Provided by: lf_38+ds-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       lf - terminal file manager

SYNOPSIS

       lf  [-command  command]  [-config  path]  [-cpuprofile  path]  [-doc]  [-last-dir-path  path] [-log path]
       [-memprofile  path]  [-print-last-dir]  [-print-selection]  [-remote  command]   [-selection-path   path]
       [-server] [-single] [-version] [-help] [cd-or-select-path]

DESCRIPTION

       lf is a terminal file manager.

       The source code can be found in the repository at https://github.com/gokcehan/lf

       This   documentation   can   either   be   read   from   the   terminal   using  lf  -doc  or  online  at
       https://github.com/gokcehan/lf/blob/master/doc.md You can also  use  the  help  command  (default  <f-1>)
       inside  lf  to  view the documentation in a pager.  A man page with the same content is also available in
       the repository at https://github.com/gokcehan/lf/blob/master/lf.1

       You can run lf -help to see descriptions of command line options.

QUICK REFERENCE

       The following commands are provided by lf:

              quit                     (default 'q')
              up                       (default 'k' and '<up>')
              half-up                  (default '<c-u>')
              page-up                  (default '<c-b>' and '<pgup>')
              scroll-up                (default '<c-y>')
              down                     (default 'j' and '<down>')
              half-down                (default '<c-d>')
              page-down                (default '<c-f>' and '<pgdn>')
              scroll-down              (default '<c-e>')
              updir                    (default 'h' and '<left>')
              open                     (default 'l' and '<right>')
              jump-next                (default ']')
              jump-prev                (default '[')
              top                      (default 'gg' and '<home>')
              bottom                   (default 'G' and '<end>')
              high                     (default 'H')
              middle                   (default 'M')
              low                      (default 'L')
              toggle
              invert                   (default 'v')
              unselect                 (default 'u')
              glob-select
              glob-unselect
              copy                     (default 'y')
              cut                      (default 'd')
              paste                    (default 'p')
              clear                    (default 'c')
              sync
              draw
              redraw                   (default '<c-l>')
              load
              reload                   (default '<c-r>')
              delete         (modal)
              rename         (modal)   (default 'r')
              read           (modal)   (default ':')
              shell          (modal)   (default '$')
              shell-pipe     (modal)   (default '%')
              shell-wait     (modal)   (default '!')
              shell-async    (modal)   (default '&')
              find           (modal)   (default 'f')
              find-back      (modal)   (default 'F')
              find-next                (default ';')
              find-prev                (default ',')
              search         (modal)   (default '/')
              search-back    (modal)   (default '?')
              search-next              (default 'n')
              search-prev              (default 'N')
              filter         (modal)
              setfilter
              mark-save      (modal)   (default 'm')
              mark-load      (modal)   (default "'")
              mark-remove    (modal)   (default '"')
              tag
              tag-toggle               (default 't')
              echo
              echomsg
              echoerr
              cd
              select
              source
              push
              addcustominfo
              calcdirsize
              clearmaps
              tty-write
              visual                   (default 'V')

       The following Visual mode commands are provided by lf:

              visual-accept            (default 'V')
              visual-unselect
              visual-discard           (default '<esc>')
              visual-change            (default 'o')

       The following Command-line mode commands are provided by lf:

              cmd-insert
              cmd-escape               (default '<esc>')
              cmd-complete             (default '<tab>')
              cmd-menu-complete
              cmd-menu-complete-back
              cmd-menu-accept
              cmd-enter                (default '<c-j>' and '<enter>')
              cmd-interrupt            (default '<c-c>')
              cmd-history-next         (default '<c-n>' and '<down>')
              cmd-history-prev         (default '<c-p>' and '<up>')
              cmd-left                 (default '<c-b>' and '<left>')
              cmd-right                (default '<c-f>' and '<right>')
              cmd-home                 (default '<c-a>' and '<home>')
              cmd-end                  (default '<c-e>' and '<end>')
              cmd-delete               (default '<c-d>' and '<delete>')
              cmd-delete-back          (default '<backspace>' and '<backspace2>')
              cmd-delete-home          (default '<c-u>')
              cmd-delete-end           (default '<c-k>')
              cmd-delete-unix-word     (default '<c-w>')
              cmd-yank                 (default '<c-y>')
              cmd-transpose            (default '<c-t>')
              cmd-transpose-word       (default '<a-t>')
              cmd-word                 (default '<a-f>')
              cmd-word-back            (default '<a-b>')
              cmd-delete-word          (default '<a-d>')
              cmd-delete-word-back     (default '<a-backspace>' and '<a-backspace2>')
              cmd-capitalize-word      (default '<a-c>')
              cmd-uppercase-word       (default '<a-u>')
              cmd-lowercase-word       (default '<a-l>')

       The following options can be used to customize the behavior of lf:

              anchorfind        bool      (default true)
              autoquit          bool      (default true)
              borderfmt         string    (default "\033[0m")
              cleaner           string    (default '')
              copyfmt           string    (default "\033[7;33m")
              cursoractivefmt   string    (default "\033[7m")
              cursorparentfmt   string    (default "\033[7m")
              cursorpreviewfmt  string    (default "\033[4m")
              cutfmt            string    (default "\033[7;31m")
              dircounts         bool      (default false)
              dirfirst          bool      (default true)
              dironly           bool      (default false)
              dirpreviews       bool      (default false)
              drawbox           bool      (default false)
              dupfilefmt        string    (default '%f.~%n~')
              errorfmt          string    (default "\033[7;31;47m")
              filesep           string    (default "\n")
              filtermethod      string    (default 'text')
              findlen           int       (default 1)
              hidden            bool      (default false)
              hiddenfiles       []string  (default '.*' for Unix and '' for Windows)
              history           bool      (default true)
              icons             bool      (default false)
              ifs               string    (default '')
              ignorecase        bool      (default true)
              ignoredia         bool      (default true)
              incfilter         bool      (default false)
              incsearch         bool      (default false)
              info              []string  (default '')
              infotimefmtnew    string    (default 'Jan _2 15:04')
              infotimefmtold    string    (default 'Jan _2  2006')
              menufmt           string    (default "\033[0m")
              menuheaderfmt     string    (default "\033[1m")
              menuselectfmt     string    (default "\033[7m")
              mouse             bool      (default false)
              number            bool      (default false)
              numberfmt         string    (default "\033[33m")
              period            int       (default 0)
              preserve          []string  (default "mode")
              preview           bool      (default true)
              previewer         string    (default '')
              promptfmt         string    (default "\033[32;1m%u@%h\033[0m:\033[34;1m%d\033[0m\033[1m%f\033[0m")
              ratios            []int     (default '1:2:3')
              relativenumber    bool      (default false)
              reverse           bool      (default false)
              roundbox          bool      (default false)
              rulerfmt          string    (default "  %a|  %p|  \033[7;31m %m \033[0m|  \033[7;33m %c \033[0m|  \033[7;35m %s \033[0m|  \033[7;34m %f \033[0m|  %i/%t")
              scrolloff         int       (default 0)
              searchmethod      string    (default 'text')
              selectfmt         string    (default "\033[7;35m")
              selmode           string    (default 'all')
              shell             string    (default 'sh' for Unix and 'cmd' for Windows)
              shellflag         string    (default '-c' for Unix and '/c' for Windows)
              shellopts         []string  (default '')
              showbinds         bool      (default true)
              sizeunits         string    (default 'binary')
              smartcase         bool      (default true)
              smartdia          bool      (default false)
              sortby            string    (default 'natural')
              statfmt           string    (default "\033[36m%p\033[0m| %c| %u| %g| %S| %t| -> %l")
              tabstop           int       (default 8)
              tagfmt            string    (default "\033[31m")
              tempmarks         string    (default '')
              timefmt           string    (default 'Mon Jan _2 15:04:05 2006')
              truncatechar      string    (default '~')
              truncatepct       int       (default 100)
              visualfmt         string    (default "\033[7;36m")
              waitmsg           string    (default 'Press any key to continue')
              watch             bool      (default false)
              wrapscan          bool      (default true)
              wrapscroll        bool      (default false)
              user_{option}     string    (default none)

       The following environment variables are exported for shell commands:

              f
              fs
              fv
              fx
              id
              PWD
              OLDPWD
              LF_LEVEL
              OPENER
              VISUAL
              EDITOR
              PAGER
              SHELL
              lf
              lf_{option}
              lf_user_{option}
              lf_flag_{flag}
              lf_width
              lf_height
              lf_count
              lf_mode

       The following special shell commands are used to customize the behavior of lf when defined:

              open
              paste
              rename
              delete
              pre-cd
              on-cd
              on-load
              on-focus-gained
              on-focus-lost
              on-init
              on-select
              on-redraw
              on-quit

       The following commands/keybindings are provided by default:

              Unix
              cmd open &$OPENER "$f"
              map e $$EDITOR "$f"
              map i $$PAGER "$f"
              map w $$SHELL
              cmd help $$lf -doc | $PAGER
              map <f-1> help
              cmd maps $lf -remote "query $id maps" | $PAGER
              cmd nmaps $lf -remote "query $id nmaps" | $PAGER
              cmd vmaps $lf -remote "query $id vmaps" | $PAGER
              cmd cmaps $lf -remote "query $id cmaps" | $PAGER
              cmd cmds $lf -remote "query $id cmds" | $PAGER

