colout [-h] [-r [RESOURCE]]
colout [-g] [-c] [-l min,max] [-a] [-t] [-T DIR] [-P DIR] [-d COLORMAP] [-s] [-e CHAR] [-E CHAR] [--debug] PATTERN [COLOR(S) [STYLE(S)]]
colout
read lines of text stream on the standard input and output characters
matching a given regular expression PATTERN in given COLOR and STYLE.
If groups are specified in the regular expression pattern, only them are taken into account, else the whole matching pattern is colored.
You can specify several colors or styles when using groups by separating them with commas. If you indicate more colors than groups, the last ones will be ignored. If you ask for fewer colors, the last one will be duplicated across remaining groups.
Available colors are: blue, black, yellow, cyan, green, magenta, white, red,
rainbow, random, Random, Spectrum, spectrum, scale, Scale, hash, Hash, none, an
RGB hexadecimal triplet (#11aaff
, for example) or any number between 0 and 255.
Available styles are: normal, bold, faint, italic, underline, blink, rapid_blink, reverse, conceal or random (some styles may have no effect, depending on your terminal).
In some case, you can indicate a foreground and a background color, by indicating both colors
separated by a period (for example: red.blue
). You can also use this system to combine two styles
(for example, for a bold style that also blinks: bold.blink
).
rainbow
will cycle over a the default colormap at each matching pattern.
Rainbow
will do the same over the default colormap for the 256-colors mode
(this requires a terminal that supports the 256 color escape sequences).
Random
will color each matching pattern with a random color among the default colormap
(the 255 available in the ANSI table, by default).
random
will do the same in 8 colors mode.
spectrum
and Spectrum
are like rainbows, but with more colors (8 and 36
colors).
scale
(8 colors) and Scale
(256 colors) will parse the numbers characters in
the matching text as a decimal number and apply the default colormap according
to its position on the scale defined by the -l
option (see below, "0,100" by
default).
hash
(8 colors) and Hash
(256 colors) will take a fingerprint of the matching
text and apply the default colormap according to it. This ensure that matching
texts appearing several times will always get the same color.
Before interpreting the matched string as a number, colout will remove any character not supposed to be used to write down numbers. This permits to apply this special color on a large group, while interpreting only its numerical part.
You can use the name of a syntax-coloring "lexer" as a color (for example: "Cpp", "ruby", "xml+django", etc.).
If GIMP palettes files (*.gpl) are available, you can also use their names as a
colormap (see the -P
switch below).
Note that the RGB colors (either the hex triplets or the palettes's colors) will be converted to their nearest ANSI 256 color mode equivalents.
When not specified, a COLOR defaults to red and a STYLE defaults to bold.
colout
comes with some predefined themes to rapidly color well-known outputs
(see the -t
switch below).
colout
can be used as an interface to pygments (see also the --source
switch below).
To have a list of all colors, styles, special colormaps, themes, palettes and lexers,
use the -r
switch (see below).
colout
is released under the GNU Public License v3.
The recomended method is using pip to install the package for the local user:
$ pip install --user colout
Another method is using pipsi (pipsi is no longer maintained, https://github.com/mitsuhiko/pipsi/blob/db3e3fccbe4f8f9ed1104ed7293ec8fec6579efc/README.md#L3)
$ pipsi install colout
There is also a PPA for Ubuntu 16.04 (Xenial)/18.04 (Bionic) (@0.6.1-3~dist7
, not actively maintained)
$ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:csaba-kertesz/random
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get/aptitude install colout
-
-h
,--help
: Show a help message and exit -
-g
,--groups
: For color maps (like "rainbow"), iterate over matching groups in the pattern instead of over patterns. -
-c
,--colormap
: Use the given list of comma-separated colors as a colormap (cycle the colors at each match). -
-l min,max
,--scale min,max
: When using the 'scale' colormap, parse matches as decimal numbers (taking your locale into account) or as arithmetic expression (like "1+2/0.9*3") and apply the rainbow colormap linearly between the given min,max (0,100, by default). -
-a
,--all
: Color the whole input at once instead of line per line (really useful for coloring a source code file with strings on multiple lines). -
-t
,--theme
: Interpret PATTERN as a predefined theme (perm, cmake, g++, etc.). -
-T DIR
,--themes-dir DIR
: Search for additional themes (colout_*.py files) in this directory. -
-P DIR
,--palettes-dir DIR
: Search for additional palettes (*.gpl files) in this directory. -
-d COLORMAP
,--default COLORMAP
: When using special colormaps (random
,scale
orhash
), use this COLORMAP instead of the default one. This can be either one of the available colormaps or a comma-separated list of colors. WARNING: be sure to specify a default colormap that is compatible with the special colormap's mode, or else the colors may not appear the same. Also, external palettes are converted from RGB to 256-ANSI and will thus not work if you use them as default colormaps for a 8-colors mode special color. -
-r [TYPE(S)]
,--resources [TYPE(S)]
: Print the names of available resources. Use a comma-separated list of resources names (styles, colors, special, themes, palettes, colormaps or lexers), use 'all' (or no argument) to print all resources. -
-s
,--source
: Interpret PATTERN as source code readable by the Pygments library. If the first letter of PATTERN is upper case, use the 256 color mode, if it is lower case, use the 8 colors mode. In 256 color mode, interpret COLOR as a Pygments style (e.g. "default"). -
-e CHAR
,--sep-list CHAR
: Use this character as a separator for list of colors/resources/numbers (instead of comma). -
-E CHAR
,--sep-pair CHAR
: Use this character as a separator for foreground/background pairs (instead of period). -
--debug
: Debug mode: print what's going on internally, if you want to check what features are available.
