal File Viewer"
- .PP
- .I Ask new file name.
- If this option is enabled, file name is asked before open new file in editor.
- .PP
- .I Auto menus.
- If this option is enabled, the user menu will be invoked at startup.
- Useful for building menus for non\-unixers.
- .PP
- .I Drop down menus.
- When this option is enabled, the pull down menus will be activated as
- soon as you press the F9 key. Otherwise, you will only get the menu title,
- and you will have to activate the menu either with the arrow keys or with
- the hotkeys. It is recommended if you are using hotkeys.
- .PP
- .I Shell Patterns.
- By default the Select, Unselect and Filter commands will use shell\-like
- regular expressions. The following conversions are performed to achieve
- this: the '*' is replaced by '.*' (zero or more characters); the '?'
- is replaced by '.' (exactly one character) and '.' by the literal
- dot. If the option is disabled, then the regular expressions are the
- ones described in ed(1).
- .PP
- .I Complete: show all.
- By default, Midnight Commander pops up all possible
- .\"LINK2"
- completions
- .\"Completion"
- if the completion is ambiguous only when you press
- .B Alt\-Tab
- for the second time. For the first time, it just completes as much as
- possible and beeps in the case of ambiguity. Enable this option if you
- want to see all possible completions even after pressing
- .B Alt\-Tab
- the first time.
- .PP
- .I Rotating dash.
- If this option is enabled, the
- Midnight Commander shows a rotating dash in the upper right corner
- as a work in progress indicator.
- .PP
- .I Cd follows links.
- This option, if set, causes Midnight Commander to follow the
- logical chain of directories when changing current directory
- either in the panels, or using the cd command. This is the default
- behavior of bash. When unset, Midnight Commander follows the
- real directory structure, so cd .. if you've entered that directory
- through a link will move you to the current directory's real parent
- and not to the directory where the link was present.
- .PP
- .I Safe delete.
- If this option is enabled, deleting files and directory hotlist entries
- unintentionally becomes more difficult. The default selection in the
- confirmation dialogs for deletion changes from
- .B Yes
- to
- .BR No .
- This option is disabled by default.
- .PP
- .I Safe overwrite.
- If this option is enabled, overwriting files unintentionally becomes
- more difficult. The default selection in the overwrite confirmation dialog
- changes from
- .B Yes
- to
- .BR No .
- This option is disabled by default.
- .PP
- .I Auto save setup.
- If this option is enabled, when you exit Midnight Commander, the
- configurable options of Midnight Commander are saved in the
- ~/.config/mc/ini file.
- .\"NODE " Layout"
- .SH " Layout"
- The layout dialog gives you a possibility to change the general layout
- of screen. The options in this dialog are divided into several groups:
- "Panel split", "Console output" and "Other options".
- .PP
- .B Panel split
- .PP
- The rest of the screen area is used for the two directory panels. You
- can specify whether the area is split to the panels in
- .I Vertical
- or
- .I Horizontal
- direction. Panel layout can be changed using Alt\-, (Alt\-comma) shortcut.
- .PP
- .I Equal split.
- By default, panels have equal sizes. Using this option you can specify
- an unequal split.
- .PP
- .B Console output
- .PP
- On the Linux or FreeBSD console you can specify how many lines are shown
- in the output window. This option is available if Midnight Commander runs
- on native console only.
- .PP
- .B Other options
- .PP
- .I Menu bar visible.
- If enabled, main menu of Midnight Commander is always visible on the top row
- of screen above panels. Enabled by default.
- .PP
- .I Command prompt.
- If enabled, command line is available. Enabled by default.
- .PP
- .I Keybar visible.
- If enabled, 10 labels associated with F1\-F10 keys are located at the bottom
- row of screen. Enabled by default.
- .PP
- .I Hintbar visible.
- If enabled, the one\-line hints are visible below panels. Enabled by default.
- .PP
- .I XTerm window title.
- When run in a terminal emulator for X11, Midnight Commander sets the
- terminal window title to the current working directory and updates it
- when necessary. If your terminal emulator is broken and you see some
- incorrect output on startup and directory change, turn off this option.
- Enabled by default.
- .PP
- .I Show free space.
- If enabled, free space and total space of current file system is shown
- at the bottom frame of panel. Enabled by default.
- .\"NODE " Panel options"
- .SH " Panel options"
- .B Main panel options
- .PP
- .I Show mini\-status.
- If enabled, one line of status information about the currently selected item
- is shown at the bottom of the panels. Enabled by default.
- .PP
- .I Use SI size units.
- If this option is enabled, Midnight Commander will use SI prefixes (base 10)
- when displaying any byte sizes. If disabled (default), Midnight Commander will
- use IEC prefixes (base 2).
- .PP
- .I Mix all files.
- If this option is enabled, all files and directories are shown mixed
- together. If the option is disabled (default), directories (and links to
- directories) are shown at the beginning of the listing, and other files below.
- .PP
- .I Show backup files.
- If enabled, Midnight Commander will show files ending with a tilde.
- Otherwise, they won't be shown (like GNU's ls option \-B). Enabled by default.
- .PP
- .I Show hidden files.
- If enabled, Midnight Commander will show all files that start with
- a dot (like ls \-a). Disabled by default.
- .PP
- .I Fast directory reload.
- If this option is enabled, Midnight Commander will use a trick to
- determine if the directory contents have changed. The trick is to reload
- the directory only if the i\-node of the directory has changed; this means
- that reloads only happen when files are created or deleted. If what
- changes is the i\-node for a file in the directory (file size changes,
- mode or owner changes, etc) the display is not updated. In these cases,
- if you have the option on, you have to rescan the directory manually
- (with C\-r). Disabled by default.
- .PP
- .I Mark moves down.
- If enabled, the selection bar will move down when you mark a file (with
- Insert key). Enabled by default.
- .PP
- .I Reverse files only.
- Allow revert selection of files only. Enabled by default.
- If enabled, the reverse selection is applied to files only, not to directories.
- The selection of directories is untouched. If off, the reverse selection
- is applied to files as well to directories: all unselected items become
- selected, and vice versa.
- .PP
- .I Simple swap.
- If both panels contain file listing, simple swap means that panels exchange
- its screen positions: left panel become right one, and vice versa. If this
- option is unchecked, file listing panels exchange its content keeping listing
- format and sort options. Unchecked by default.
- .PP
- .I Auto save panels setup.
- If this option is enabled, when you exit Midnight Commander, the
- current settings of panels are saved in the ~/.config/mc/panels.ini file.
- Disabled by default.
- .PP
- .B Navigation
- .PP
- .I Lynx\-like motion.
- If this option is enabled, you may use the arrows keys to automatically
- chdir if the current selection is a subdirectory and the shell command
- line is empty. By default, this setting is off.
- .PP
- .I Page scrolling.
- If set (the default), panel will scroll by half the display when the
- cursor reaches the end or the beginning of the panel, otherwise it
- will just scroll a file at a time.
- .PP
- .I Center scrolling.
- If set, panel will scroll when the cursor reaches the middle of the
- panel column, only hitting the top or bottom of the panel when actually on
- the first or last file. This behavior applies when scrolling one file
- at a time, and does not apply to the page up/down keys.
- .PP
- .I Mouse page scrolling.
- Controls whenever scrolling with the mouse wheel is done by pages or
- line by line on the panels.
- .PP
- .B File highlight
- .PP
- You can specify whether
- .I permissions
- and
- .I file types
- should be highlighted with distinctive
- .\"LINK2"
- Colors\&.
- .\"Colors"
- If the permission highlighting is enabled, the parts of the
- .I perm
- and
- .I mode
- .\"LINK2"
- display fields
- .\"Listing Format..."
- which apply to the user running Midnight Commander are highlighted with
- the color defined by the
- .I selected
- keyword. If the file type highlighting is enabled, file names are colored
- according to rules described in
- %sysconfdir%/mc/filehighlight.ini
- file. See
- .\"LINK2"
- Filenames Highlight
- .\"Filenames Highlight"
- for more info.
- .PP
- .B Quick search
- .PP
- You can specify how the
- .\"LINK2"
- Quick search
- .\"Quick search"
- mode should work: case insensitively, case sensitively or be matched
- to the panel sort order: case sensitive or not.
- .\"NODE " Confirmation"
- .SH " Confirmation"
- In this dialog you configure the confirmation options for file deletion,
- overwriting files, execution by pressing enter, quitting the program,
- directory hotlist entries deletion and history cleanup.
- .\"NODE " Appearance"
- .SH " Appearance"
- In this dialog you can select the skin to be used and enable shadow
- for dialogs and drop down menus.
- .PP
- See the
- .\"LINK2"
- Skins
- .\"Skins"
- section for technical details about the skin definition files.
- .PP
- .I Shadows.
- If this option is enabled, all dialogs and drop down menus will have a shadow.
- .\"NODE " Display bits"
- .SH " Display bits"
- This is used to configure the range of visible characters on the
- screen. This setting may be 7\-bits if your terminal/curses supports
- only seven output bits, ISO\-8859\-1 displays all the characters in the
- ISO\-8859\-1 map and full 8 bits is for those terminals that can display
- full 8 bit characters.
- .\"NODE " Learn keys"
- .SH " Learn keys"
- This dialog allows you to test and redefine functional keys, cursor
- arrows and some other keys to make them work properly on your terminal.
- They often don't, since many terminal databases are incomplete or broken.
- .PP
- You can move around with the Tab key and with the vi moving keys ('h'
- left, 'j' down, 'k' up and 'l' right). Once you press any cursor movement
- key and it is recognized, you can use that key as well.
- .PP
- You can test keys just by pressing each of them. When you press a
- key and it is recognized properly, OK should appear next to the name
- of that key. Once a key is marked OK it starts working as usually,
- e.g. F1 pressed the first time will just check that the F1 key works,
- but after that it will show help. The same applies to the arrow keys.