              Windows
              cmd open &%OPENER% %f%
              map e $%EDITOR% %f%
              map i !%PAGER% %f%
              map w $%SHELL%
              cmd help !%lf% -doc | %PAGER%
              map <f-1> help
              cmd maps !%lf% -remote "query %id% maps" | %PAGER%
              cmd nmaps !%lf% -remote "query %id% nmaps" | %PAGER%
              cmd vmaps !%lf% -remote "query %id% vmaps" | %PAGER%
              cmd cmaps !%lf% -remote "query %id% cmaps" | %PAGER%
              cmd cmds !%lf% -remote "query %id% cmds" | %PAGER%

       The defaults for Windows are using cmd syntax.  A PowerShell compatible configuration file can  be  found
       at https://github.com/gokcehan/lf/blob/master/etc/lfrc.ps1.example

       The following additional keybindings are provided by default:

              map zh set hidden!
              map zr set reverse!
              map zn set info
              map zs set info size
              map zt set info time
              map za set info size:time
              map sn :set sortby natural; set info
              map ss :set sortby size; set info size
              map st :set sortby time; set info time
              map sa :set sortby atime; set info atime
              map sb :set sortby btime; set info btime
              map sc :set sortby ctime; set info ctime
              map se :set sortby ext; set info
              map gh cd ~
              nmap <space> :toggle; down

       If the mouse option is enabled, mouse buttons have the following default effects:

              Left mouse button
                  Click on a file or directory to select it.

              Right mouse button
                  Enter a directory or open a file. Also works on the preview pane.

              Scroll wheel
                  Move up or down. If Ctrl is pressed, scroll up or down.

CONFIGURATION

       Configuration files should be located at:

              OS       system-wide               user-specific
              Unix     /etc/lf/lfrc              ~/.config/lf/lfrc
              Windows  C:\ProgramData\lf\lfrc    C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Roaming\lf\lfrc

       The colors file should be located at:

              OS       system-wide               user-specific
              Unix     /etc/lf/colors            ~/.config/lf/colors
              Windows  C:\ProgramData\lf\colors  C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Roaming\lf\colors

       The icons file should be located at:

              OS       system-wide               user-specific
              Unix     /etc/lf/icons             ~/.config/lf/icons
              Windows  C:\ProgramData\lf\icons   C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Roaming\lf\icons

       The selection file should be located at:

              Unix     ~/.local/share/lf/files
              Windows  C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Local\lf\files

       The marks file should be located at:

              Unix     ~/.local/share/lf/marks
              Windows  C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Local\lf\marks

       The tags file should be located at:

              Unix     ~/.local/share/lf/tags
              Windows  C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Local\lf\tags

       The history file should be located at:

              Unix     ~/.local/share/lf/history
              Windows  C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Local\lf\history

       You  can configure these locations with the following variables given with their order of precedences and
       their default values:

              Unix
                  $LF_CONFIG_HOME
                  $XDG_CONFIG_HOME
                  ~/.config

                  $LF_DATA_HOME
                  $XDG_DATA_HOME
                  ~/.local/share

              Windows
                  %LF_CONFIG_HOME%
                  %XDG_CONFIG_HOME%
                  %APPDATA%

                  %LF_DATA_HOME%
                  %XDG_DATA_HOME%
                  %LOCALAPPDATA%

       A sample configuration file can be found at https://github.com/gokcehan/lf/blob/master/etc/lfrc.example

COMMANDS

       This section shows information about built-in commands.  Modal commands do not take  any  arguments,  but
       instead  change the operation mode to read their input conveniently, and so they are meant to be assigned
       to keybindings.

   quit (default q)
       Quit lf and return to the shell.

   up (default k and <up>), half-up (default <c-u>), page-up (default  <c-b>  and  <pgup>),  scroll-up  (default
       <c-y>),  down  (default  j  and <down>), half-down (default <c-d>), page-down (default <c-f> and <pgdn>),
       scroll-down (default <c-e>)
       Move/scroll the current file selection upwards/downwards by one/half a page/full page.

   updir (default h and <left>)
       Change the current working directory to the parent directory.

   open (default l and <right>)
       If the current file is a directory, then change the current directory to it, otherwise, execute the  open
       command.   A  default  open command is provided to call the default system opener asynchronously with the
       current file as the argument.  A custom open command can be defined to override this default.

   jump-next (default ]), jump-prev (default [)
       Change the current working directory to the next/previous jumplist item.

   top (default gg and <home>), bottom (default G and <end>)
       Move the current file selection to the top/bottom of the directory.  A count can be specified to move  to
       a specific line, for example, use 3G to move to the third line.

   high (default H), middle (default M), low (default L)
       Move the current file selection to the high/middle/low of the screen.

   toggle
       Toggle the selection of the current file or files given as arguments.

   invert (default v)
       Reverse  the  selection  of  all  files in the current directory (i.e.  toggle all files).  Selections in
       other directories are not affected by this command.  You can define a new command to select all files  in
       the  directory  by  combining  invert with unselect (i.e.  cmd select-all :unselect; invert), though this
       will also remove selections in other directories.

   unselect (default u)
       Remove the selection of all files in all directories.

   glob-select, glob-unselect
       Select/unselect files that match the given glob.

   copy (default y)
       Save the paths of selected files to the clipboard as files to be copied.  If there are no selected files,
       the path of the current file is used instead.

   cut (default d)
       Save the paths of selected files to the clipboard as files to be moved.  If there are no selected  files,
       the path of the current file is used instead.

   paste (default p)
       Copy/Move files in the clipboard to the current working directory.  A custom paste command can be defined
       to override this default.

   clear (default c)
       Clear file paths in the clipboard.

   sync
       Synchronize copied/cut files with the server.  This command is automatically called when required.

   draw
       Draw the screen.  This command is automatically called when required.

   redraw (default <c-l>)
       Synchronize the terminal and redraw the screen.

   load
       Load modified files and directories.  This command is automatically called when required.

   reload (default <c-r>)
       Flush the cache and reload all files and directories.

   delete (modal)
       Remove  the  current  file  or selected file(s).  A custom delete command can be defined to override this
       default.

   rename (modal) (default r)
       Rename the current file using the built-in method.  A custom rename command can be  defined  to  override
       this default.

   read (modal) (default :)
       Read a command to evaluate.

   shell (modal) (default $)
       Read a shell command to execute.

   shell-pipe (modal) (default %)
       Read a shell command to execute piping its standard I/O to the bottom statline.

   shell-wait (modal) (default !)
       Read a shell command to execute and wait for a key press at the end.

   shell-async (modal) (default &)
       Read a shell command to execute asynchronously without standard I/O.

   find (modal) (default f), find-back (modal) (default F), find-next (default ;), find-prev (default ,)
       Read  key(s)  to  find  the  appropriate filename match in the forward/backward direction and jump to the
       next/previous match.

   search (default /), search-back (default ?), search-next (default n), search-prev (default N)
       Read a pattern to search for a  filename  match  in  the  forward/backward  direction  and  jump  to  the
       next/previous match.

   filter (modal), setfilter
       Command filter reads a pattern to filter out and only view files matching the pattern.  Command setfilter
       does  the  same but uses an argument to set the filter immediately.  You can supply an argument to filter
       to use as the starting prompt.

   mark-save (modal) (default m)
       Save the current directory as a bookmark assigned to the given key.

   mark-load (modal) (default ')
       Change the current directory to the bookmark assigned to the given key.  A special bookmark '  holds  the
       previous directory after a mark-load, cd, or select command.

   mark-remove (modal) (default ")
       Remove a bookmark assigned to the given key.

   tag
       Tag  a  file with * or a single-width character given in the argument.  You can define a new tag-clearing
       command by combining tag with tag-toggle (i.e.  cmd tag-clear :tag; tag-toggle).

   tag-toggle (default t)
       Tag a file with * or a single-width character given in the argument if the file  is  untagged,  otherwise
       remove the tag.

   echo
       Print the given arguments to the message line at the bottom.

   echomsg
       Print the given arguments to the message line at the bottom and also to the log file.

   echoerr
       Print given arguments to the message line at the bottom as errorfmt and also to the log file.

   cd
       Change the working directory to the given argument.

   select
       Change the current file selection to the given argument.

   source
       Read the configuration file given in the argument.

   push
       Simulate key pushes given in the argument.

   addcustominfo
       Update  the  custom info field of the given file with the given string.  The info string may contain ANSI
       escape codes to further customize its appearance.  If no info is provided, clear the file's info instead.

   calcdirsize
       Calculate the total size for each of the selected directories.   Option  info  should  include  size  and
       option  dircounts  should  be  disabled  to  show  this  size.   If  the total size of a directory is not
       calculated, it will be shown as -.

   clearmaps
       Remove all keybindings associated with the map, nmap and vmap command.  This command can be used  in  the
       config  file  to  remove  the  default  keybindings.   For  safety purposes, : is left mapped to the read
       command, and cmap keybindings are retained so that it is still possible to exit lf using :quit.

   tty-write
       Write the given string to the tty.  This is useful for  sending  escape  sequences  to  the  terminal  to
       control  its  behavior (e.g.  OSC 0 to set the window title).  Using tty-write is preferred over directly
       writing to /dev/tty because the latter is not synchronized and can interfere with drawing the UI.

   visual (default V)
       Switch to Visual mode.  If already in Visual mode, discard the visual selection and stay in Visual mode.