A regular expression (or regex) is a pattern that describes a set of strings that matches it.
colout
understands regex as specified in the re python module. Given that
colout
is generally called by the command line, you may have to escape
special characters that would be recognize by your shell.
Necessary Python modules:
pygments
for the source code syntax coloringbabel
for a locale-aware number parsing
Don't use nested groups or colout will duplicate the corresponding input text with each matching colors.
Using a default colormap that is incompatible with the special colormap's mode (i.e. number of colors) will end badly.
Color pairs (foreground.background
) work in 8-colors mode for simple coloring, but may fail with --colormap
.
-
Color in bold red every occurrence of the word color in colout sources:
cat colout.py | colout color red bold
-
Color in bold violet home directories in /etc/passwd:
colout '/home/[a-z]+' 135 < /etc/passwd
-
Color in yellow user/groups id, in bold green name and in bold red home directories in
/etc/passwd
:colout ':x:([0-9]+:[0-9]+):([^:]+).*(/home/[a-z]+)' yellow,green,red normal,bold < /etc/passwd
-
Color in yellow file permissions with read rights for everyone:
ls -l | colout '.(r.-){3}' yellow normal
-
Color in green read permission, in bold red write and execution ones:
ls -l | colout '(r)(w*)(x*)' green,red normal,bold
-
Color in green comments in colout sources:
colout '.*(#.*)$' green normal < colout.py
-
Color in bold green every numbers and in bold red the words error in make output:
make 2>&1 | colout '[0-9]+' green normal | colout error
-
Use a different color for each line of the auth log
grep user /var/log/auth.log | colout "^.*$" rainbow
-
Color each line of a file with a different color among a 256 color gradient from cyan to green:
head /var/log/auth.log | colout -c "^.*$" 39,38,37,36,35,34
-
Color permissions with a predefined template:
ls -l | colout -t perm
-
Color in light green comments in non-empty colout sources, with the sharp in bold green:
grep -v '^\s*$' colout.py | colout '.*(#)(.*)$' green,119 bold,normal
-
Color a make output, line numbers in yellow, errors in bold red, warning in magenta, pragma in green and C++ file base names in cyan:
make 2>&1 | colout ':([0-9]+):[0-9]*' yellow normal | colout error | colout warning magenta | colout pragma green normal | colout '/(\w+)*\.(h|cpp)' cyan normal
Or using themes:make 2>&1 | colout -t cmake | colout -t g++
-
Color each word in the head of auth.log with a rainbow color map, starting a new colormap at each new line (the beginning of the command is just bash magic to repeat the string "(\w+)\W+":
L=$(seq 10) ; P=${L//??/(\\w+)\\W+} ; head /var/log/auth.log | colout -g "^${P}(.*)$" rainbow
-
Color source code in 8 colors mode, without seeing comments:
cat colout.py | grep -v "#" | colout -s python
-
Color source code in 256 color mode:
cat colout.py | colout -s Python monokai
-
Color a JSON stream:
echo '{"foo": "lorem", "bar":"ipsum"}' | python -mjson.tool | colout -t json
-
Color a source code substring:
echo "There is an error in 'static void Functor::operator()( EOT& indiv ) { return indiv; }' you should fix it" | colout "'(.*)'" Cpp monokai
-
Color the percent of progress part of a CMake's makefile output, with a color related to the value of the progress (from 0%=blue to 100%=red):
cmake .. && make | colout "^(\[\s*[0-9]+%\])" Scale
-
Color hosts and users in
auth.log
, with consistent colors:cat /var/log/auth.log | colout "^(\S+\s+){3}(\S+)\s(\S+\s+){3}(\S+)\s+(\S+\s+){2}(\S+)\s*" none,hash,none,hash,none,hash
The following bash function color the output of any command with the cmake and g++ themes:
function cm()
{
set -o pipefail
$@ 2>&1 | colout -t cmake | colout -t g++
}
You then can use the cm
alias as a prefix to your build command,
for example: cm make test
You can use colout
within the GNU debuger (gbd
) to color its output.