- The Tab key should be working always.
- .PP
- If some keys do not work properly then you won't see OK appear after
- pressing one of these. Then you may want to redefine it. Do it by pressing
- the button with the name of that key (either by the mouse or by Enter
- or Space after selecting the button with Tab or arrows). Then a message
- box will appear asking you to press that key. Do it and wait until the
- message box disappears. If you want to abort, just press Escape once
- and wait.
- .PP
- When you finish with all the keys, you can Save them. The definitions
- for the keys you have redefined will be written into the [terminal:TERM]
- section of your ~/.config/mc/ini file (where TERM is the name of your current
- terminal). The definitions of the keys that were already working properly
- are not saved.
- .\"NODE " Virtual FS"
- .SH " Virtual FS"
- This option gives you control over the settings of the
- .\"LINK2"
- Virtual File System\&.
- .\"Virtual File System"
- .PP
- Midnight Commander keeps in memory the information related to some
- of the virtual file systems to speed up the access to the files in the
- file system (for example, directory listings fetched from FTP servers).
- .PP
- Also, in order to access the contents of compressed files (for example,
- compressed tar files), Midnight Commander needs to create temporary
- uncompressed files on your disk.
- .PP
- Since both the information in memory and the temporary files on disk
- take up resources, you may want to tune the parameters of the cached
- information to decrease your resource usage or to maximize the speed of
- access to frequently used file systems.
- .PP
- Because of the format of the tar archives, the
- .I Tar filesystem
- needs to read the whole file just to load the file entries. Since most
- tar files are usually kept compressed (plain tar files are species in
- extinction), the tar file system has to uncompress the file on the disk
- in a temporary location and then access the uncompressed file as a
- regular tar file.
- .PP
- Now, since we all love to browse files and tar files all over the disk,
- it's common that you will leave a tar file and then re\-enter it later.
- Since decompression is slow, Midnight Commander will cache the
- information in memory for a limited time. When the timeout expires, all
- the resources associated with the file system are released. The default
- timeout is set to one minute.
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- FTP File System
- .\"FTP File System"
- (ftpfs) allows you to browse directories on remote FTP servers. It has
- several options.
- .PP
- .I ftp anonymous password
- is the password used when you login as "anonymous". Some sites require
- a valid e\-mail address. On the other hand, you probably don't want to
- give your real e\-mail address to untrusted sites, especially if you are
- not using spam filtering.
- .PP
- ftpfs keeps the directory listing it fetches from a FTP server in a cache.
- The cache expire time is configurable with the
- .I ftpfs directory cache timeout
- option. A low value for this option may slow down every operation on
- the ftpfs because every operation would require sending a request to the
- FTP server.
- .PP
- You can define an FTP proxy host for doing FTP. Note that most modern
- firewalls are fully transparent at least for passive FTP (see below), so
- FTP proxies are considered obsolete.
- .PP
- If
- .I Always use ftp proxy
- is not set, you can use the exclamation sign to enable proxy for certain
- hosts. See
- .\"LINK2"
- FTP File System
- .\"FTP File System"
- for examples.
- .PP
- If this option is set, the program will do two things: consult the
- %sysconfdir%/mc/mc.no_proxy file for lines containing host names that
- are local (if the host name starts with a dot, it is assumed to be a
- domain) and to assume that any hostnames without dots in their names are
- directly accessible. All other hosts will be accessed through the
- specified FTP proxy.
- .PP
- You can enable using
- .I ~/.netrc
- file, which keeps login names and passwords for ftp servers. See netrc
- (5) for the description of the .netrc format.
- .PP
- .I Use passive mode
- enables using FTP passive mode, when the connection for data transfer is
- initiated by the client, not by the server. This option is recommended
- and enabled by default. If this option is turned off, the data
- connection is initiated by the server. This may not work with some
- firewalls.
- .\"NODE " Save Setup"
- .SH " Save Setup"
- At startup, Midnight Commander tries to load initialization information
- from the ~/.config/mc/ini file.
- If this file doesn't exist, the system\-wide file
- .B %sysconfdir%/mc/mc.ini
- is used. If this file doesn't exist, the system\-wide file
- .B %pkgdatadir%/mc.ini
- is used. If this file doesn't exist, MC uses the default settings.
- .PP
- The
- .I Save Setup
- command creates the ~/.config/mc/ini file by saving the
- current settings of the
- .\"LINK2"
- Left, Right
- .\"Left and Right Menus"
- and
- .\"LINK2"
- Options
- .\"Options Menu"
- menus.
- .PP
- If you activate the
- .I auto save setup
- option, MC will always save the current settings when exiting.
- .PP
- There also exist settings which can't be changed from the menus. To
- change these settings you have to edit the setup file with your
- favorite editor. See the section on
- .\"LINK2"
- Special Settings
- .\"Special Settings"
- for more information.
- .SH ""
- .\"NODE "Executing operating system commands"
- .SH "Executing operating system commands"
- You may execute commands by typing them directly in Midnight
- Commander's input line, or by selecting the program you want to
- execute with the selection bar in one of the panels and hitting Enter.
- .PP
- If you press Enter over a file that is not executable, Midnight
- Commander checks the extension of the selected file against the
- extensions in the
- .\"LINK2"
- Extensions File\&.
- .\"Edit Extension File"
- If a match is found then the code associated with that extension is
- executed. A very simple
- .\"LINK2"
- macro expansion
- .\"Macro Substitution"
- takes place before executing the command.
- .\"NODE " The cd internal command"
- .SH " The cd internal command"
- The
- .I cd
- command is interpreted by Midnight Commander, it is not passed to
- the command shell for execution. Thus it may not handle all of the
- nice macro expansion and substitution that your shell does, although it
- does some of them:
- .PP
- .I Tilde substitution.
- The (~) will be substituted with your home directory, if you append a
- username after the tilde, then it will be substituted with the login
- directory of the specified user.
- .PP
- For example, ~guest is the home directory for the user guest, while
- ~/guest is the directory guest in your home directory.
- .PP
- .I Previous directory.
- You can jump to the directory you were previously by using the special
- directory name '\-' like this:
- .B cd \-
- .PP
- .I CDPATH directories.
- If the directory specified to the
- .B cd
- command is not in the current directory, then Midnight Commander
- uses the value in the environment variable
- .B CDPATH
- to search for the directory in any of the named directories.
- .PP
- For example you could set your
- .B CDPATH
- variable to ~/src:/usr/src, allowing you to change your directory to
- any of the directories inside the ~/src and /usr/src directories, from
- any place in the file system by using its relative name (for example
- cd linux could take you to /usr/src/linux).
- .\"NODE " Macro Substitution"
- .SH " Macro Substitution"
- When accessing a
- .\"LINK2"
- user menu\&,
- .\"Edit Menu File"
- or executing an
- .\"LINK2"
- extension dependent command\&,
- .\"Edit Extension File"
- or running a command from the command line input, a simple macro
- substitution takes place.
- .PP
- The macros are:
- .TP
- .I %i
- The indent of blank space, equal the cursor column position. For edit
- menu only.
- .TP
- .I %y
- The syntax type of current file. For edit menu only.
- .TP
- .I %k
- The block file name.
- .TP
- .I %e
- The error file name.
- .TP
- .I %m
- The current menu name.
- .TP
- .IR %f " and " %p
- In file manager user menu: the current file name in selected panel.
- In mcedit user menu: the name of opened file.
- .TP
- .I %x
- The extension of current file name.
- .TP
- .I %b
- The current file name without extension.
- .TP
- .I %d
- The current directory name.
- .TP
- .I %F
- The current file in the unselected panel.
- .TP
- .I %D
- The directory name of the unselected panel.
- .TP
- .I %t
- The currently tagged files.
- .TP
- .I %T
- The tagged files in the unselected panel.
- .TP
- .IR %u " and " %U
- Similar to the %t and %T macros, but in addition the files are untagged.
- You can use this macro only once per menu file entry or extension file
- entry, because next time there will be no tagged files.
- .TP
- .IR %s " and " %S
- The selected files: The tagged files if there are any. Otherwise the
- current file.
- .TP
- .I %cd
- This is a special macro that is used to change the current directory
- to the directory specified in front of it. This is used primarily as
- an interface to the
- .\"LINK2"
- Virtual File System\&.
- .\"Virtual File System"
- .TP
- .I %view
- This macro is used to invoke the internal viewer. This macro can be
- used alone, or with arguments. If you pass any arguments to this
- macro, they should be enclosed in brackets.
- .IP
- The arguments are:
- .I ascii
- to force the viewer into ascii mode;
- .I hex
- to force the viewer into hex mode;
- .I nroff
- to tell the viewer that it should interpret the bold and underline
- sequences of nroff;
- .I unformatted
- to tell the viewer to not interpret nroff commands for making the text
- bold or underlined.
- .TP
- .I %%
- The % character
- .TP
- .I %{some text}
- Prompt for the substitution. An input box is shown and the text inside
- the braces is used as a prompt. The macro is substituted by the text
- typed by the user. The user can press Esc or F10 to cancel. This macro
- doesn't work on the command line yet.
- .TP
- .I %var{ENV:default}
- If environment variable
- .I ENV
- is unset, the
- .I default
- is substituted. Otherwise, the value of
- .I ENV
- is substituted.
- .\"NODE " The subshell support"
- .SH " The subshell support"
- The subshell support is a compile time option, that works with the
- shells: bash, ash (BusyBox and Debian), tcsh, zsh and fish.
- .PP
- When the subshell support is active, Midnight Commander will
- spawn a concurrent copy of your shell (the one defined in the
- .B SHELL
- variable and if it is not defined, then the one in the /etc/passwd
- file) and run it in a pseudo terminal, instead of invoking a new shell
- each time you execute a command, the command will be passed to the
- subshell as if you had typed it. This also allows you to change the
- environment variables, use shell functions and define aliases that are
- valid until you quit Midnight Commander.