VISUAL MODE COMMANDS

   visual-accept (default V)
       Add the visual selection to the selection list, quit Visual mode and return to Normal mode.

   visual-unselect
       Remove the visual selection from the selection list, quit Visual mode and return to Normal mode.

   visual-discard (default <esc>)
       Discard the visual selection, quit Visual mode and return to Normal mode.

   visual-change (default o)
       Go to the other end of the current Visual mode selection.

COMMAND-LINE MODE COMMANDS

       The prompt character specifies which of the several Command-line modes you are in.  For example, the read
       command takes you to the : mode.

       When the cursor is at the first character in : mode, pressing one of the keys !, $, %, or & takes you  to
       the corresponding mode.  You can go back with cmd-delete-back (<backspace> by default).

       The command line commands should be mostly compatible with readline keybindings.  A character refers to a
       Unicode  code  point,  a  word  consists of letters and digits, and a Unix word consists of any non-blank
       characters.

   cmd-insert
       Insert the character given in the argument.  This command is automatically called when required.

   cmd-escape (default <esc>)
       Quit Command-line mode and return to Normal mode.

   cmd-complete (default <tab>)
       Autocomplete the current word.

   cmd-menu-complete, cmd-menu-complete-back
       Autocomplete the current word with the menu selection.  You need to assign keys to these  commands  (e.g.
       cmap  <tab>  cmd-menu-complete; cmap <backtab> cmd-menu-complete-back).  You can use the assigned keys to
       display the menu and then cycle through completion options.

   cmd-menu-accept
       Accept the currently selected match in menu completion and close the menu.

   cmd-enter (default <c-j> and <enter>)
       Execute the current line.

   cmd-interrupt (default <c-c>)
       Interrupt the current shell-pipe command and return to the Normal mode.

   cmd-history-next (default <c-n> and <down>), cmd-history-prev (default <c-p> and <up>)
       Go to the next/previous item in the history.

   cmd-left (default <c-b> and <left>), cmd-right (default <c-f> and <right>)
       Move the cursor to the left/right.

   cmd-home (default <c-a> and <home>), cmd-end (default <c-e> and <end>)
       Move the cursor to the beginning/end of the line.

   cmd-delete (default <c-d> and <delete>)
       Delete the next character.

   cmd-delete-back (default <backspace> and <backspace2>)
       Delete the previous character.  When at the beginning of a prompt, returns either to Normal mode or to  :
       mode.

   cmd-delete-home (default <c-u>), cmd-delete-end (default <c-k>)
       Delete everything up to the beginning/end of the line.

   cmd-delete-unix-word (default <c-w>)
       Delete the previous Unix word.

   cmd-yank (default <c-y>)
       Paste the buffer content containing the last deleted item.

   cmd-transpose (default <c-t>), cmd-transpose-word (default <a-t>)
       Transpose the positions of the last two characters/words.

   cmd-word (default <a-f>), cmd-word-back (default <a-b>)
       Move the cursor by one word in the forward/backward direction.

   cmd-delete-word (default <a-d>)
       Delete the next word in the forward direction.

   cmd-delete-word-back (default <a-backspace> and <a-backspace2>)
       Delete the previous word in the backward direction.

   cmd-capitalize-word (default <a-c>), cmd-uppercase-word (default <a-u>), cmd-lowercase-word (default <a-l>)
       Capitalize/uppercase/lowercase the current word and jump to the next word.

OPTIONS

       This  section  shows  information  about  options  to customize the behavior.  Character : is used as the
       separator for list options []int and []string.

   anchorfind (bool) (default true)
       When this option is enabled, the find command starts matching patterns from the beginning  of  filenames,
       otherwise, it can match at an arbitrary position.

   autoquit (bool) (default true)
       Automatically quit the server when there are no clients left connected.

   borderfmt (string) (default \033[0m)
       Format string of the box drawing characters enabled by the drawbox option.

   cleaner (string) (default ``) (not called if empty)
       Set  the  path  of  a cleaner file.  The file should be executable.  This file is called if previewing is
       enabled, the previewer is set, and the previously selected file has  its  preview  cache  disabled.   The
       following  arguments  are passed to the file, (1) current filename, (2) width, (3) height, (4) horizontal
       position, (5) vertical position of preview pane and (6)  next  filename  to  be  previewed  respectively.
       Preview cleaning is disabled when the value of this option is left empty.

   copyfmt (string) (default \033[7;33m)
       Format string of the indicator for files to be copied.

   cursoractivefmt  (string)  (default  \033[7m),  cursorparentfmt  (string) (default \033[7m), cursorpreviewfmt
       (string) (default \033[4m)
       Format strings for highlighting the cursor.  cursoractivefmt  applies  in  the  current  directory  pane,
       cursorparentfmt applies in panes that show parents of the current directory, and cursorpreviewfmt applies
       in panes that preview directories.

       The default is to make the active cursor and the parent directory cursor inverted.  The preview cursor is
       underlined.

       Some  other  possibilities  to consider for the preview or parent cursors: an empty string for no cursor,
       \033[7;2m for dimmed inverted text (visibility varies by terminal), \033[7;90m  for  inverted  text  with
       grey (aka "brightblack") background.

       If  the  format  string contains the characters %s, it is interpreted as a format string for fmt.Sprintf.
       Such a string should end with the terminal reset sequence.  For example, \033[4m%s\033[0m  has  the  same
       effect as \033[4m.

   cutfmt (string) (default \033[7;31m)
       Format string of the indicator for files to be cut.

   dircounts (bool) (default false)
       When this option is enabled, directory sizes show the number of items inside instead of the total size of
       the directory, which needs to be calculated for each directory using calcdirsize.  This information needs
       to  be  calculated  by  reading  the  directory and counting the items inside.  Therefore, this option is
       disabled by default for performance reasons.  This option only has an effect when info has a  size  field
       and  the  pane  is wide enough to show the information.  999 items are counted per directory at most, and
       bigger directories are shown as 999+.

   dirfirst (bool) (default true)
       Show directories first above regular files.  With dircounts enabled, sorting  by  size  always  separates
       directories and files, regardless of dirfirst.

   dironly (bool) (default false)
       Show only directories.

   dirpreviews (bool) (default false)
       If  enabled,  directories  will  also be passed to the previewer script.  This allows custom previews for
       directories.

   drawbox (bool) (default false)
       Draw boxes around panes with box drawing characters.

   dupfilefmt (string) (default %f.~%n~)
       Format string of filename when creating duplicate files.  With the default format, copying a file abc.txt
       to the same directory will result in  a  duplicate  file  called  abc.txt.~1~.   Special  expansions  are
       provided,  %f  as  the file name, %b for the base name (file name without extension), %e as the extension
       (including the dot) and %n as the number of duplicates.

   errorfmt (string) (default \033[7;31;47m)
       Format string of error messages shown in the bottom message line.

       If the format string contains the characters %s, it is interpreted as a format  string  for  fmt.Sprintf.
       Such  a  string  should end with the terminal reset sequence.  For example, \033[4m%s\033[0m has the same
       effect as \033[4m.

   filesep (string) (default \n)
       File separator used in environment variables fs, fv and fx.

   filtermethod (string) (default text)
       How filter command patterns are treated.  Currently supported methods are text (i.e.   string  literals),
       glob (i.e.  shell globs) and regex (i.e.  regular expressions).  See SEARCHING FILES for more details.

   findlen (int) (default 1)
       Number  of  characters  prompted for the find command.  When this value is set to 0, find command prompts
       until there is only a single match left.

   hidden (bool) (default false)
       Show hidden files.  On Unix systems, hidden files  are  determined  by  the  value  of  hiddenfiles.   On
       Windows, files with hidden attributes are also considered hidden files.

   hiddenfiles ([]string) (default .* for Unix and `` for Windows)
       List  of  hidden  file  glob  patterns.   Patterns  can be given as relative or absolute paths.  Globbing
       supports the usual special characters, * to match any sequence, ? to match any character, and  [...]   or
       [^...]  to match character sets or ranges.  In addition, if a pattern starts with !, then its matches are
       excluded  from  hidden  files.   To  add  multiple  patterns,   use   :   as   a   separator.    Example:
       .*:lost+found:*.bak

   history (bool) (default true)
       Save command history.

   icons (bool) (default false)
       Show icons before each item in the list.

   ifs (string) (default ``)
       Sets  IFS  variable in shell commands.  It works by adding the assignment to the beginning of the command
       string as IFS=...; ....  The reason is that IFS variable is not  inherited  by  the  shell  for  security
       reasons.   This method assumes a POSIX shell syntax so it can fail for non-POSIX shells.  This option has
       no effect when the value is left empty.  This option does not have any effect on Windows.

   ignorecase (bool) (default true)
       Ignore case in sorting and search patterns.

   ignoredia (bool) (default true)
       Ignore diacritics in sorting and search patterns.

   incfilter (bool) (default false)
       Apply filter pattern after each keystroke during filtering.

   incsearch (bool) (default false)
       Jump to the first match after each keystroke during searching.

   info ([]string) (default ``)
       A list of information that is shown for directory items at the right side of the pane.

