# Powerlevel10k Powerlevel10k is a theme for ZSH. It's a backward-compatible fork of [Powerlevel9k](https://github.com/bhilburn/powerlevel9k) with lower latency and better prompt responsiveness. If you like the looks of Powerlevel9k but feeling frustrated by its slow prompt, simply replace your `powerlevel9k` theme with `powerlevel10k` and enjoy responsive shell like it's 80's again! Powerlevel10k uses the same configuration options as Powerlevel9k and produces the same results. It's simply faster. There is no catch. If you are on Linux or WSL, consider enabling [gitstatus](https://github.com/romkatv/gitstatus) plugin for additional performance improvement in the vcs/prompt segment. ## Installation & Configuration For installation and configuration instructions see [Powerlevel9k](https://github.com/bhilburn/powerlevel9k). Everything in there applies to Powerlevel10k as well. Follow the official installation guide, make sure everything works and you like the way prompt looks. Then simply replace the content of your `powerlevel9k` directory with Powerlevel10k. Once you restart zsh, your prompt will be faster. No configuration changes are needed. If you are using oh-my-zsh, here's how you can replace Powerlevel9k with Powerlevel10k. ```zsh # Delete the original powerlevel9k theme. rm -rf ~/.oh-my-zsh/custom/themes/powerlevel9k # Put powerlevel10k in its place. git clone git@github.com:romkatv/powerlevel10k.git ~/.oh-my-zsh/custom/themes/powerlevel9k ``` Adjust these commands based on where your `powerlevel9k` directory is. Alternatively, you can place `Powerlevel10k` in `powerlevel10k` directory and modify the theme name in your `.zshrc`. **However, do not load both Powerlevel9k and Powerlevel10k themes at the same time. Variable name clashes will cause mayhem. You can source either one or the other. Consider Powerlevel10k a patched fork of Powerlevel9k, which it is.** ## How fast is it? Powerlevel10k with [gitstatus](https://github.com/romkatv/gitstatus) renders prompt about 10 times faster than powerlevel9k/master (stable version) and about 5 times faster than powerlevel9k/next (beta version). Powerlevel10k is faster than Powerlevel9k even without [gitstatus](https://github.com/romkatv/gitstatus) but the difference isn't as dramatic. Here's are benchmark results obtained with [zsh-prompt-benchmark](https://github.com/romkatv/zsh-prompt-benchmark) on Intel i9-7900X running Ubuntu 18.04. | Theme | / | ~/testrepo | ~/nerd-fonts | ~/linux | |----------------------------------|----------:|-----------:|-------------:|-----------:| | powerlevel9k/master | 135 ms | 207 ms | 234 ms | 326 ms | | powerlevel9k/next | 47 ms | 101 ms | 122 ms | 213 ms | | powerlevel10k | 24 ms | 82 ms | 104 ms | 197 ms | | **powerlevel10k with gitstatus** | **9 ms** | **11 ms** | **27 ms** | **71 ms** | | naked zsh | 1 ms | 1 ms | 1 ms | 1 ms | Columns define the current directory where the prompt was rendered. * `/` -- root directory, not a git repo. * `~/testrepo` -- a tiny git repo. * `~/nerd-fonts` -- [nerd-fonts](https://github.com/ryanoasis/nerd-fonts) git repo with 4k files. * `~/linux` -- [linux](https://github.com/torvalds/linux) git repo. Huge. Here's how the prompt looked like (identical by design in Powerlevel9k and Powerlevel 10k): ![](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/romkatv/powerlevel10k/master/prompt.png) Configuration that was used during benchmarking: ```zsh POWERLEVEL9K_LEFT_PROMPT_ELEMENTS=(dir_writable dir vcs) POWERLEVEL9K_RIGHT_PROMPT_ELEMENTS=(status background_jobs time custom_rprompt) POWERLEVEL9K_MODE=nerdfont-complete POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_ON_NEWLINE=true POWERLEVEL9K_CUSTOM_RPROMPT=custom_rprompt POWERLEVEL9K_ROOT_ICON=\\uF09CPOWERLEVEL9K_TIME_ICON=\\uF017 POWERLEVEL9K_CUSTOM_RPROMPT_ICON=\\uF005 POWERLEVEL9K_TIME_BACKGROUND=magenta POWERLEVEL9K_CUSTOM_RPROMPT_BACKGROUND=blue POWERLEVEL9K_STATUS_OK_BACKGROUND=grey53 POWERLEVEL9K_BACKGROUND_JOBS_BACKGROUND=orange1 POWERLEVEL9K_BACKGROUND_JOBS_FOREGROUND=black # Powerlevel10k extension to enable gitstatus. Has no effect on Powerlevel9k. POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_STATUS_COMMAND=gitstatus_query_dir function custom_rprompt() echo -E "hello world" ``` For completeness, here's the same benchmark for Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) with zsh running in the standard Command Prompt (`cmd.exe`). | Theme | / | ~/testrepo | ~/nerd-fonts | ~/linux | |----------------------------------|----------:|-----------:|-------------:|------------:| | powerlevel9k/master | 313 ms | 531 ms | 693 ms | 5898 ms | | powerlevel9k/next | 119 ms | 278 ms | 442 ms | 5710 ms | | powerlevel10k | 66 ms | 237 ms | 399 ms | 5569 ms | | **powerlevel10k with gitstatus** | **22 ms** | **30 ms** | **30 ms** | **5098 ms** | | naked zsh | 16 ms | 16 ms | 16 ms | 16 ms | Here Powerlevel10k with [gitstatus](https://github.com/romkatv/gitstatus) has even bigger advantage over Powerlevel9k and manages to render prompt with low latency. However, every theme failed miserably on the humongous Linux kernel repo, showing prompt latency over 5 seconds. This might be related to some sort of system cache, which can fit indices of smaller repos but of Linux kernel. To work around this problem, you can instruct [gitstatus](https://github.com/romkatv/gitstatus) to not scan dirty files on repos with over 4k files in the index (see `GITSTATUS_DIRTY_MAX_INDEX_SIZE` in [gitstatus docs](https://github.com/romkatv/gitstatus). Linux kernel is the only repo in these benchmarks that is affected by this setting. Its prompt latency goes down to 32 ms. The prompt no longer shows whether there are dirty (unstaged or untracked) files but it does indicate with the color that there _might_ be such files. ## What's the catch? Really, there is no catch. It's literally the same prompt with the same flexibility configuration format as Powerlevel9k. But **much faster**.