- .PP
- .B bash
- users may specify startup commands in ~/.local/share/mc/bashrc (fallback ~/.bashrc)
- and special keyboard maps in ~/.local/share/mc/inputrc (fallback ~/.inputrc).
- .PP
- .B ash/dash
- users (BusyBox or Debian) may specify startup commands in ~/.local/share/mc/ashrc (fallback ~/.profile).
- .PP
- .B zsh
- users may specify startup commands in ~/.local/share/mc/.zshrc (fallback ~/.zshrc).
- .PP
- .B tcsh, fish
- users cannot specify mc-specific startup commands at present. They have to rely on
- shell-specific startup files.
- .PP
- The following paragraphs are relevant only when the subshell support is
- active:
- .PP
- You can suspend applications at any
- time with the sequence C\-o and jump back to Midnight Commander, if
- you interrupt an application, you will not be able to run other
- external commands until you quit the application you interrupted.
- .PP
- The basic prompt displayed by Midnight Commander is of the form
- "user@host:current_path$ ". When using a capable shell, like Bash, the
- prompt displayed by Midnight Commander will be the same prompt that you
- are currently using in your shell.
- .PP
- (There's a known problem when using fish: the prompt is displayed only in
- full screen mode (Ctrl-o), not when the panels are visible.)
- .PP
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- OPTIONS
- .\"OPTIONS"
- section has more information on how you can control subshell usage (-U/-u).
- Furthermore, to set a specific subshell different from your current SHELL variable or
- login shell defined in /etc/passwd, you may call MC like this:
- .B SHELL=/bin/myshell mc
- .\"NODE "Chmod"
- .SH "Chmod"
- The Chmod window is used to change the attribute bits in a group of
- files and directories. It can be invoked with the C\-x c key combination.
- .PP
- The Chmod window has two parts \-
- .I Permissions
- and
- .IR File .
- .PP
- In the File section are displayed the name of the file or directory
- and its permissions in octal form, as well as its owner and group.
- .PP
- In the Permissions section there is a set of check buttons which
- correspond to the file attribute bits. As you change the attribute
- bits, you can see the octal value change in the File section.
- .PP
- To move between the widgets (buttons and check buttons) use the
- .I arrow keys
- or the
- .I Tab
- key. To change the state of the check buttons or to select a button
- use
- .I Space.
- You can also use the hotkeys on the buttons to quickly activate them.
- Hotkeys are shown as highlighted letters on the buttons.
- .PP
- To set the attribute bits, use the Enter key.
- .PP
- When working with a group of files or directories, you just click on
- the bits you want to set or clear. Once you have selected the bits
- you want to change, you select one of the action buttons (Set marked
- or Clear marked).
- .PP
- Finally, to set the attributes exactly to those specified, you can use
- the
- .B [Set all]
- button, which will act on all the tagged files.
- .PP
- .B [Marked all]
- set only marked attributes to all selected files
- .PP
- .B [Set marked]
- set marked bits in attributes of all selected files
- .PP
- .B [Clean marked]
- clear marked bits in attributes of all selected files
- .PP
- .B [Set]
- set the attributes of one file
- .PP
- .B [Cancel]
- cancel the Chmod command
- .\"NODE "Chown"
- .SH "Chown"
- The Chown command is used to change the owner/group of a file. The hot
- key for this command is C\-x o.
- .\"NODE "Advanced Chown"
- .SH "Advanced Chown"
- The Advanced Chown command is the
- .\"LINK2"
- Chmod
- .\"Chmod"
- and
- .\"LINK2"
- Chown
- .\"Chown"
- command combined into one window. You can change the permissions and
- owner/group of files at once.
- .\"NODE "Chattr"
- .SH "Chattr"
- The Chattr window is used to change the attributes of a group of files
- and directories on a Linux file system. It can be invoked with the C\-x e
- key combination.
- .PP
- Not all attributes are supported or utilized by all filesystems.
- List of available attribute flags is represented as a set of check buttons
- which correspond to the attribute flags (see
- .B chattr(1)
- for details). As you change the attribute flags, you can see the symbolic
- value change below file name.
- .PP
- To move between the widgets (buttons and check buttons) use the
- .I arrow keys
- or the
- .I Tab
- key. To change the state of the check buttons or to select a button use
- .BR Space .
- .PP
- To set the attributes, use the Enter key.
- .PP
- When working with a group of files or directories, you just click on
- the flags you want to set or clear. Once you have selected the flags
- you want to change, you select one of the action buttons (Set marked
- or Clear marked).
- .PP
- Finally, to set the attributes exactly to those specified, you can use
- the
- .B [Set all]
- button, which will act on all the tagged files.
- .PP
- .B [Marked all]
- set only marked attributes to all selected files.
- .PP
- .B [Set marked]
- set marked flags in attributes of all selected files.
- .PP
- .B [Clean marked]
- clear marked flags in attributes of all selected files.
- .PP
- .B [Set]
- set the attributes of one file.
- .PP
- .B [Cancel]
- cancel the Chattr command.
- .\"NODE "File Operations"
- .SH "File Operations"
- When you copy, move or delete files, Midnight Commander shows the
- file operations dialog. It shows the files currently being processed
- and uses up to three progress bars. The file bar indicates the
- percentage of the current file that has been processed so far. The
- count bar shows how many of the tagged files have been handled. The
- bytes bar indicates the percentage of the total size of the tagged files
- that has been handled. If the verbose option is off, the file and bytes
- bars are not shown.
- .PP
- There are two buttons at the bottom of the dialog. Pressing the Skip
- button will skip the rest of the current file. Pressing the Abort
- button will abort the whole operation, the rest of the files are
- skipped.
- .PP
- There are three other dialogs which you can run into during the file
- operations.
- .PP
- The error dialog informs about error conditions and has three choices.
- Normally you select either the Skip button to skip the file or the Abort
- button to abort the operation altogether. You can also select the Retry
- button if you fixed the problem from another terminal.
- .PP
- The replace dialog is shown when you attempt to copy or move a file on
- the top of an existing file. The dialog shows the dates and sizes of
- the both files. Press the Yes button to overwrite the file, the No
- button to skip the file, the All button to overwrite all the files, the
- None button to never overwrite and the Update button to overwrite if the
- source file is newer than the target file. You can abort the whole
- operation by pressing the Abort button.
- .PP
- The recursive delete dialog is shown when you try to delete a directory
- which is not empty. Press the Yes button to delete the directory
- recursively, the No button to skip the directory, the All button to
- delete all the directories and the None button to skip all the non\-empty
- directories. You can abort the whole operation by pressing the Abort
- button. If you selected the Yes or All button you will be asked for a
- confirmation. Type "yes" only if you are really sure you want to do the
- recursive delete.
- .PP
- If you have tagged files and perform an operation on them only the files
- on which the operation succeeded are untagged. Failed and skipped files
- are left tagged.
- .\"NODE "Mask Copy/Rename"
- .SH "Mask Copy/Rename"
- The copy/move operations let you translate the names of files in an
- easy way. To do it, you have to specify the correct source mask and
- usually in the trailing part of the destination specify some wildcards.
- All the files matching the source mask are copied/renamed according to
- the target mask. If there are tagged files, only the tagged files
- matching the source mask are renamed.
- .PP
- There are other options which you can set:
- .PP
- .B Follow links
- .PP
- determines whether make the symlinks and hardlinks in the source
- directory (recursively in subdirectories) new links in the target
- directory or whether would you like to copy their content.
- .PP
- .B Dive into subdirs
- .PP
- determines the behavior when the source directory is about to be copied,
- but the target directory already exists. The default action is to copy
- the contents of the source directory into the target directory.
- Enabling this option causes copying the source directory itself into the
- target directory.
- .PP
- For example, you want to copy directory
- .I /foo
- containing file
- .I bar
- to
- .IR /bla/foo ,
- which is an already existing directory. Normally (when
- .B Dive into subdirs
- is not set), mc would copy file
- .I /foo/bar
- into the file
- .IR /bla/foo/bar .
- By enabling this option the
- .I /bla/foo/foo
- directory will be created, and
- .I /foo/bar
- will be copied into
- .IR /bla/foo/foo/bar .
- .PP
- .B Preserve attributes
- .PP
- determines whether to preserve the permissions, timestamps and (if you
- are root) the ownership of the original files. If this option is not
- set, the current value of the umask will be respected.
- .PP
- .B Use shell patterns
- .PP
- When this option is on you can use the '*' and '?' wildcards in the source
- mask. They work like they do in the shell. In the target mask only the '*'
- and '\\<digit>' wildcards are allowed. The first '*' wildcard in the target
- mask corresponds to the first wildcard group in the source mask,
- the second '*' corresponds to the second group and so on. The '\\1' wildcard
- corresponds to the first wildcard group in the source mask, the '\\2' wildcard
- corresponds to the second group and so on all the way up to '\\9'.
- The '\\0' wildcard is the whole filename of the source file.
- .PP
- Two examples:
- .PP
- If the source mask is "*.tar.gz", the destination is "/bla/*.tgz" and the
- file to be copied is "foo.tar.gz", the copy will be "foo.tgz" in "/bla".
- .PP
- Suppose you want to swap basename and extension so that "file.c" would
- become "c.file" and so on. The source mask for this is "*.*" and the
- destination is "\\2.\\1".
- .PP
- .B Use shell patterns off
- .PP
- When the shell patterns option is off the MC doesn't do automatic
- grouping anymore. You must use '\\(...\\)' expressions in the source
- mask to specify meaning for the wildcards in the target mask. This is
- more flexible but also requires more typing. Otherwise target masks
- are similar to the situation when the shell patterns option is on.
- .PP
- Two examples:
- .PP
- If the source mask is "^\\(.*\\)\\.tar\\.gz$", the destination is
- "/bla/*.tgz" and the file to be copied is "foo.tar.gz", the copy
- will be "/bla/foo.tgz".