       The following information types are supported:

              perm      file permission
              user      user name
              group     group name
              size      file size
              time      time of last data modification
              atime     time of last access
              btime     time of file birth
              ctime     time of last status (inode) change
              custom    property defined via `addcustominfo` (empty by default)

       Information is only shown when the pane width is more than twice the width of information.

   infotimefmtnew (string) (default Jan _2 15:04)
       Format string of the file time shown in the info column when it matches this year.

   infotimefmtold (string) (default Jan _2 2006)
       Format string of the file time shown in the info column when it doesn't match this year.

   menufmt (string) (default \033[0m)
       Format string of the menu.

   menuheaderfmt (string) (default \033[1m)
       Format string of the header row in the menu.

   menuselectfmt (string) (default \033[7m)
       Format string of the currently selected item in the menu.

   mouse (bool) (default false)
       Send mouse events as input.

   number (bool) (default false)
       Show the position number for directory items on the left side  of  the  pane.   When  the  relativenumber
       option is enabled, only the current line shows the absolute position and relative positions are shown for
       the rest.

   numberfmt (string) (default \033[33m)
       Format string of the position number for each line.

   period (int) (default 0)
       Set the interval in seconds for periodic checks of directory updates.  This works by periodically calling
       the  load  command.   Note that directories are already updated automatically in many cases.  This option
       can be useful when there is an external process changing the displayed directory and you  are  not  doing
       anything in lf.  Periodic checks are disabled when the value of this option is set to zero.

   preserve ([]string) (default mode)
       List  of attributes that are preserved when copying files.  Currently supported attributes are mode (i.e.
       access mode) and timestamps (i.e.  modification time  and  access  time).   Note  that  preserving  other
       attributes like ownership of change/birth timestamp is desirable, but not portably supported in Go.

   preview (bool) (default true)
       Show  previews  of  files  and  directories  at  the rightmost pane.  If the file has more lines than the
       preview pane, the rest of the lines are not read.  Files containing the null character  (U+0000)  in  the
       read portion are considered binary files and displayed as binary.

   previewer (string) (default ``) (not filtered if empty)
       Set  the path of a previewer file to filter the content of regular files for previewing.  The file should
       be executable.  The following arguments are passed to the file, (1)  current  filename,  (2)  width,  (3)
       height,  (4) horizontal position, and (5) vertical position of preview pane respectively.  SIGPIPE signal
       is sent when enough lines are read.  If the previewer returns a non-zero  exit  code,  then  the  preview
       cache  for  the  given  file  is  disabled.   This  means that if the file is selected in the future, the
       previewer is called once again.  Preview filtering is disabled and files are displayed as they  are  when
       the value of this option is left empty.

   promptfmt (string) (default \033[32;1m%u@%h\033[0m:\033[34;1m%d\033[0m\033[1m%f\033[0m)
       Format string of the prompt shown in the top line.

       The following special expansions are supported:

              %f        file name
              %h        host name
              %u        user name
              %w        working directory
              %d        working directory (with trailing path separator)
              %F        current filter
              %S        spacer to right-align the following parts (can be used once)

       The  home  folder  is  shown  as ~ in the working directory expansion.  Directory names are automatically
       shortened to a single character starting from the leftmost parent  when  the  prompt  does  not  fit  the
       screen.

   ratios ([]int) (default 1:2:3)
       List  of  ratios  of  pane widths.  Number of items in the list determines the number of panes in the UI.
       When the preview option is enabled, the rightmost number is used for the width of the preview pane.

   relativenumber (bool) (default false)
       Show the position number relative to the current line.  When number is enabled, the  current  line  shows
       the absolute position, otherwise nothing is shown.

   reverse (bool) (default false)
       Reverse the direction of sort.

   roundbox (bool) (default false)
       Draw rounded outer corners when the drawbox option is enabled.

   rulerfmt  (string)  (default   %a|  %p|  \033[7;31m %m \033[0m| \033[7;33m %c \033[0m| \033[7;35m %s \033[0m|
       \033[7;36m %v \033[0m| \033[7;34m %f \033[0m| %i/%t)
       Format string of the ruler shown in the bottom right corner.

       The following special expansions are supported:

              %a        pressed keys
              %p        progress of file operations
              %m        number of files to be cut (moved)
              %c        number of files to be copied
              %s        number of selected files
              %v        number of visually selected files
              %t        number of shown files in the current directory
              %h        number of hidden files in the current directory
              %f        current filter
              %i        cursor position
              %P        scroll percentage
              %d        amount of free disk space

       Additional expansions are provided for environment variables exported by lf,  in  the  form  %{lf_<name>}
       (e.g.  %{lf_selmode}).  This is useful for displaying the current settings.  Expansions are also provided
       for  user-defined  options, in the form %{lf_user_<name>} (e.g.  %{lf_user_foo}).  The | character splits
       the format string into sections.  Any section containing a failed expansion (result is a blank string) is
       discarded and not shown.

   scrolloff (int) (default 0)
       Minimum number of offset lines shown at all times at the top and bottom of  the  screen  when  scrolling.
       The  current line is kept in the middle when this option is set to a large value that is bigger than half
       the number of lines.  A smaller offset can be used when the current file is close to the beginning or end
       of the list to show the maximum number of items.

   searchmethod (string) (default text)
       How search command patterns are treated.  Currently supported methods are text (i.e.   string  literals),
       glob (i.e.  shell globs) and regex (i.e.  regular expressions).  See SEARCHING FILES for more details.

   selectfmt (string) (default \033[7;35m)
       Format string of the indicator for files that are selected.

   selmode (string) (default all)
       Selection  mode for commands.  When set to all it will use the selected files from all directories.  When
       set to dir it will only use the selected files in the current directory.

   shell (string) (default sh for Unix and cmd for Windows)
       Shell executable to use for shell commands.  Shell commands are executed  as  shell  shellopts  shellflag
       command -- arguments.

   shellflag (string) (default -c for Unix and /c for Windows)
       Command line flag used to pass shell commands.

   shellopts ([]string) (default ``)
       List of shell options to pass to the shell executable.

   showbinds (bool) (default true)
       Show bindings associated with pressed keys.

   sizeunits (string) (default binary)
       Determines whether file sizes are displayed using binary units (1K is 1024 bytes) or decimal units (1K is
       1000 bytes).

   smartcase (bool) (default true)
       Override  ignorecase  option when the pattern contains an uppercase character.  This option has no effect
       when ignorecase is disabled.

   smartdia (bool) (default false)
       Override ignoredia option when the pattern contains a character  with  diacritic.   This  option  has  no
       effect when ignoredia is disabled.

   sortby (string) (default natural)
       Sort type for directories.

       The following sort types are supported:

              natural   file name (track_2.flac comes before track_10.flac)
              name      file name (track_10.flac comes before track_2.flac)
              ext       file extension
              size      file size
              time      time of last data modification
              atime     time of last access
              btime     time of file birth
              ctime     time of last status (inode) change
              custom    property defined via `addcustominfo` (empty by default)

   statfmt (string) (default \033[36m%p\033[0m| %c| %u| %g| %S| %t| -> %l)
       Format string of the file info shown in the bottom left corner.

       The following special expansions are supported:

              %p        file permission
              %c        link count
              %u        user name
              %g        group name
              %s        file size
              %S        file size (left-padded with spaces to a fixed width of 5 characters)
              %t        time of last data modification
              %l        link target
              %m        current mode
              %M        current mode (displaying `NORMAL` instead of a blank string in Normal mode)

       The  |  character  splits  the  format  string  into sections.  Any section containing a failed expansion
       (result is a blank string) is discarded and not shown.

   tabstop (int) (default 8)
       Number of space characters to show for horizontal tabulation (U+0009) character.

   tagfmt (string) (default \033[31m)
       Format string of the tags.

