My custom theme for bash-it: https://github.com/Bash-it/bash-it Original Theme Powerline Multiline Theme: https://github.com/Bash-it/bash-it/tree/master/themes/powerline-multiline
A colorful multiline theme, where the first line shows information about your shell session (divided into two parts, left and right), and the second one is where the shell commands are introduced.
IMPORTANT: This theme requires that a font with the Powerline symbols needs to be used in your terminal emulator, otherwise the prompt won't be displayed correctly, i.e. some of the additional icons and characters will be missing. Please follow your operating system's instructions to install one of the fonts from the above link and select it in your terminal emulator.
- Current path
- Current username and hostname
- Current time
- An indicator when connected by SSH
- An indicator when
sudo
has the credentials cached (see thesudo
manpage for more info about this) - An indicator when the current shell is inside the Vim editor
- Battery charging status (depends on the [../../plugins/available/battery.plugin.bash](battery plugin))
- SCM Repository status (e.g. Git, SVN)
- The current Python environment (Virtualenv, venv, and Conda are supported) in use
- The current Ruby environment (rvm and rbenv are supported) in use
- Last command exit code (only shown when the exit code is greater than 0)
This theme is pretty configurable, all the configuration is done by setting environment variables.
By default, the username and hostname are shown on the right hand side, but you can change this behavior by setting the value of the following variable:
export POWERLINE_PROMPT_USER_INFO_MODE="sudo"
For now, the only supported value is sudo
, which hides the username and hostname, and shows an indicator when sudo
has the credentials cached. Other values have no effect at this time.
By default, the current time is shown on the right hand side, you can change the format using the following variable:
export THEME_CLOCK_FORMAT="%H:%M:%S"
The time/date is printed by the date
command, so refer to its man page to change the format.
The contents of both prompt sides can be "reordered", all the "segments" (every piece of information) can take any place. The currently available segments are:
battery
- Battery information (you'll need to enable thebattery
plugin)clock
- Current time inHH:MM:SS
formatcwd
- Current working directory including full folder hierarchy (c.f.wd
)hostname
- Host name of machinein_vim
- Show identifier if running in:terminal
from vimlast_status
- Exit status of last run commandpython_venv
- Python virtual environment information (virtualenv
,venv
andconda
supported)ruby
- Current ruby version if usingrvm
scm
- Version control information,git
user_info
- Current userwd
- Working directory, likecwd
but doesn't show the full folder hierarchy, only the directory you're currently in.
Two variables can be defined to set the order of the prompt segments:
export POWERLINE_LEFT_PROMPT="scm python_venv ruby cwd"
export POWERLINE_RIGHT_PROMPT="in_vim clock battery user_info"
The example values above are the current default values, but if you want to remove anything from the prompt, simply remove the "string" that represents the segment from the corresponding variable.
To get the length of the left and right segments right, a padding value is used.
In most cases, the default value (2) works fine, but on some operating systems, this needs to be adjusted.
One example is macOS High Sierra, where the default padding causes the right segment to extend to the next line.
On macOS High Sierra, the padding value needs to be changed to 3 to make the theme look right.
This can be done by setting the POWERLINE_PADDING
variable before Bash-it is loaded, e.g. in your ~/.bash_profile
or ~/.bashrc
file:
export POWERLINE_PADDING=3