- .PP
- Let's suppose you want to swap basename and extension so that "file.c"
- will become "c.file" and so on. The source mask for this is
- "^\\(.*\\)\\.\\(.*\\)$" and the destination is "\\2.\\1".
- .PP
- .B Case Conversions
- .PP
- You can also change the case of the filenames. If you use '\\u'
- or '\\l' in the target mask, the next character will be converted to
- uppercase or lowercase correspondingly.
- .PP
- If you use '\\U' or '\\L' in the target mask, the next characters will
- be converted to uppercase or lowercase correspondingly up to the
- next '\\E' or next '\\U', '\\L' or the end of the file name.
- .PP
- The '\\u' and '\\l' are stronger than '\\U' and '\\L'.
- .PP
- For example, if the source mask is '*' (
- .I Use shell patterns
- on) or '^\\(.*\\)$' (
- .I Use shell patterns
- off) and the target mask is '\\L\\u*' the file names will be converted
- to have initial upper case and otherwise lower case.
- .PP
- You can also use '\\' as a quote character. For example, '\\\\' is
- a backslash and '\\*' is an asterisk.
- .PP
- .B Stable symlinks
- .PP
- commands Midnight Commander, that it should change symlinks in the target,
- so that they'll point to the same location as it did before. With absolute
- symbolic links this does nothing, but if you have a relative one, it will
- recompute its value, adding necessary ../ and other directory parts and making
- the value as short as possible (most modern filesystems keep short symlinks
- inside inodes and thus don't waste much disk space).
- .\"NODE "Select/Unselect Files"
- .SH "Select/Unselect Files"
- The dialog of group of files and directories selection or uselection.
- The
- .\"LINK2"
- input line
- .\"Input Line Keys"
- allow enter the regular expression of filenames that will be
- selected/unselected.
- .PP
- When
- .I Files only
- checkbox is on, only files will be selected. If
- .I Files only
- is off, as files as directories will be selected.
- When
- .I Shell Patterns
- checkbox is on, the regular expression is much like the filename globbing
- in the shell (* standing for zero or more characters and ? standing
- for one character). If
- .I Shell Patterns
- is off, then the tagging of files is done with normal regular
- expressions (see ed (1)). When
- .I Case sensitive
- checkbox is on, the selection will be case sensitive characters.
- If
- .I Case sensitive
- is off, the case will be ignored.
- .\"NODE "Diff Viewer"
- .SH "Internal Diff Viewer"
- The mcdiff is a visual diff tool. You can compare two files and edit them
- in\-place (diffs are updated dynamically). You can browse and view a working
- copy from popular version control systems (GIT, Subversion, etc).
- .PP
- Following shortcuts are available in internal diff viewer of Midnight
- Commander.
- .TP
- .B F1
- Invoke the built\-in hypertext help viewer.
- .TP
- .B F2
- Save modified files.
- .TP
- .B F4
- Edit file of the left panel in the internal editor.
- .TP
- .B F14
- Edit file of the right panel in the internal editor.
- .TP
- .B F5
- Merge the current hunk. Only the current hunk will be merged.
- .TP
- .B F7
- Start search.
- .TP
- .B F17
- Continue search.
- .TP
- .B F10, Esc, q
- Exit from diff viewer.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-s, s
- Toggle show of hunk status.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-n, l
- Toggle show of line numbers.
- .TP
- .B f
- Maximize left panel.
- .TP
- .B =
- Make panels equal in width.
- .TP
- .B >
- Reduce the size of the right panel.
- .TP
- .B <
- Reduce the size of the left panel.
- .TP
- .B c
- Toggle show of trailing carriage return (CR) symbol as ^M.
- .TP
- .B 2, 3, 4, 8
- Set tabulation size
- .TP
- .B C\-u
- Swap contents of diff panels.
- .TP
- .B C\-r
- Refresh the screen.
- .TP
- .B C\-o
- Switch to the subshell and show the command screen.
- .TP
- .B Enter, Space, n
- Find next diff hunk.
- .TP
- .B Backspace, p
- Find previous diff hunk.
- .TP
- .B g
- Go to line.
- .TP
- .B Down
- Scroll one line forward.
- .TP
- .B Up
- Scroll one line backward.
- .TP
- .B PageUp
- Move one page up.
- .TP
- .B PageDown
- Mves one page down.
- .TP
- .B Home, A1
- Moves to the line beginning.
- .TP
- .B End
- Moves to the line end.
- .TP
- .B C\-Home
- Move to the file beginning.
- .TP
- .B C\-End, C1
- Move to the file end.
- .\"NODE "Internal File Viewer"
- .SH "Internal File Viewer"
- The internal file viewer provides two display modes: ASCII and hex.
- To toggle between modes, use the F4 key.
- .PP
- The viewer will try to use the best method provided by your system or
- the file type to display the information.
- Some character sequences, which appear most often in preformatted manual
- pages, are displayed bold and underlined, thus making a pretty display
- of your files.
- .PP
- When in hex mode, the search function accepts text in quotes and
- constant numbers. Text in quotes is matched exactly after removing
- the quotes. Each number matches one byte. You can mix quoted text
- with constants like this:
- .PP
- .nf
- "String" 34 0xBB 012 "more text"
- .fi
- .PP
- Numbers are always interpreted in hex. In the example above, "34" is
- interpreted as 0x34. The prefix "0x" isn't really needed: we could type
- "BB" instead of "0xBB". And "012" is interpreted as 0x12, not as an octal
- number.
- .PP
- Here is a listing of the actions associated with each key that the
- Midnight Commander handles in the internal file viewer.
- .TP
- .B F1
- Invoke the built\-in hypertext help viewer.
- .TP
- .B F2
- Toggle the wrap mode.
- .TP
- .B F4
- Toggle the hex mode.
- .TP
- .B F5
- Goto. You can specify a line number, offset or percentage of file size
- of position that you want to view.
- .TP
- .B F7, /, ?
- Start search. These keys call the dialog window that allows you to set up
- the search options. If key is ? the "Backwards" option is on.
- .TP
- .B C\-s
- Continue forward search.
- .TP
- .B C\-r
- Continue reverse search.
- .TP
- .B F17, n
- Continue search in the chosen direction.
- .TP
- .B N
- Temporary change the search direction: backwards if forward search is chosen,
- and vice versa.
- .TP
- .B F8
- Toggle Raw/Parsed mode: This will show the file as found on disk or if
- a processing filter has been specified in the mc.ext.ini file, then the
- output from the filter. Current mode is always the other than written
- on the button label, since on the button is the mode which you enter
- by that key.
- .TP
- .B F9
- Toggle the format/unformat mode: when format mode is on the viewer
- will interpret some string sequences to show bold and underline with
- different colors. Also, on button label is the other mode than current.
- .TP
- .B F10, Esc.
- Exit the internal file viewer.
- .TP
- .B PageDown, space, C\-v.
- Scroll one page forward.
- .TP
- .B PageUp, Alt\-v, C\-b, Backspace.
- Scroll one page backward.
- .TP
- .B Down
- Scroll one line forward.
- .TP
- .B Up
- Scroll one line backward.
- .TP
- .B C\-l
- Refresh the screen.
- .TP
- .B C\-o
- Switch to the subshell and show the command screen.
- .TP
- .B "[n] m"
- Set the mark n.
- .TP
- .B "[n] r"
- Jump to the mark n.
- .TP
- .B C\-f
- Jump to the next file.
- .TP
- .B C\-b
- Jump to the previous file.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-r
- Toggle the ruler.
- .TP
- .B Alt\-e
- to change charset of displayed text may use Alt\-e (M\-e).
- Recoding is made from selected codepage into system codepage. To
- cancel the recoding you may select "<No translation>" in charset
- selection dialog.
- .PP
- It's possible to instruct the file viewer how to display a file, look
- at the
- .\"LINK2"
- Edit Extension File section
- .\"Edit Extension File"
- .\"NODE "Internal File Editor"
- .SH "Internal File Editor"
- The internal file editor is a full\-featured full screen editor. It can
- edit files up to 64 megabytes. It is possible to edit binary files.
- The internal file editor is invoked using
- .B F4
- if the
- .I use_internal_edit
- option is set in the initialization file.
- .PP
- The features it presently supports are: block copy, move, delete, cut,
- paste; key for key undo; pull\-down menus; file insertion; macro
- commands; regular expression search and replace; S\-arrow text highlighting
- (if supported by the terminal); insert\-overwrite toggle; word wrap;
- autoindent; tunable tab size; syntax highlighting for various file
- types; and an option to pipe text blocks through shell commands like
- indent and ispell.
- .PP
- Sections:
- .IP
- .\"LINK2"
- Options of editor in ini\-file
- .\"Internal File Editor / options"
- .PP
- The editor is very easy to use and requires no tutoring. To see what
- keys do what, just consult the appropriate pull\-down menu. Other keys
- are: Shift movement keys do text highlighting.
- .B C\-Ins
- copies to the file
- .B mcedit.clip
- and
- .B S\-Ins
- pastes from mcedit.clip.
- .B S\-Del
- cuts to
- .BR mcedit.clip ,
- and
- .B C\-Del
- deletes highlighted text. Mouse highlighting also works, and you
- can override the mouse as usual by holding down the shift key
- while dragging the mouse to let normal terminal mouse highlighting
- work.
- .PP
- To define a macro, press
- .B C\-R
- and then type out the key
- strokes you want to be executed. Press
- .B C\-R
- again when finished. You can then assign the macro to any key you
- like by pressing that key. The macro is executed when you press
- .B C\-A
- and then the assigned key. The macro is also executed if
- you press Meta, Ctrl, or Esc and the assigned key, provided that the
- key is not used for any other function. Once defined, the macro
- commands go into the file
- .B ~/.local/share/mc/mcedit/mcedit.macros
- You can delete a macro by deleting the
- appropriate line in this file.