       If the format string contains the characters %s, it is interpreted as a format  string  for  fmt.Sprintf.
       Such  a  string  should end with the terminal reset sequence.  For example, \033[4m%s\033[0m has the same
       effect as \033[4m.

   tempmarks (string) (default ``)
       Marks to be considered temporary (e.g.  abc refers to marks a, b, and c).  These marks are not synced  to
       other  clients  and they are not saved in the bookmarks file.  Note that the special bookmark ` is always
       treated as temporary and it does not need to be specified.

   timefmt (string) (default Mon Jan _2 15:04:05 2006)
       Format string of the file modification time shown in the bottom line.

   truncatechar (string) (default ~)
       The truncate character that is shown at the end when the filename does not fit into the pane.

   truncatepct (int) (default 100)
       When a filename is too long to be shown completely, the available space is partitioned into  two  pieces.
       truncatepct defines a fraction (in percent between 0 and 100) for the size of the first piece, which will
       show  the beginning of the filename.  The second piece will show the end of the filename and will use the
       rest of the available space.  Both pieces are separated by the truncation  character  (truncatechar).   A
       value  of  100 will only show the beginning of the filename, while a value of 0 will only show the end of
       the filename, e.g.:

       • set truncatepct 100 -> very-long-filename-tr~ (default)

       • set truncatepct 50 -> very-long-f~-truncated

       • set truncatepct 0 -> ~ng-filename-truncated

   visualfmt (string) (default \033[7;36m)
       Format string of the indicator for files that are visually selected.

   waitmsg (string) (default Press any key to continue)
       String shown after commands of shell-wait type.

   watch (bool) (default false)
       Watch the filesystem for changes using fsnotify to  automatically  refresh  file  information.   FUSE  is
       currently not supported due to limitations in fsnotify.

   wrapscan (bool) (default true)
       Searching can wrap around the file list.

   wrapscroll (bool) (default false)
       Scrolling can wrap around the file list.

   user_{option} (string) (default none)
       Any  option  that is prefixed with user_ is a user-defined option and can be set to any string.  Inside a
       user-defined command, the value will be provided in the  lf_user_{option}  environment  variable.   These
       options are not used by lf and are not persisted.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       The  following  variables are exported for shell commands: These are referred to with a $ prefix on POSIX
       shells (e.g.  $f), between % characters on Windows cmd (e.g.  %f%), and with a $env:  prefix  on  Windows
       PowerShell (e.g.  $env:f).

   f
       Current file selection as a full path.

   fs
       Selected file(s) separated with the value of filesep option as full path(s).

   fv
       Visually selected file(s) separated with the value of filesep option as full path(s).

   fx
       Selected  file(s)  (i.e.  fs, never fv) if there are any selected files, otherwise current file selection
       (i.e.  f).

   id
       Id of the running client.

   PWD
       Present working directory.

   OLDPWD
       Initial working directory.

   LF_LEVEL
       The value of this variable is set to the current nesting level when you  run  lf  from  a  shell  spawned
       inside  lf.  You can add the value of this variable to your shell prompt to make it clear that your shell
       runs inside lf.  For example, with POSIX shells, you can use [ -n "$LF_LEVEL" ] && PS1="$PS1""(lf  level:
       $LF_LEVEL) " in your shell configuration file (e.g.  ~/.bashrc).

   OPENER
       If  this  variable  is  set  in  the environment, use the same value.  Otherwise, this is set to start in
       Windows, open in macOS, xdg-open in others.

   EDITOR
       If VISUAL is set in the environment, use its value.  Otherwise, use the value of the environment variable
       EDITOR.  If neither variable is set, this is set to vi on Unix, notepad in Windows.

   PAGER
       If this variable is set in the environment, use the same value.  Otherwise, this is set to less on  Unix,
       more in Windows.

   SHELL
       If  this  variable  is set in the environment, use the same value.  Otherwise, this is set to sh on Unix,
       cmd in Windows.

   lf
       Absolute path to the currently running lf binary, if it can be found.  Otherwise,  this  is  set  to  the
       string lf.

   lf_{option}
       Value of the {option}.

   lf_user_{option}
       Value of the user_{option}.

   lf_flag_{flag}
       Value of the command line {flag}.

   lf_width, lf_height
       Width/Height of the terminal.

   lf_count
       Value of the count associated with the current command.

   lf_mode
       Current  mode  that lf is operating in.  This is useful for customizing keybindings depending on what the
       current mode is.  Possible values are delete, rename, filter, find, mark, search,  command,  shell,  pipe
       (when running a shell-pipe command), normal, visual and unknown.

SPECIAL COMMANDS

       This section shows information about special shell commands.

   open
       This  shell  command  can  be defined to override the default open command when the current file is not a
       directory.

   paste
       This shell command can be defined to override the default paste command.

   rename
       This shell command can be defined to override the default rename command.

   delete
       This shell command can be defined to override the default delete command.

   pre-cd
       This shell command can be defined to be executed before changing a directory.

   on-cd
       This shell command can be defined to be executed after changing a directory.

   on-load
       This shell command can be defined to be executed after loading a directory.  It provides the files inside
       the directory as arguments.

   on-focus-gained
       This shell command can be defined to be executed when the terminal gains focus.

   on-focus-lost
       This shell command can be defined to be executed when the terminal loses focus.

   on-init
       This shell command can be defined to be executed after initializing and connecting to the server.

   on-select
       This shell command can be defined to be executed after the selection changes.

   on-redraw
       This shell command can be defined to be executed after the screen  is  redrawn  or  if  the  terminal  is
       resized.

   on-quit
       This shell command can be defined to be executed before quitting.

PREFIXES

       The following command prefixes are used by lf:

              :  read (default)  built-in/custom command
              $  shell           shell command
              %  shell-pipe      shell command running with the UI
              !  shell-wait      shell command waiting for a key press
              &  shell-async     shell command running asynchronously

       The  same  evaluator  is used for the command line and the configuration file for reading shell commands.
       The difference is that prefixes are not necessary in the command  line.   Instead,  different  modes  are
       provided  to  read  corresponding  commands.  These modes are mapped to the prefix keys above by default.
       Visual mode mappings are defined the same way Normal mode mappings are defined.

SYNTAX

       Characters from # to newline are comments and ignored:

              # comments start with `#`

       The following commands (set, setlocal, map, nmap, vmap, cmap, and cmd) are used for configuration.

       Command set is used to set an option which can be a boolean, integer, or string:

              set hidden         # boolean enable
              set hidden true    # boolean enable
              set nohidden       # boolean disable
              set hidden false   # boolean disable
              set hidden!        # boolean toggle
              set scrolloff 10   # integer value
              set sortby time    # string value without quotes
              set sortby 'time'  # string value with single quotes (whitespace)
              set sortby "time"  # string value with double quotes (backslash escapes)

       Command setlocal is used to set a local option for  a  directory  which  can  be  a  boolean  or  string.
       Currently  supported  local  options  are dircounts, dirfirst, dironly, hidden, info, reverse and sortby.
       Adding a trailing path separator (i.e.  / for Unix and \ for Windows)  sets  the  option  for  the  given
       directory along with its subdirectories:

              setlocal /foo/bar hidden         # boolean enable
              setlocal /foo/bar hidden true    # boolean enable
              setlocal /foo/bar nohidden       # boolean disable
              setlocal /foo/bar hidden false   # boolean disable
              setlocal /foo/bar hidden!        # boolean toggle
              setlocal /foo/bar sortby time    # string value without quotes
              setlocal /foo/bar sortby 'time'  # string value with single quotes (whitespace)
              setlocal /foo/bar sortby "time"  # string value with double quotes (backslash escapes)
              setlocal /foo/bar  hidden        # for only '/foo/bar' directory
              setlocal /foo/bar/ hidden        # for '/foo/bar' and its subdirectories (e.g. '/foo/bar/baz')

       Command map is used to bind a key in Normal and Visual mode to a command which can be a built-in command,
       custom command, or shell command:

              map gh cd ~        # built-in command
              map D trash        # custom command
              map i $less $f     # shell command
              map U !du -csh *   # waiting shell command

       Command nmap does the same but for Normal mode only.

       Command vmap does the same but for Visual mode only.

       Overview of which map command works in which mode:

              map                Normal, Visual
              nmap               Normal
              vmap               Visual
              cmap               Command-line

       Command cmap is used to bind a key on the command line to a command line command or any other command:

              cmap <c-g> cmd-escape
              cmap <a-i> set incsearch!

       You can delete an existing binding by leaving the expression empty:

              map gh             # deletes 'gh' mapping in Normal and Visual mode
              nmap v             # deletes 'v' mapping in Normal mode
              vmap o             # deletes 'o' mapping in Visual mode
              cmap <c-g>         # deletes '<c-g>' mapping

       Command cmd is used to define a custom command:

              cmd usage $du -h -d1 | less

       You can delete an existing command by leaving the expression empty:

              cmd trash          # deletes 'trash' command

       If there is no prefix then : is assumed:

              map zt set info time

       An  explicit : can be provided to group statements until a newline which is especially useful for map and
       cmd commands:

              map st :set sortby time; set info time

       If you need multiline you can wrap statements in {{ and }} after the proper prefix.

              map st :{{
                  set sortby time
                  set info time
              }}

KEY MAPPINGS

       Regular keys are assigned to a command with the usual syntax:

              map a down

       Keys combined with the Shift key simply use the uppercase letter:

              map A down

       Special keys are written in between < and > characters and always use lowercase letters:

              map <enter> down

       Angle brackets can be assigned with their special names:

              map <lt> down
              map <gt> down

       Function keys are prefixed with f character:

              map <f-1> down

       Keys combined with the Ctrl key are prefixed with a c character:

              map <c-a> down

       Keys combined with the Alt key are assigned in two different ways  depending  on  the  behavior  of  your
       terminal.   Older terminals (e.g.  xterm) may set the 8th bit of a character when the Alt key is pressed.
       On these terminals, you can use the corresponding byte for the mapping:

              map á down

       Newer terminals (e.g.  gnome-terminal) may prefix the key with an escape character when the  Alt  key  is
       pressed.   lf  uses  the  escape  delaying  mechanism  to recognize Alt keys in these terminals (delay is
       100ms).  On these terminals, keys combined with the Alt key are prefixed with an a character:

              map <a-a> down

       It is possible to combine special keys with modifiers:

              map <a-enter> down

       WARNING: Some key combinations will likely be intercepted by your OS, window manager, or terminal.  Other
       key combinations cannot be recognized by lf due to the way terminals work (e.g.  Ctrl+h combination sends
       a backspace key instead).  The easiest way to find out the name of a key combination and whether it  will
       work  on  your  system is to press the key while lf is running and read the name from the unknown mapping
       error.