For example, the following script .gdbinit
configuration will color
the output of the backtrace command:
set confirm off
# Don't wrap line or the coloring regexp won't work.
set width 0
# Create a named pipe to get outputs from gdb
shell test -e /tmp/coloutPipe && rm /tmp/coloutPipe
shell mkfifo /tmp/coloutPipe
define logging_on
# Instead of printing on stdout only, log everything...
set logging redirect on
# ... in our named pipe.
set logging on /tmp/coloutPipe
end
define logging_off
set logging off
set logging redirect off
# Because both gdb and our commands are writing on the same pipe at the same
# time, it is more than probable that gdb will end before our (higher level)
# commands. The gdb prompt will thus render before the result of the command,
# which is highly akward. To prevent this, we need to wait before displaying
# the prompt again. The more your commands are complex, the higher you will
# need to set this.
shell sleep 0.4s
end
define hook-backtrace
# Note: match path = [path]file[.ext] = (.*/)?(?:$|(.+?)(?:(\.[^.]*)|))
# This line color highlights:
# – lines that link to source code,
# – function call in green,
# – arguments names in yellow, values in magenta,
# — the parent directory in bold red (assuming that the debug session would be in a "project/build/" directory).
shell cat /tmp/coloutPipe | colout "^(#)([0-9]+)\s+(0x\S+ )*(in )*(.*) (\(.*\)) (at) (.*/)?(?:$|(.+?)(?:(\.[^.]*)|)):([0-9]+)" red,red,blue,red,green,magenta,red,none,white,white,yellow normal,bold,normal,normal,normal,normal,normal,bold,bold,bold | colout "([\w\s]*?)(=)([^,]*?)([,\)])" yellow,blue,magenta,blue normal | colout "/($(basename $(dirname $(pwd))))/" red bold &
logging_on
end
define hookpost-backtrace
logging_off
end
# Don't forget to clean the adhoc pipe.
define hook-quit
set confirm off
shell rm -f /tmp/coloutPipe
end
Take a look at the example.gdbinit
file distributed with colout for more gdb commands.
You can easily add your own theme to colout.
A theme is basically a module with a function named theme
that take the configuration context as
an argument and return back the (modified) context and a list of triplets.
Each triplet figures the same arguments than those of the command line interface.
def theme(context):
return context,[ [regexp, colors, styles] ]
With the context dictionary at hand, you have access to the internal configuration of colout, you can thus change colormaps for special keywords, the scale, even the available colors, styles or themes.
See the cmake them for how to modify an existing colormap if (and only if) the user didn't ask for an alternative one. See the ninja theme for how to extend an existing theme with more regexps and a different configuration. See the gcc theme for an example of how to use the localization of existing softwares to build translated regexp.
Note that when you use colout within real time streams (like tail -f X | grep Y | colout Z
) of
commands, you may observe that the lines are printed by large chunks and not one by one, in real
time.
This is not due to colout but to the buffering behavior of your shell.
To fix that, use stdbuf
, for example: tail -f X | stdbuf -o0 grep Y | colout Z
.
- nojhan [email protected]: original idea, main developer, maintainer.
- Adrian Sadłocha [email protected]
- Alex Burka [email protected]
- Brian Foley [email protected]
- Charles Lewis [email protected]
- DainDwarf [email protected]
- Dimitri Merejkowsky [email protected]
- Dong Wei Ming [email protected]
- Fabien MARTY [email protected]
- Jason Green [email protected]
- John Anderson [email protected]
- Jonathan Poelen [email protected]
- Louis-Kenzo Furuya Cahier [email protected]
- Mantas [email protected]
- Martin Ueding [email protected]
- Nicolas Pouillard [email protected]
- Nurono [email protected]
- Oliver Bristow [email protected]
- orzrd [email protected]
- Philippe Daouadi [email protected]
- Piotr Staroszczyk [email protected]
- Scott Lawrence [email protected]
- Xu Di [email protected]
- https://github.com/stdedos: maintainer.