- .PP
- To change charset of displayed text may use Alt\-e (M\-e).
- Recoding is made from selected codepage into system codepage. To
- cancel the recoding you may select "<No translation>" in charset
- selection dialog.
- .PP
- .B F19
- will format the currently highlighted block (plain text or C or C++
- code or another). This is controlled by the
- file
- .B %pkgdatadir%/edit.indent.rc
- which is copied to
- .B ~/.local/share/mc/mcedit/edit.indent.rc
- in your home directory the first time you use it.
- .PP
- The editor also displays non\-us characters (160+). When editing
- binary files, you should set
- .B display bits
- to 7 bits in the options menu to keep the spacing clean.
- .\"NODE "Internal File Editor / options"
- .SH "Options of editor in ini\-file"
- Some editor options of ini\-file are described in this section.
- Options are placed in [Midnight\-Commander] section
- .TP
- .I editor_wordcompletion_collect_entire_file
- Search autocomplete candidates in entire of file or just from
- begin of file to cursor position (0)
- .\"NODE "Screen selector"
- .SH "Screen selector"
- Midnight Commander supports running many internal modules (such as
- editor, viewer and diff viewer) simultaneously and switching between
- them without closing open files. Using several file managers at a time,
- however, is not currently supported.
- .PP
- Let's call each of these modules a screen. There are three ways to
- switch between screens, using one of these global shortcuts:
- .TP
- .B Alt\-}
- switch to the next screen;
- .TP
- .B Alt\-{
- switch to the previous screen;
- .TP
- .B Alt\-`
- open a dialog window with the list of currently open screens (or use the
- "Screen list" menu item).
- .\"NODE "Completion"
- .SH "Completion"
- Let Midnight Commander type for you.
- .PP
- Attempt to perform completion on the text before current position. MC
- attempts completion treating the text as variable (if the text begins
- with
- .BR $ ),
- username (if the text begins with
- .BR ~ ),
- hostname (if the text begins with
- .BR @ )
- or command (if you are on the command line in the position where you
- might type a command, possible completions then include shell reserved
- words and shell built\-in commands as well) in turn. If none of these
- matches, filename completion is attempted.
- .PP
- Filename, username, variable and hostname completion works on all input
- lines, command completion is command line specific. If the completion
- is ambiguous (there are more different possibilities), MC beeps and the
- following action depends on the setting of the
- .\"LINK2"
- Complete: show all
- .\"Configuration"
- option in the
- .\"LINK2"
- Configuration
- .\"Configuration"
- dialog. If it is enabled, a list of all possibilities pops up next to
- the current position and you can select with the arrow keys and
- .B Enter
- the correct entry. You can also type the first letters in which the
- possibilities differ to move to a subset of all possibilities and
- complete as much as possible. If you press
- .B Alt\-Tab
- again, only the subset will be shown in the listbox, otherwise the first
- item which matches all the previous characters will be highlighted. As
- soon as there is no ambiguity, dialog disappears, but you can hide it by
- canceling keys
- .BR Esc ,
- .B F10
- and left and right arrow keys. If
- .\"LINK2"
- Complete: show all
- .\"Configuration"
- is disabled, the dialog pops up only if you press
- .B Alt\-Tab
- for the second time, for the first time MC just beeps.
- .PP
- Apply escaping of \fB?\fR, \fB*\fR, and \fB&\fR symbols (as \fB\\?\fR, \fB\\*\fR,
- and \fB\\&\fR) in filenames to disallow use them as metasymbols in regular
- expressions when substitution is performed in the input line.
- .\"NODE "Virtual File System"
- .SH "Virtual File System"
- Midnight Commander is provided with a code layer to access the file
- system; this code layer is known as the virtual file system switch. The
- virtual file system switch allows Midnight Commander to manipulate
- files not located on the Unix file system.
- .PP
- Currently, Midnight Commander is packaged with some Virtual File
- Systems (VFS): the
- .I local
- file system, used for accessing the regular Unix file system; the
- .IR ftpfs ,
- used to manipulate files on remote systems with the FTP protocol; the
- .IR tarfs ,
- used to manipulate tar and compressed tar files; the
- .IR undelfs ,
- used to recover deleted files on ext2 file systems (the default file
- system for Linux systems),
- .I shell
- (for manipulating files over shell connections such as rsh and ssh).
- If the code was compiled with
- .I sftpfs
- (for manipulating files over SFTP connections).
- .PP
- A generic
- .I extfs
- (EXTernal virtual File System) is provided in order to easily expand
- VFS capabilities using scripts and external software.
- .PP
- The VFS switch code will interpret all of the path names used and will
- forward them to the correct file system, the formats used for each one
- of the file systems is described later in their own section.
- .\"NODE " FTP File System"
- .SH " FTP File System"
- The FTP File System (ftpfs) allows you to manipulate files on remote
- machines. To actually use it, you can use the
- .I FTP link
- item in the menu or directly change your current directory using the
- .I cd
- command to a path name that looks like this:
- .PP
- .I ftp://[!][user[:pass]@]machine[:port][remote\-dir]
- .PP
- The
- .IR user ,
- .I port
- and
- .I remote\-dir
- elements are optional. If you specify the
- .I user
- element, Midnight Commander will login to the remote machine as that
- user, otherwise it will use anonymous login or the login name from the
- .I ~/.netrc
- file. The optional
- .I pass
- element is the password used for the connection. Using the password in
- the VFS directory name is not recommended, because it can appear on the
- screen in clear text and can be saved to the directory history.
- .PP
- To enable using FTP proxy, prepend
- .B !
- (an exclamation sign) to the hostname.
- .PP
- Examples:
- .PP
- .nf
- ftp://ftp.nuclecu.unam.mx/linux/local
- ftp://tsx\-11.mit.edu/pub/linux/packages
- ftp://!behind.firewall.edu/pub
- ftp://guest@remote\-host.com:40/pub
- ftp://miguel:xxx@server/pub
- .fi
- .PP
- Please check the
- .\"LINK2"
- Virtual File System
- .\"Virtual FS"
- dialog box for ftpfs options.
- .\"NODE " Tar File System"
- .SH " Tar File System"
- The tar file system provides you with read\-only access to your tar
- files and compressed tar files by using the chdir command. To change
- your directory to a tar file, you change your current directory to the
- tar file by using the following syntax:
- .PP
- .I /filename.tar/utar://[dir\-inside\-tar]
- .PP
- The mc.ext.ini file already provides a shortcut for tar files, this means
- that usually you just point to a tar file and press return to enter
- into the tar file, see the
- .\"LINK2"
- Edit Extension File
- .\"Edit Extension File"
- section for details on how this is done.
- .PP
- Examples:
- .PP
- .nf
- mc\-3.0.tar.gz/utar://mc\-3.0/vfs
- /ftp/GCC/gcc\-2.7.0.tar/utar://
- .fi
- .PP
- The latter specifies the full path of the tar archive.
- .\"NODE " FIle transfer over SHell filesystem"
- .SH " FIle transfer over SHell filesystem"
- The shell file system is a network based file system that allows you to
- manipulate the files in a remote machine as if they were local. To use
- this, the other side has to have bash\-compatible shell.
- .PP
- To connect to a remote machine, you just need to chdir
- into a special directory which name is in the following
- format:
- .PP
- .I sh://[user@]machine[:options]/[remote\-dir]
- .PP
- The
- .I user,
- .I options
- and
- .I remote\-dir
- elements are optional. If you specify the
- .I user
- element, Midnight Commander will try to login on the remote
- machine as that user, otherwise it will use your login name.
- .PP
- The available
- .I options
- are:
- .nf
- 'C' \- use compression;
- 'r' \- use rsh instead of ssh;
- port \- specify the port used by remote server.
- .fi
- If the
- .I remote\-dir
- element is present, your current directory on the remote machine will be
- set to this one.
- .PP
- Examples:
- .PP
- .nf
- sh://onlyrsh.mx:r/linux/local
- sh://joe@want.compression.edu:C/private
- sh://joe@noncompressed.ssh.edu/private
- sh://joe@somehost.ssh.edu:2222/private
- .fi
- .\"NODE " SFTP (SSH File Transfer Protocol) filesystem"
- .SH " SFTP (SSH File Transfer Protocol) filesystem"
- The SFTP file system is a network based file system that allows you to
- manipulate the files in a remote machine as if they were local.
- .PP
- To connect to a remote machine, you just need to chdir
- into a special directory which name is in the following
- format:
- .PP
- .I sftp://[user@]machine:[port]/[remote\-dir]
- .PP
- The
- .I user,
- .I port
- and
- .I remote\-dir
- elements are optional. If you specify the
- .I user
- element, Midnight Commander will try to login on the remote
- machine as that user, otherwise it will use your login name.
- .I port
- \- specify the port used by remote server (22 by default).
- If the
- .I remote\-dir
- element is present, your current directory on the remote machine will be
- set to this one.
- .PP
- Examples:
- .PP
- .nf
- sftp://onlyrsh.mx/linux/local
- sftp://joe:password@want.compression.edu/private
- sftp://joe@noncompressed.ssh.edu/private
- sftp://joe@somehost.ssh.edu:2222/private
- .fi
- .PP
- When establishing the connection, server key fingerprint is verified using
- the ~/.ssh/known_hosts file. If the host/key pair is not found or the host is found,
- but the key doesn't match, an appropriate message is shown.
- There are three buttons in the message dialog:
- .PP
- .B [Yes]
- add new host/key pair to the ~/.ssh/known_hosts file and continue.
- .PP
- .B [Ignore]
- do not add new host/key pair to the ~/.ssh/known_hosts file, but continue
- nevertheless (at you own risk).
- .PP
- .B [No]
- abort connection.
- .\"NODE " Undelete File System"
- .SH " Undelete File System"
- On Linux systems, if you asked configure to use the ext2fs undelete
- facilities, you will have the undelete file system available.