       Mouse buttons are prefixed with an m character:

              map <m-1> down  # primary
              map <m-2> down  # secondary
              map <m-3> down  # middle
              map <m-4> down
              map <m-5> down
              map <m-6> down
              map <m-7> down
              map <m-8> down

       Mouse wheel events are also prefixed with an m character:

              map <m-up>    down
              map <m-down>  down
              map <m-left>  down
              map <m-right> down

PUSH MAPPINGS

       The usual way to map a key sequence is to assign it to a named or unnamed command.  While this provides a
       clean way to remap built-in keys as well as other commands, it  can  be  limiting  at  times.   For  this
       reason,  the  push  command  is provided by lf.  This command is used to simulate key pushes given as its
       arguments.  You can map a key to a push command with an argument to create various keybindings.

       This is mainly useful for two purposes.  First, it can be used to map a command with a command count:

              map <c-j> push 10j

       Second, it can be used to avoid typing the name when a command takes arguments:

              map r push :rename<space>

       One thing to be careful of is that since the push command works with  keys  instead  of  commands  it  is
       possible to accidentally create recursive bindings:

              map j push 2j

       These types of bindings create a deadlock when executed.

SHELL COMMANDS

       Regular shell commands are the most basic command type that is useful for many purposes.  For example, we
       can write a shell command to move the selected file(s) to trash.  A first attempt to write such a command
       may look like this:

              cmd trash ${{
                  mkdir -p ~/.trash
                  if [ -z "$fs" ]; then
                      mv "$f" ~/.trash
                  else
                      IFS="$(printf '\n\t')"; mv $fs ~/.trash
                  fi
              }}

       We  check $fs to see if there are any selected files.  Otherwise, we just delete the current file.  Since
       this is such a common pattern, a separate $fx variable is provided.  We can use this variable to get  rid
       of the conditional:

              cmd trash ${{
                  mkdir -p ~/.trash
                  IFS="$(printf '\n\t')"; mv $fx ~/.trash
              }}

       The  trash directory is checked each time the command is executed.  We can move it outside of the command
       so it would only run once at startup:

              ${{ mkdir -p ~/.trash }}

              cmd trash ${{ IFS="$(printf '\n\t')"; mv $fx ~/.trash }}

       Since these are one-liners, we can drop {{ and }}:

              $mkdir -p ~/.trash

              cmd trash $IFS="$(printf '\n\t')"; mv $fx ~/.trash

       Finally, note that we set the IFS variable manually in these commands.  Instead, we  could  use  the  ifs
       option  to  set  it  for  all  shell  commands  (i.e.   set ifs "\n").  This can be especially useful for
       interactive use (e.g.  $rm $f or $rm $fs would simply work).  This option is not set by default as it can
       behave unexpectedly for new users.  However, use of this option is highly recommended and it  is  assumed
       in the rest of the documentation.

PIPING SHELL COMMANDS

       Regular shell commands have some limitations in some cases.  When an output or error message is given and
       the  command  exits  afterwards,  the  UI  is  immediately resumed and there is no way to see the message
       without dropping to shell again.  Also, even when there is no output or error, the UI still needs  to  be
       paused  while  the  command  is  running.  This can cause flickering on the screen for short commands and
       similar distractions for longer commands.

       Instead of pausing the UI, piping shell commands connect stdin, stdout, and stderr of the command to  the
       statline  at the bottom of the UI.  This can be useful for programs following the Unix philosophy to give
       no output in the success case, and brief error messages or prompts in other cases.

       For example, the following rename command prompts for overwrite in the statline if there is  an  existing
       file with the given name:

              cmd rename %mv -i $f $1

       You can also output error messages in the command and they will show up in the statline.  For example, an
       alternative rename command may look like this:

              cmd rename %[ -e $1 ] && printf "file exists" || mv $f $1

       Note that input is line buffered and output and error are byte buffered.

WAITING SHELL COMMANDS

       Waiting  shell  commands are similar to regular shell commands except that they wait for a key press when
       the command is finished.  These can be useful to see the output of a program before the  UI  is  resumed.
       Waiting  shell  commands  are more appropriate than piping shell commands when the command is verbose and
       the output is best displayed as multiline.

ASYNCHRONOUS SHELL COMMANDS

       Asynchronous shell commands are used to start a command in  the  background  and  then  resume  operation
       without  waiting  for  the  command  to  finish.   Stdin,  stdout,  and stderr of the command are neither
       connected to the terminal nor the UI.

REMOTE COMMANDS

       One of the more advanced features in lf is remote commands.  All clients connect to a server on  startup.
       It  is  possible to send commands to all or any of the connected clients over the common server.  This is
       used internally to notify file selection changes to other clients.

       To use this feature, you need to use a client which supports communicating with  a  Unix  domain  socket.
       OpenBSD  implementation  of  netcat  (nc)  is  one such example.  You can use it to send a command to the
       socket file:

              echo 'send echo hello world' | nc -U ${XDG_RUNTIME_DIR:-/tmp}/lf.${USER}.sock

       Since such a client may not be available everywhere, lf comes bundled with a command line flag to be used
       as such.  When using lf, you do not need to specify  the  address  of  the  socket  file.   This  is  the
       recommended way of using remote commands since it is shorter and immune to socket file address changes:

              lf -remote 'send echo hello world'

       In  this  command send is used to send the rest of the string as a command to all connected clients.  You
       can optionally give it an ID number to send a command to a single client:

              lf -remote 'send 1234 echo hello world'

       All clients have a unique ID number but you may not be aware of the ID number  when  you  are  writing  a
       command.  For this purpose, an $id variable is exported to the environment for shell commands.  The value
       of  this variable is set to the process ID of the client.  You can use it to send a remote command from a
       client to the server which in return sends a command back to itself.  So now you can display a message in
       the current client by calling the following in a shell command:

              lf -remote "send $id echo hello world"

       Since lf does not have control flow syntax, remote commands are used for such needs.   For  example,  you
       can configure the number of columns in the UI with respect to the terminal width as follows:

              cmd recol %{{
                  if [ $lf_width -le 80 ]; then
                      lf -remote "send $id set ratios 1:2"
                  elif [ $lf_width -le 160 ]; then
                      lf -remote "send $id set ratios 1:2:3"
                  else
                      lf -remote "send $id set ratios 1:2:3:5"
                  fi
              }}

       In  addition,  the  query  command  can  be  used  to  obtain information about a specific lf instance by
       providing its ID:

              lf -remote "query $id maps"

       The following types of information are supported:

              maps     list of mappings created by the 'map', 'nmap' and 'vmap' command
              nmaps    list of mappings created by the 'nmap' and 'map' command
              vmaps    list of mappings created by the 'vmap' and 'map' command
              cmaps    list of mappings created by the 'cmap' command
              cmds     list of commands created by the 'cmd' command
              jumps    contents of the jump list, showing previously visited locations
              history  list of previously executed commands on the command line
              files    list of files in the currently open directory as displayed by lf, empty if dir is still loading

       When listing mappings the characters in the first column are:

              n  Normal
              v  Visual
              c  Command-line

       This is useful for scripting actions based on the internal  state  of  lf.   For  example,  to  select  a
       previous command using fzf and execute it:

              map <a-h> ${{
                  clear
                  cmd=$(
                      lf -remote "query $id history" |
                      awk -F'\t' 'NR > 1 { print $NF}' |
                      sort -u |
                      fzf --reverse --prompt='Execute command: '
                  )
                  lf -remote "send $id $cmd"
              }}

       There  is  also  a  quit command to quit the server when there are no connected clients left, and a quit!
       command to force quit the server by closing client connections first:

              lf -remote 'quit'
              lf -remote 'quit!'

       Lastly, there is a conn command to connect the server to a client.  This should not be needed for users.

