Fix ls coloring in MacOS if gls is not installed

Fixes #5520.
This commit is contained in:
Marc Cornellà 2016-10-11 09:24:43 +02:00
parent 628d0bb106
commit c24dfa1ab4

View file

@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ export LSCOLORS="Gxfxcxdxbxegedabagacad"
if [[ "$DISABLE_LS_COLORS" != "true" ]]; then
# Find the option for using colors in ls, depending on the version
if [[ "$OSTYPE" == netbsd* ]] || [[ "$OSTYPE" == darwin* ]]; then
if [[ "$OSTYPE" == netbsd* ]]; then
# On NetBSD, test if "gls" (GNU ls) is installed (this one supports colors);
# otherwise, leave ls as is, because NetBSD's ls doesn't support -G
gls --color -d . &>/dev/null && alias ls='gls --color=tty'
@ -17,6 +17,8 @@ if [[ "$DISABLE_LS_COLORS" != "true" ]]; then
# coreutils, so prefer it to "gls".
gls --color -d . &>/dev/null && alias ls='gls --color=tty'
colorls -G -d . &>/dev/null && alias ls='colorls -G'
elif [[ "$OSTYPE" == darwin* ]]; then
gls --color -d . &>/dev/null && alias ls='gls --color=tty' || alias ls='ls -G'
else
# For GNU ls, we use the default ls color theme. They can later be overwritten by themes.
if [[ -z "$LS_COLORS" ]]; then