- Recovery of deleted files is only available on ext2 file systems. The
- undelete file system is just an interface to the ext2fs library to
- retrieve all of the deleted files names on an ext2fs and provides and
- to extract the selected files into a regular partition.
- .PP
- To use this file system, you have to chdir into the special file name
- formed by the "undel://" prefix and the file name where the actual
- file system resides.
- .PP
- For example, to recover deleted files on the second partition of the
- first SCSI disk on Linux, you would use the following path name:
- .PP
- .nf
- undel://sda2
- .fi
- .PP
- It may take a while for the undelfs to load the required information
- before you start browsing files there.
- .\"NODE " EXTernal File System"
- .SH " EXTernal File System"
- .B extfs
- allows you to integrate numerous features and file types into GNU Midnight
- Commander in an easy way, by writing scripts.
- .PP
- Extfs filesystems can be divided into two categories:
- .PP
- 1. Stand\-alone filesystems, which are not associated with any existing
- file. They represent certain system\-wide data as a directory tree.
- You can invoke them by typing
- .I "cd fsname://"
- where fsname is an extfs short name (see below). Examples of such
- filesystems include audio (list audio tracks on the CD) or apt (list of
- all Debian packages in the system).
- .PP
- For example, to list CD\-Audio tracks on your CD\-ROM drive, type
- .PP
- .nf
- cd audio://
- .fi
- .PP
- 2. 'Archive' filesystems (like rpm, patchfs and more), which represent
- contents of a file as a directory tree. It can consist of 'real' files
- compressed in an archive (urar, rpm) or virtual files, like messages
- in a mailbox (mailfs) or parts of a patch (patchfs). To access such
- filesystems
- .I fsname://
- should be appended to the archive name. Note that the archive itself
- can be on another vfs.
- .PP
- For example, to list contents of a zip archive documents.zip type
- .PP
- .nf
- cd documents.zip/uzip://
- .fi
- .PP
- In many aspects, you could treat extfs like any other directory. For
- instance, you can add it to the hotlist or change to it from directory
- history. An important limitation is that you cannot invoke shell
- commands inside extfs, just like any other non\-local VFS.
- .PP
- Common extfs scripts included with Midnight Commander are:
- .TP
- .B a
- access 'A:' DOS/Windows diskette
- .RI ( "cd a://" ).
- .TP
- .B apt
- front end to Debian's APT package management system
- .RI ( "cd apt://" ).
- .TP
- .B audio
- audio CD ripping and playing
- .RI ( "cd audio://"
- or
- .IR "cd device/audio://" ).
- .TP
- .B bpp
- package of Bad Penguin GNU/Linux distribution
- .RI ( "cd file.bpp/bpp://" ).
- .TP
- .B deb
- package of Debian GNU/Linux distribution
- .RI ( "cd file.deb/deb://" ).
- .TP
- .B dpkg
- Debian GNU/Linux installed packages
- .RI ( "cd deb://" ).
- .TP
- .B hp48
- view and copy files to/from a HP48 calculator
- .RI ( "cd hp48://" ).
- .TP
- .B lslR
- browsing of lslR listings as found on many FTPs
- .RI ( "cd filename/lslR://" ).
- .TP
- .B mailfs
- mbox\-style mailbox files support
- .RI ( "cd mailbox/mailfs://" ).
- .TP
- .B patchfs
- extfs to handle unified and context diffs
- .RI ( "cd filename/patchfs://" ).
- .TP
- .B rpm
- RPM package
- .RI ( "cd filename/rpm://" ).
- .TP
- .B rpms
- RPM database management
- .RI ( "cd rpms://" ).
- .TP
- .B ulha, urar, uzip, uzoo, uar, uha
- archivers
- .RI ( "cd archive/xxxx://"
- where xxxx is one of:
- .IR ulha ,
- .IR urar ,
- .IR uzip ,
- .IR uzoo ,
- .IR uar ,
- .IR uha ).
- .PP
- You could bind file type/extension to specified extfs as described in the
- .\"LINK2"
- Edit Extension File
- .\"Edit Extension File"
- section. Here is an example entry for Debian packages:
- .PP
- .nf
- regex/\.deb$
- Open=%cd %p/deb://
- .fi
- .\"NODE "Colors"
- .SH "Colors"
- Midnight Commander will try to detect if your terminal supports
- color using the terminal database and your terminal name. Sometimes
- it gets confused, so you may force color mode or disable color mode
- using the \-c and \-b flag respectively.
- .PP
- If the program is compiled with the S\-Lang screen manager instead of
- ncurses, it will also check the variable
- .B COLORTERM,
- if it is set, it has the same effect as the \-c flag.
- .PP
- You may specify terminals that always force color mode
- by adding the
- .I color_terminals
- variable to the Colors section of the initialization file. This will
- prevent Midnight Commander from trying to detect if your terminal
- supports color. Example:
- .PP
- .nf
- [Colors]
- color_terminals=linux,xterm
- color_terminals=terminal\-name1,terminal\-name2...
- .fi
- .PP
- The program can be compiled with both ncurses and S\-Lang, ncurses does
- not provide a way to force color mode: ncurses uses just the
- information in the terminal database.
- .PP
- Midnight Commander provides a way to change the default colors.
- Currently the colors are configured using the environment variable
- .B MC_COLOR_TABLE
- or the Colors section in the initialization file.
- .PP
- In the Colors section, the default color map is loaded from the
- .I base_color
- variable. You can specify an alternate color map for a terminal by
- using the terminal name as the key in this section. Example:
- .PP
- .nf
- [Colors]
- base_color=
- xterm=menu=magenta:marked=,magenta:markselect=,red
- .fi
- .PP
- The format for the color definition is:
- .PP
- .nf
- <keyword>=<fgcolor>,<bgcolor>,<attributes>:<keyword>=...
- .fi
- .PP
- The colors are optional, and the keywords are: normal, selected, disabled, marked,
- markselect, errors, input, inputmark, inputunchanged, commandlinemark,
- reverse, gauge, header, inputhistory, commandhistory. Button bar colors are:
- bbarhotkey, bbarbutton. Status bar color: statusbar. Menu colors are: menunormal,
- menusel, menuhot, menuhotsel, menuinactive. Dialog colors are: dnormal, dfocus,
- dhotnormal, dhotfocus, dtitle. Error dialog colors are: errdfocus, errdhotnormal,
- errdhotfocus, errdtitle. Help colors are: helpnormal, helpitalic, helpbold,
- helplink, helpslink, helptitle. Viewer colors are: viewnormal, viewbold,
- viewunderline, viewselected. Editor colors are: editnormal, editbold, editmarked,
- editwhitespace, editnonprintable, editlinestate. Popup menu colors are: pmenunormal,
- pmenusel, pmenutitle.
- .PP
- .I header
- determines the color of panel header, the line that contains column titles
- and sort mode indicator.
- .PP
- .I input
- determines the color of input lines used in query dialogs.
- .PP
- .I gauge
- determines the color of the filled part of the progress bar (gauge),
- which is used to show the user the progress of file operations, such as
- copying.
- .PP
- .I disabled
- determines the color of the widget that cannot be selected.
- .PP
- The dialog boxes use the following colors:
- .I dnormal
- is used for the normal text,
- .I dfocus
- is the color used for the currently selected component,
- .I dhotnormal
- is the color used to differentiate the hotkey color in normal
- components, whereas the
- .I dhotfocus
- color is used for the highlighted color in the currently selected
- component.
- .PP
- Menus use the same scheme but uses the menunormal, menusel, menuhot, menuhotsel
- and menuinactive tags instead.
- .PP
- Help uses the following colors:
- .I helpnormal
- is used for normal text,
- .I helpitalic
- is used for text which is emphasized in italic in the manual page,
- .I helpbold
- is used for text which is emphasized in bold in the manual page,
- .I helplink
- is used for not selected hyperlinks and
- .I helpslink
- is used for selected hyperlink.
- .PP
- Popup menu uses following colors:
- .I pmenunormal
- is used for non\-selected menu items and as a main color of popup menu window,
- .I pmenusel
- is used for selected menu item,
- .I pmenutitle
- is used for popup menu title.
- .PP
- The possible colors are: black, gray, red, brightred, green,
- brightgreen, brown, yellow, blue, brightblue, magenta, brightmagenta,
- cyan, brightcyan, lightgray and white. And there is a special keyword
- for transparent background. It is 'default'. The 'default' can only be
- used for background color. Another special keyword "base" means mc's main
- colors. When 256 colors are available, they can be specified either as
- color16 to color255, or as rgb000 to rgb555 and gray0 to gray23. Example:
- .PP
- .nf
- [Colors]
- base_color=normal=white,default:marked=magenta,default
- .fi
- .PP
- Attributes can be any of bold, italic, underline, reverse and blink, appended by a
- plus sign if more than one are desired. The special word "none" means no
- attributes, without attempting to fall back to base_color. Example:
- .PP
- .nf
- menuhotsel=yellow;black;bold+underline
- .fi
- .\"NODE "Skins"
- .SH "Skins"
- You can change the appearance of Midnight Commander.
- To do this, you must specify a file that contain descriptions of colors
- and lines to draw boxes. Redefining of the colors is entirely compatible
- with the assignment of colors, as described in Section
- .\"LINK2"
- Colors\&.
- .\"Colors"
- .PP
- If your skin contains any true\-color definitions, you should define
- the 'truecolors' key set to TRUE value in [skin] section. If true\-color
- is not used but 256\-color is, you should define '256colors' instead.
- .PP
- A skin\-file is searched on the following algorithm (to the first one found):
- .IP
- .br
- 1) command line option
- .B \-S <skin>
- or
- .B \-\-skin=<skin>
- .br
- 2) Environment variable
- .B MC_SKIN
- .br
- 3) Parameter
- .B skin
- in section
- .B [Midnight\-Commander]
- in config file.