FILE OPERATIONS

       lf uses its own built-in copy and move operations by default.   These  are  implemented  as  asynchronous
       operations  and progress is shown in the bottom ruler.  These commands do not overwrite existing files or
       directories with the same name.  Instead, a suffix that is compatible with the  --backup=numbered  option
       in  GNU  cp  is  added  to  the  new  files or directories.  Only file modes and (some) timestamps can be
       preserved (see preserve option), all other attributes  are  ignored  including  ownership,  context,  and
       xattr.  Special files such as character and block devices, named pipes, and sockets are skipped and links
       are not followed.  Moving is performed using the rename operation of the underlying OS.  For cross-device
       moving,  lf  falls back to copying and then deletes the original files if there are no errors.  Operation
       errors are shown in the message line as well as the log file and they do not  prematurely  terminate  the
       corresponding file operation.

       File  operations  can  be performed on the currently selected file or on multiple files by selecting them
       first.  When you copy a file, lf doesn't actually copy the file on the disk, but only records its name to
       a file.  The actual file copying takes place when you paste.  Similarly paste after a cut operation moves
       the file.

       You can customize copy and move operations by defining a paste command.  This is a special  command  that
       is  called  when it is defined instead of the built-in implementation.  You can use the following example
       as a starting point:

              cmd paste %{{
                  load=$(cat ~/.local/share/lf/files)
                  mode=$(echo "$load" | sed -n '1p')
                  list=$(echo "$load" | sed '1d')
                  if [ $mode = 'copy' ]; then
                      cp -R $list .
                  elif [ $mode = 'move' ]; then
                      mv $list .
                      rm ~/.local/share/lf/files
                      lf -remote 'send clear'
                  fi
              }}

       Some useful things to be considered are to use the backup  (--backup)  and/or  preserve  attributes  (-a)
       options with cp and mv commands if they support it (i.e.  GNU implementation), change the command type to
       asynchronous,  or  use  rsync  command  with progress bar option for copying and feed the progress to the
       client periodically with remote echo calls.

       By default, lf does not assign delete command to a key to protect new  users.   You  can  customize  file
       deletion  by  defining  a  delete  command.   You  can also assign a key to this command if you like.  An
       example command to move selected files to a trash folder and remove files completely after  a  prompt  is
       provided in the example configuration file.

SEARCHING FILES

       There  are  two mechanisms implemented in lf to search a file in the current directory.  Searching is the
       traditional method to move the selection to a file matching a given pattern.  Finding is  an  alternative
       way to search for a pattern possibly using fewer keystrokes.

       The  searching  mechanism  is  implemented  with  commands  search  (default /), search-back (default ?),
       search-next (default n), and search-prev (default N).  You can set searchmethod to glob to match using  a
       glob  pattern.   Globbing supports * to match any sequence, ? to match any character, and [...] or [^...]
       to match character sets or ranges.  You can set searchmethod to regex to match  using  a  regex  pattern.
       For  a  full overview of Go's RE2 syntax, see https://pkg.go.dev/regexp/syntax.  You can enable incsearch
       option to jump to the current match at each keystroke while typing.  In this mode,  you  can  either  use
       cmd-enter  to  accept  the  search  or  use cmd-escape to cancel the search.  You can also map some other
       commands with cmap to accept the search and execute the command immediately afterwards.  For example, you
       can use the right arrow key to finish the search and open the selected file with the following mapping:

              cmap <right> :cmd-enter; open

       The finding mechanism is implemented with commands find (default f),  find-back  (default  F),  find-next
       (default ;), find-prev (default ,).  You can disable anchorfind option to match a pattern at an arbitrary
       position in the filename instead of the beginning.  You can set the number of keys to match using findlen
       option.   If  you set this value to zero, then the keys are read until there is only a single match.  The
       default values of these two options are set to jump to the first file with the given initial.

       Some options affect both searching and finding.  You can disable wrapscan option to prevent searches from
       being wrapped around at the end of the file list.  You can disable ignorecase option to  match  cases  in
       the  pattern  and  the filename.  This option is already automatically overridden if the pattern contains
       uppercase characters.  You can disable smartcase option to disable this behavior.   Two  similar  options
       ignoredia and smartdia are provided to control matching diacritics in Latin letters.

OPENING FILES

       You  can  define an open command (default l and <right>) to configure file opening.  This command is only
       called when the current file is not a directory, otherwise, the directory is entered  instead.   You  can
       define it just as you would define any other command:

              cmd open $vi $fx

       It is possible to use different command types:

              cmd open &xdg-open $f

       You may want to use either file extensions or MIME types from file command:

              cmd open ${{
                  case $(file --mime-type -Lb $f) in
                      text/*) vi $fx;;
                      *) for f in $fx; do xdg-open $f > /dev/null 2> /dev/null & done;;
                  esac
              }}

       You  may  want to use setsid before your opener command to have persistent processes that continue to run
       after lf quits.

       Regular shell commands (i.e.  $) drop to the terminal which results in a flicker for commands that finish
       immediately (e.g.  xdg-open in the above example).  If you want to use asynchronous shell commands  (i.e.
       &) but also want to use the terminal when necessary (e.g.  vi in the above example), you can use a remote
       command:

              cmd open &{{
                  case $(file --mime-type -Lb $f) in
                      text/*) lf -remote "send $id \$vi \$fx";;
                      *) for f in $fx; do xdg-open $f > /dev/null 2> /dev/null & done;;
                  esac
              }}

       Note  that  asynchronous  shell commands run in their own process group by default so they do not require
       the manual use of setsid.

       The following command is provided by default:

              cmd open &$OPENER $f

       You may also use any other existing file openers as you like.  Possible options are libfile-mimeinfo-perl
       (executable name is mimeopen), rifle (ranger's default file opener), or mimeo to name a few.

PREVIEWING FILES

       lf previews files on the preview pane by printing the file until the end or until  the  preview  pane  is
       filled.   This  output  can  be enhanced by providing a custom preview script for filtering.  This can be
       used to highlight source code, list contents of archive files or view PDF or image files to name  a  few.
       For coloring lf recognizes ANSI escape codes.

       To  use  this  feature,  you need to set the value of previewer option to the path of an executable file.
       Five arguments are passed to the file, (1) current  filename,  (2)  width,  (3)  height,  (4)  horizontal
       position, and (5) vertical position of preview pane respectively.  The output of the execution is printed
       in the preview pane.  You may also want to use the same script in your pager mapping as well:

              set previewer ~/.config/lf/pv.sh
              map i $~/.config/lf/pv.sh $f | less -R

       For less pager, you may instead utilize LESSOPEN mechanism so that useful information about the file such
       as the full path of the file can still be displayed in the statusline below:

              set previewer ~/.config/lf/pv.sh
              map i $LESSOPEN='| ~/.config/lf/pv.sh %s' less -R $f

       Since  this  script  is called for each file selection change it needs to be as efficient as possible and
       this responsibility is left to the user.  You may use file extensions to determine the type of file  more
       efficiently  compared  to  obtaining  MIME types from file command.  Extensions can then be used to match
       cleanly within a conditional:

              #!/bin/sh

              case "$1" in
                  *.tar*) tar tf "$1";;
                  *.zip) unzip -l "$1";;
                  *.rar) unrar l "$1";;
                  *.7z) 7z l "$1";;
                  *.pdf) pdftotext "$1" -;;
                  *) highlight -O ansi "$1";;
              esac

       Another important consideration for efficiency is the use  of  programs  with  short  startup  times  for
       preview.  For this reason, highlight is recommended over pygmentize for syntax highlighting.  Besides, it
       is  also important that the application processes the file on the fly rather than first reading it to the
       memory and then doing the processing  afterwards.   This  is  especially  relevant  for  big  files.   lf
       automatically  closes  the  previewer script output pipe with a SIGPIPE when enough lines are read.  When
       everything else fails, you can make use of the height argument to only feed the first portion of the file
       to a program for preview.  Note that some programs may not  respond  well  to  SIGPIPE  to  exit  with  a
       non-zero return code and avoid caching.  You may add a trailing || true command to avoid such errors:

              highlight -O ansi "$1" || true

       You  may  also  use  an existing preview filter as you like.  Your system may already come with a preview
       filter named lesspipe.  These filters may have a mechanism to add user customizations as well.   See  the
       related documentation for more information.

CHANGING DIRECTORY

       lf  changes  the  working directory of the process to the current directory so that shell commands always
       work in the displayed directory.  After quitting, it returns to the original directory where it is  first
       launched  like  all shell programs.  If you want to stay in the current directory after quitting, you can
       use   one   of   the   example   lfcd   wrapper   shell   scripts   provided   in   the   repository   at
       https://github.com/gokcehan/lf/tree/master/etc

       There  is  a  special  command  on-cd  that  runs a shell command when it is defined and the directory is
       changed.  You can define it just as you would define any other command:

              cmd on-cd &{{
                  bash -c '
                  # display git repository status in your prompt
                  source /usr/share/git/completion/git-prompt.sh
                  GIT_PS1_SHOWDIRTYSTATE=auto
                  GIT_PS1_SHOWSTASHSTATE=auto
                  GIT_PS1_SHOWUNTRACKEDFILES=auto
                  GIT_PS1_SHOWUPSTREAM=auto
                  git=$(__git_ps1 " (%s)")
                  fmt="\033[32;1m%u@%h\033[0m:\033[34;1m%d\033[0m\033[1m%f$git\033[0m"
                  lf -remote "send $id set promptfmt \"$fmt\""
                  '
              }}

       If you want to send escape sequences to the terminal, you can use the tty-write command to  do  so.   The
       following xterm-specific escape sequence sets the terminal title to the working directory:

              cmd on-cd &{{
                  lf -remote "send $id tty-write \"\033]0;$PWD\007\""
              }}

       This  command  runs  whenever  you change the directory but not on startup.  You can add an extra call to
       make it run on startup as well:

              cmd on-cd &{{ ... }}
              on-cd

       Note that all shell commands are possible but % and & are usually more appropriate  as  $  and  !  causes
       flickers and pauses respectively.