- .br
- 4) File
- .B %sysconfdir%/mc/skins/default.ini
- .br
- 5) File
- .B %pkgdatadir%/skins/default.ini
- .PP
- Command line option, environment variable and parameter in config file may
- contain the absolute path to the skin\-file (with the extension \.ini
- or without it). Search of skin\-file will occur in (to the first one found):
- .IP
- 1)
- .B ~/.local/share/mc/skins/
- .br
- 2)
- .B %sysconfdir%/mc/skins/
- .br
- 3)
- .B %pkgdatadir%/skins/
- .br
- .PP
- For getting extended info, refer to:
- .IP
- .\"LINK2"
- Description of section and parameters
- .\"Skins sections"
- .br
- .\"LINK2"
- Color pair definitions
- .\"Skins colors"
- .br
- .\"LINK2"
- Color and attribute aliases
- .\"Skins aliases"
- .br
- .\"LINK2"
- Draw lines
- .\"Skins lines"
- .br
- .\"LINK2"
- Compatibility
- .\"Skins oldcolors"
- .br
- .\"NODE " Skins sections"
- .SH " Description of section and parameters"
- Section
- .B [skin]
- contain metainfo for skin\-file. Parameter
- .I description
- contain short text about skin.
- .PP
- Section
- .B [filehighlight]
- contain descriptions of color pairs for filenames highlighting.
- Name of parameters must be equal to names of sections into
- filehighlight.ini file.
- See
- .\"LINK2"
- Filenames Highlight
- .\"Filenames Highlight"
- for getting more info.
- .PP
- Section
- .B [core]
- describes the elements that are used everywhere.
- .TP
- .I _default_
- Default color pair. Used in all other sections if they not contain
- color definitions
- .TP
- .I selected
- cursor
- .TP
- .I marked
- selected data
- .TP
- .I markselect
- cursor on selected data
- .TP
- .I gauge
- color of the filled part of the progress bar
- .TP
- .I input
- color of input lines used in query dialogs
- .TP
- .I inputmark
- color of input selected text
- .TP
- .I inputunchanged
- color of input text before first modification or cursor movement
- .TP
- .I commandlinemark
- color of selected text in command line
- .TP
- .I reverse
- reverse color
- .PP
- Section
- .B [dialog]
- describes the elements that are placed on dialog windows (except error dialogs).
- .TP
- .I _default_
- Default color for this section. Used [core]._default_ if not specified
- .TP
- .I dfocus
- Color of active element (in focus)
- .TP
- .I dhotnormal
- Color of hotkeys
- .TP
- .I dhotfocus
- Color of hotkeys in focused element
- .PP
- Section
- .B [error]
- describes the elements that are placed on error dialog windows
- .TP
- .I _default_
- Default color for this section. Used [core]._default_ if not specified
- .TP
- .I errdhotnormal
- Color of hotkeys
- .TP
- .I errdhotfocus
- Color of hotkeys in focused element
- .PP
- Section
- .B [menu]
- describes the elements that are placed in menu. This section describes
- system menu (called by F9) and user\-defined menus (called by F2 in panels
- and by F11 in editor).
- .TP
- .I _default_
- Default color for this section. Used [core]._default_ if not specified
- .TP
- .I entry
- Color of menu items
- .TP
- .I menuhot
- Color of menu hotkeys
- .TP
- .I menusel
- Color of active menu item (in focus)
- .TP
- .I menuhotsel
- Color of menu hotkeys in focused menu item
- .TP
- .I menuinactive
- Color of inactive menu
- .PP
- Section
- .B [help]
- describes the elements that are placed on help window.
- .TP
- .I _default_
- Default color for this section. Used [core]._default_ if not specified
- .TP
- .I helpitalic
- Color pair for element with
- .B italic
- attribute
- .TP
- .I helpbold
- Color pair for element with
- .B bold
- attribute
- .TP
- .I helplink
- Color of links
- .TP
- .I helpslink
- Color of active link (on focus)
- .PP
- Section
- .B [editor]
- describes the colors of elements placed in editor.
- .TP
- .I _default_
- Default color for this section. Used [core]._default_ if not specified
- .TP
- .I editbold
- Color pair for element with
- .B bold
- attribute
- .TP
- .I editmarked
- Color of selected text
- .TP
- .I editwhitespace
- Color of tabs and trailing spaces highlighting
- .TP
- .I editlinestate
- Color for line state area
- .PP
- Section
- .B [viewer]
- describes the colors of elements placed in viewer.
- .TP
- .I viewunderline
- Color pair for element with
- .B underline
- attribute
- .\"NODE " Skins colors"
- .SH " Color pair definitions"
- Any parameter in skin\-file contain definition of color pair.
- .PP
- Color pairs described as two colors and the optional attributes
- separated by ';'. First field sets the foreground color, second
- field sets background color, third field sets the attributes.
- Any of the fields may be omitted, in this case value will be
- taken from default color pair (global color pair or from default
- color pair of this section).
- .PP
- Example:
- .br
- .nf
- [core]
- # green on black
- _default_=green;black
- # green (default) on blue
- selected=;blue
- # yellow on black (default)
- # underlined yellow on black (default)
- marked=yellow;;underline
- .fi
- .PP
- Possible colors (names) and attributes are described in
- .\"LINK2"
- Colors\&.
- .\"Colors"
- section.
- .\"NODE " Skins aliases"
- .SH " Color and attribute aliases"
- This optional section might define aliases for single colors (not color pairs)
- as well as combination of attributes; in other words, for semicolon\-separated
- fragments of parameters. Aliases can refer to other aliases as long as they
- don't form a loop.
- .PP
- Example:
- .br
- .nf
- [aliases]
- myfavfg=green
- myfavbg=black
- myfavattr=bold+italic
- [core]
- _default_=myfavfg;myfavbg;myfavattr
- .fi
- .\"NODE " Skins lines"
- .SH " Draw lines"
- Lines sets in section
- .B [Lines]
- into skin\-file. By default single lines are used, but you may redefine
- to usage of any utf\-8 symbols (like to lines, for example).
- .PP
- .I WARNING!!!
- When you build Midnight Commander with the ncurses screen library
- usage of drawing lines is limited!
- Possible only drawing a single lines.
- For all questions and comments please contact the developers of ncurses.
- .PP
- Descriptions of parameters
- .BR [Lines] :
- .TP
- .I lefttop
- left\-top line fragment.
- .TP
- .I righttop
- right\-top line fragment.
- .TP
- .I centertop
- down branch of horizontal line
- .TP
- .I centerbottom
- up branch of horizontal line
- .TP
- .I leftbottom
- left\-bottom line fragment
- .TP
- .I rightbottom
- right\-bottom line fragment
- .TP
- .I leftmiddle
- right branch of vertical line
- .TP
- .I rightmiddle
- left branch of vertical line
- .TP
- .I centermiddle
- cross of lines
- .TP
- .I horiz
- horizontal line
- .TP
- .I vert
- vertical line
- .TP
- .I thinhoriz
- thin horizontal line
- .TP
- .I thinvert
- thin vertical line
- .\"NODE " Skins oldcolors"
- .SH " Compatibility"
- Appointment of color by skin\-files fully compatible with
- the appointment of the colors described in
- .\"LINK2"
- Colors\&.
- .\"Colors"
- section.
- .PP
- In this case, reassignment of colors has priority over the skin file and is
- complementary.
- .\"NODE "Filenames Highlight"
- .SH "Filenames Highlight"
- Section [filehighlight] in current skin\-file contains key names as
- highlight groups and values as color pairs. Color pairs is documented
- in
- .\"LINK2"
- Skins
- .\"Skins"
- section.
- .PP
- Rules of filenames highlight are placed in %pkgdatadir%/filehighlight.ini file
- (~/.config/mc/filehighlight.ini).
- Name of section in this file must be equal to parameters names in
- [filehighlight] section (in current skin\-file).
- .PP
- Keys in these groups are:
- .TP
- .I type
- file type. If present, all other options are ignored.
- .TP
- .I regexp
- regular expression. If present, 'extensions' option is ignored.
- .TP
- .I extensions
- list of extensions of files. Separated by ';' sign.
- .TP
- .I extensions_case
- (make sense only with 'extensions' parameter) make 'extensions'
- rule case sensitive (true) or not (false).
- .PP
- `type' key may have values:
- .nf
- \- FILE (all files)
- \- FILE_EXE
- \- DIR (all directories)
- \- LINK_DIR
- \- LINK (all links except stale link)
- \- HARDLINK
- \- SYMLINK
- \- STALE_LINK
- \- DEVICE (all device files)
- \- DEVICE_BLOCK
- \- DEVICE_CHAR
- \- SPECIAL (all special files)
- \- SPECIAL_SOCKET
- \- SPECIAL_FIFO
- \- SPECIAL_DOOR
- .fi
- .PP
- .\"NODE "Special Settings"
- .SH "Special Settings"
- Most of Midnight Commander settings can be changed from the
- menus. However, there are a small number of settings which can only be
- changed by editing the setup file.
- .PP
- These variables may be set in your ~/.config/mc/ini file:
- .TP
- .I clear_before_exec
- By default, Midnight Commander clears the screen before executing a
- command. If you would prefer to see the output of the command at the
- bottom of the screen, edit your ~/.config/mc/ini file and change the value of
- the field clear_before_exec to 0.
- .TP
- .I confirm_view_dir
- If you press F3 on a directory, normally MC enters that directory. If
- this flag is set to 1, then MC will ask for confirmation before changing
- the directory if you have files tagged.
- .TP
- .I ftpfs_retry_seconds
- This value is the number of seconds Midnight Commander will wait
- before attempting to reconnect to an FTP server that has denied the
- login. If the value is zero, the login will no be retried.
- .TP
- .I max_dirt_limit
- Specifies how many screen updates can be skipped at most in the internal
- file viewer. Normally this value is not significant, because the code
- automatically adjusts the number of updates to skip according to the
- rate of incoming keystrokes. However, on very slow machines or
- terminals with a fast keyboard auto repeat, a big value can make screen
- updates too jumpy.
- .IP
- It seems that setting max_dirt_limit to 10 causes the best behavior,
- and that is the default value.
- .TP
- .I mouse_move_pages_viewer
- Controls if scrolling with the mouse is done by pages or line by line
- on the internal file viewer.
- .TP
- .I only_leading_plus_minus
- Allow special treatment for '+', '\-', '*' in the command line (select,
- unselect, reverse selection) only if the command line is empty. You
- don't need to quote those characters in the middle of the command line.
- On the other hand, you cannot use them to change selection when the
- command line is not empty.
- .TP
- .I alternate_plus_minus
- If true, use '+', '\-', '\\' and '*' keys normally. For select/unselect,
- use 'Alt\-+', 'Alt\--' and 'Alt\-*'.
- .TP
- .I show_output_starts_shell
- This variable only works if you are not using the subshell support.
- When you use the C\-o keystroke to go back to the user screen, if this
- one is set, you will get a fresh shell. Otherwise, pressing any key
- will bring you back to Midnight Commander.
- .TP
- .I timeformat_recent
- Change the time format used to display dates less than 6 months from
- now.
- See strftime or date man page for the format specification. If this
- option is absent, default timeformat is used.
- .TP
- .I timeformat_old
- Change the time format used to display dates older than 6 months from
- now or for dates in the future.
- See strftime or date man page for the format specification. If this
- option is absent, default timeformat is used.
- .TP
- .I torben_fj_mode
- If this flag is set, then the home and end keys will work slightly
- different on the panels, instead of moving the selection to the first
- and last files in the panels, they will act as follows:
- .IP
- The home key will: Go up to the middle line, if below it; else go to the
- top line unless it is already on the top line, in this case it will go
- to the first file in the panel.
- .IP
- The end key has a similar behavior: Go down to the middle line, if over
- it; else go to the bottom line unless you already are at the bottom
- line, in such case it will move the selection to the last file name in
- the panel.
- .TP
- .I use_file_to_guess_type
- If this variable is on (the default) it will spawn the file command to
- match the file types listed on the
- .\"LINK2"
- mc.ext.ini file\&.
- .\"Edit Extension File"
- .TP
- .I xtree_mode
- If this variable is on (default is off) when you browse the file system
- on a Tree panel, it will automatically reload the other panel with the
- contents of the selected directory.
- .TP
- .I shell_directory_timeout
- This variable holds the lifetime of a directory cache entry in seconds. The
- default value is 900 seconds.
- .TP
- .I clipboard_store
- This variable contains path (with options) to the external clipboard
- utility like 'xclip' to read text into X selection from file.
- For example:
- .PP
- .nf
- clipboard_store=xclip \-i
- .fi
- .TP
- .I clipboard_paste
- This variable contains path (with options) to the external clipboard
- utility like 'xclip' to print the selection to standard out.
- For example:
- .PP
- .nf
- clipboard_paste=xclip \-o
- .fi
- .TP
- .I autodetect_codeset
- This option allows use the `enca' command to autodetect codeset of text files
- in internal viewer and editor. List of valid values can be obtain by the
- `enca \-\-list languages | cut \-d : \-f1' command. Option must be located
- in the [Misc] section.
- .PP
- For example:
- .PP
- .nf
- autodetect_codeset=russian
- .fi
- .\"NODE "Parameters for external editor or viewer"
- .SH "Parameters for external editor or viewer"
- Midnight Commander provides a way for specify an options for external editors
- and viewers. Midnight Commander tries to search the
- "[External editor or viewer parameters]" section in the system initialization file
- (the mc.lib file located in Midnight Commander's library directory)
- and then in the ~/.config/mc/ini file. The option name should be equal to the name
- (full pathname) of external editor or viewer. The option value can contain following
- variables:
- .TP
- .I %filename
- The filename to edit/view.
- .TP
- .I %lineno
- The start line in the opening file.
- .PP
- For example:
- .PP
- .nf
- [External editor or viewer parameters]
- vi=%filename +%lineno
- joe=%filename +%lineno
- more=%filename +%lineno
- .fi
- .PP
- Start line is passed to the external editor/viewer only if it is called from the
- .\"LINK2"
- Find file
- .\"Find File"
- results window.
- .PP
- If external editor/viewer is launched via F4/F3 keys, MC hopes that program
- (at least "joe", but probably others too) has an own feature that by default
- opens the file where it was last open. MC doesn't prevent external editor/viewer
- to save and restore position in opened files.
- .\"NODE "Terminal databases"
- .SH "Terminal databases"
- Midnight Commander provides a way to fix your system terminal
- database without requiring root privileges. Midnight Commander
- searches in the system initialization file (the mc.lib file located in
- Midnight Commander's library directory) and in the
- ~/.config/mc/ini file for the section
- "terminal:your\-terminal\-name" and then for the section
- "terminal:general", each line of the section contains a key symbol that
- you want to define, followed by an equal sign and the definition for the
- key. You can use the special \\e form to represent the escape character
- and the ^x to represent the control\-x character.
- .PP
- The possible key symbols are:
- .PP
- .nf
- f0 to f20 Function keys f0\-f20
- bs backspace
- home home key
- end end key
- up up arrow key
- down down arrow key
- left left arrow key
- right right arrow key
- pgdn page down key
- pgup page up key
- insert the insert character
- delete the delete character
- complete to do completion
- .fi
- .PP
- For example, to define the key insert to be the Escape + [ + O + p, you
- set this in the ini file:
- .PP
- .nf
- insert=\\e[Op
- .fi
- .PP
- Also now you can use
- .I extended learn keys.
- For example:
- .nf
- ctrl\-alt\-right=\\e[[1;6C
- ctrl\-alt\-left=\\e[[1;6D
- .fi
- .PP
- This means that ctrl+alt+left sends a \\e[[1;6D escape sequence
- and therefore Midnight Commander interprets "\\e[[1;6D" as C\-Alt\-Left.
- .PP
- The
- .I complete
- key symbol represents the escape sequences used to invoke the completion
- process, this is invoked with Alt\-tab, but you can define other keys to do
- the same work (on those keyboard with tons of nice and unused keys
- everywhere).
- .SH ""
- .\"NODE "FILES"
- .SH "FILES"
- Full paths below may vary between installations. They are also affected
- by the
- .B MC_DATADIR
- environment variable. If it's set, its value is used instead of
- %pkgdatadir% in the paths below.
- .PP
- .I %pkgdatadir%/help/mc.hlp
- .IP
- The help file for the program.
- .PP
- .I %pkgdatadir%/mc.ext.ini
- .IP
- The default system\-wide extensions file.
- .PP
- .I ~/.config/mc/mc.ext.ini
- .IP
- User's own extension, view configuration and edit configuration
- file. They override the contents of the system wide files if present.
- .PP
- .I %sysconfdir%/mc/mc.ini
- .RE
- .I %pkgdatadir%/mc.ini
- .IP
- System\-wide setup files for Midnight Commander, used only if the user
- doesn't have his own
- .B ~/.config/mc/ini
- file. If %sysconfdir%/mc/mc.ini exists, %pkgdatadir%/mc.ini isn't used.
- .PP
- .I %pkgdatadir%/mc.lib
- .IP
- Global settings for Midnight Commander. Settings in this file
- affect all users, whether they have ~/.config/mc/ini or not. Currently, only
- .\"LINK2"
- terminal settings
- .\"Terminal databases"
- are loaded from mc.lib.
- .PP
- .I ~/.config/mc/ini
- .IP
- User's own setup. If this file is present then the setup is loaded
- from here instead of the system\-wide startup file.
- .PP
- .I %pkgdatadir%/hints/mc.hint
- .IP
- This file contains the hints displayed by the program.
- .PP
- .I %pkgdatadir%/mc.menu
- .IP
- This file contains the default system\-wide applications menu.
- .PP
- .I ~/.config/mc/menu
- .IP
- User's own application menu. If this file is present it is used instead
- of the system\-wide applications menu.
- .PP
- .I ~/.cache/mc/Tree
- .IP
- The directory list for the directory tree and tree view features.
- .PP
- .I ~/.local/share/mc.menu
- .IP
- Local user\-defined menu. If this file is present, it is used instead of
- the home or system\-wide applications menu.
- .PP
- To change default root directory of MC, you can use
- .B MC_PROFILE_ROOT
- environment variable. The value of MC_PROFILE_ROOT must be an absolute path.
- If MC_PROFILE_ROOT is unset or empty, HOME variable is used. If HOME is unset
- or empty, MC directories are get from GLib library.
- .\"SKIP_SECTION"
- .SH "LICENSE"
- This program is distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public
- License as published by the Free Software Foundation. See the built\-in
- help for details on the License and the lack of warranty.
- .\"NODE "AVAILABILITY"
- .SH "AVAILABILITY"
- The latest version of this program can be found at
- http://ftp.midnight\-commander.org/.
- .\"NODE "SEE ALSO"
- .SH "SEE ALSO"
- ed(1), gpm(1), terminfo(1), view(1), sh(1), bash(1),
- tcsh(1), zsh(1).
- .PP
- .nf
- Midnight Commander's page on the World Wide Web:
- https://www.midnight\-commander.org/
- .fi
- .\"NODE "AUTHORS"
- .SH "AUTHORS"
- Authors and contributors are listed in the AUTHORS file in the source
- distribution.
- .\"NODE "BUGS"
- .SH "BUGS"
- See the file TODO in the distribution for information on what remains to
- be done.
- .PP
- If you want to report a problem with the program, please create bugreport
- at https://www.midnight\-commander.org/.
- .PP
- Provide a detailed description of the bug, the version of the program
- you are running
- .RI ( "mc \-V"
- displays this information), the operating system you are running the
- program on. If the program crashes, we would appreciate a stack trace.
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