       There  is  also  a  pre-cd  command,  that  works like on-cd, but is run before the directory is actually
       changed.  Another related command is on-load which gets executed when loading a directory.

LOADING DIRECTORY

       Similar to on-cd there also is on-load that when defined runs a shell command after loading a  directory.
       It works well when combined with addcustominfo.

       The following example can be used to display git indicators in the info column:

              cmd on-load &{{
                  cd "$(dirname "$1")" || exit 1
                  [ "$(git rev-parse --is-inside-git-dir 2>/dev/null)" = false ] || exit 0

                  cmds=""

                  for file in "$@"; do
                      case "$file" in
                          */.git|*/.git/*) continue;;
                      esac

                      status=$(git status --porcelain --ignored -- "$file" | cut -c1-2 | head -n1)

                      if [ -n "$status" ]; then
                          cmds="${cmds}addcustominfo \"${file}\" \"$status\"; "
                      else
                          cmds="${cmds}addcustominfo \"${file}\" ''; "
                      fi
                  done

                  if [ -n "$cmds" ]; then
                      lf -remote "send $id :$cmds"
                  fi
              }}

       Another use case could be showing the dimensions of images and videos:

              cmd on-load &{{
                  cmds=""

                  for file in "$@"; do
                      mime=$(file --mime-type -Lb -- "$file")
                      case "$mime" in
                          # vector images cause problems
                          image/svg+xml)
                              ;;
                          image/*|video/*)
                              dimensions=$(exiftool -s3 -imagesize -- "$file")
                              cmds="${cmds}addcustominfo \"${file}\" \"$dimensions\"; "
                              ;;
                      esac
                  done

                  if [ -n "$cmds" ]; then
                      lf -remote "send $id :$cmds"
                  fi
              }}

COLORS

       lf tries to automatically adapt its colors to the environment.  It starts with a default color scheme and
       updates  colors  using  values  of  existing  environment  variables possibly by overwriting its previous
       values.  Colors are set in the following order:

       1. default

       2. LSCOLORS (macOS/BSD ls)

       3. LS_COLORS (GNU ls)

       4. LF_COLORS (lf specific)

       5. colors file (lf specific)

       Please refer to the corresponding man pages for more information about LSCOLORS and LS_COLORS.  LF_COLORS
       is provided with the same syntax as LS_COLORS in case you want to configure colors only for  lf  but  not
       ls.   This can be useful since there are some differences between ls and lf, though one should expect the
       same behavior for common cases.  The colors file (refer to the  CONFIGURATION section)  is  provided  for
       easier  configuration  without  environment  variables.  This file should consist of whitespace-separated
       pairs with a # character to start comments until the end of the line.

       You can configure lf colors in two different ways.  First, you can only configure 8 basic colors used  by
       your  terminal  and lf should pick up those colors automatically.  Depending on your terminal, you should
       be able to select your colors from a 24-bit palette.  This is the recommended approach as colors used  by
       other programs will also match each other.

       Second,  you  can set the values of environment variables or colors file mentioned above for fine-grained
       customization.  Note that LS_COLORS/LF_COLORS are more powerful than LSCOLORS and they can be  used  even
       when  GNU  programs  are  not installed on the system.  You can combine this second method with the first
       method for the best results.

       Lastly, you may also want to configure the colors of the prompt line to match the  rest  of  the  colors.
       Colors of the prompt line can be configured using the promptfmt option which can include hardcoded colors
       as ANSI escapes.  See the default value of this option to have an idea about how to color this line.

       It is worth noting that lf uses as many colors advertised by your terminal's entry in terminfo or infocmp
       databases  on  your  system.  If an entry is not present, it falls back to an internal database.  If your
       terminal supports 24-bit colors but either does not have a database  entry  or  does  not  advertise  all
       capabilities, you can enable support by setting the $COLORTERM variable to truecolor or ensuring $TERM is
       set to a value that ends with -truecolor.

       Default  lf  colors  are mostly taken from GNU dircolors defaults.  These defaults use 8 basic colors and
       bold attribute.  Default dircolors entries with background colors are simplified to avoid confusion  with
       current  file selection in lf.  Similarly, there are only file type matchings and extension matchings are
       left out for simplicity.  Default values are as follows given with their matching order in lf:

              ln  01;36
              or  31;01
              tw  01;34
              ow  01;34
              st  01;34
              di  01;34
              pi  33
              so  01;35
              bd  33;01
              cd  33;01
              su  01;32
              sg  01;32
              ex  01;32
              fi  00

       Note that lf first tries matching file names and then falls back  to  file  types.   The  full  order  of
       matchings from most specific to least are as follows:

       1. Full Path (e.g.  ~/.config/lf/lfrc)

       2. Dir Name (e.g.  .git/) (only matches dirs with a trailing slash at the end)

       3. File Type (e.g.  ln) (except fi)

       4. File Name (e.g.  README*)

       5. File Name (e.g.  *README)

       6. Base Name (e.g.  README.*)

       7. Extension (e.g.  *.txt)

       8. Default (i.e.  fi)

       For  example,  given  a  regular  text file /path/to/README.txt, the following entries are checked in the
       configuration and the first one to match is used:

       1. /path/to/README.txt

       2. (skipped since the file is not a directory)

       3. (skipped since the file is of type fi)

       4. README.txt*

       5. *README.txt

       6. README.*

       7. *.txt

       8. fi

       Given a regular directory /path/to/example.d, the following entries are checked in the configuration  and
       the first one to match is used:

       1. /path/to/example.d

       2. example.d/

       3. di

       4. example.d*

       5. *example.d

       6. example.*

       7. *.d

       8. fi

       Note that glob-like patterns do not perform glob matching for performance reasons.

       For example, you can set a variable as follows:

              export LF_COLORS="~/Documents=01;31:~/Downloads=01;31:~/.local/share=01;31:~/.config/lf/lfrc=31:.git/=01;32:.git*=32:*.gitignore=32:*Makefile=32:README.*=33:*.txt=34:*.md=34:ln=01;36:di=01;34:ex=01;32:"

       Having  all  entries  on a single line can make it hard to read.  You may instead divide it into multiple
       lines in between double quotes by escaping newlines with backslashes as follows:

              export LF_COLORS="\
              ~/Documents=01;31:\
              ~/Downloads=01;31:\
              ~/.local/share=01;31:\
              ~/.config/lf/lfrc=31:\
              .git/=01;32:\
              .git*=32:\
              *.gitignore=32:\
              *Makefile=32:\
              README.*=33:\
              *.txt=34:\
              *.md=34:\
              ln=01;36:\
              di=01;34:\
              ex=01;32:\
              "

       The ln entry supports the special value target, which will  use  the  link  target  to  select  a  style.
       Filename rules will still apply based on the link's name -- this mirrors GNU's ls and dircolors behavior.
       Having  such  a  long  variable  definition  in a shell configuration file might be undesirable.  You may
       instead use the colors file (refer to the CONFIGURATION section) for configuration.  A sample colors file
       can be found at https://github.com/gokcehan/lf/blob/master/etc/colors.example You may also see  the  wiki
       page for ANSI escape codes https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code

ICONS

       Icons  are  configured  using  LF_ICONS environment variable or an icons file (refer to the CONFIGURATION
       section).  The variable uses the same syntax as LS_COLORS/LF_COLORS.  Instead of colors, you  should  use
       single  characters  or symbols as values.  The ln entry supports the special value target, which will use
       the link target to select a icon.  Filename rules will still apply based  on  the  link's  name  --  this
       mirrors  GNU's  ls  and  dircolors  behavior.  The icons file (refer to the CONFIGURATION section) should
       consist of whitespace-separated arrays with a # character to start comments until the end  of  the  line.
       Each  line  should  contain 1-3 columns: a file type or file name pattern, the icon, and an optional icon
       color.  Using only one column disables all rules for that type or name.  Do not forget to add  set  icons
       true to your lfrc to see the icons.  Default values are listed below in the order lf matches them:

              ln  l
              or  l
              tw  t
              ow  d
              st  t
              di  d
              pi  p
              so  s
              bd  b
              cd  c
              su  u
              sg  g
              ex  x
              fi  -

       A sample icons file can be found at https://github.com/gokcehan/lf/blob/master/etc/icons.example

       A         sample         colored         icons         file         can         be        found        at
       https://github.com/gokcehan/lf/blob/master/etc/icons_colored.example

r38                                                2025-09-19                                              LF(1)