# lstr **Repository Path**: young12345666/lstr ## Basic Information - **Project Name**: lstr - **Description**: No description available - **Primary Language**: Unknown - **License**: MIT - **Default Branch**: master - **Homepage**: None - **GVP Project**: No ## Statistics - **Stars**: 0 - **Forks**: 0 - **Created**: 2025-06-29 - **Last Updated**: 2025-07-13 ## Categories & Tags **Categories**: Uncategorized **Tags**: None ## README # lstr [![Build Status](https://github.com/bgreenwell/lstr/actions/workflows/ci.yml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/bgreenwell/lstr/actions) [![Latest Version](https://img.shields.io/crates/v/lstr.svg)](https://crates.io/crates/lstr) [![License: MIT](https://img.shields.io/badge/License-MIT-yellow.svg)](https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT) A fast, minimalist directory tree viewer, written in Rust. Inspired by the command line program [tree](https://github.com/Old-Man-Programmer/tree), with a powerful interactive mode. ![](assets/lstr-demo.gif) *An interactive overview of a project's structure using `lstr`.* ## Philosophy - **Minimalist:** Provides essential features without the bloat. The core experience is clean and uncluttered. - **Interactive:** An optional TUI mode for fluid, keyboard-driven exploration. ## Features - **Classic and interactive modes:** Use `lstr` for a classic `tree`-like view, or launch `lstr interactive` for a fully interactive TUI. - **Theme-aware coloring:** Respects your system's `LS_COLORS` environment variable for fully customizable file and directory colors. - **Rich information display (optional):** - Display file-specific icons with `--icons` (requires a Nerd Font). - Show file permissions with `-p`. - Show file sizes with `-s`. - **Git Integration:** Show file statuses (`Modified`, `New`, `Untracked`, etc.) directly in the tree with the `-G` flag. - **Smart filtering:** - Respects your `.gitignore` files with the `-g` flag. - Control recursion depth (`-L`) or show only directories (`-d`). ## Installation ### With Homebrew (macOS) The easiest way to install `lstr` on macOS is with Homebrew. ```bash # First, tap our repository brew tap bgreenwell/lstr # Now, install lstr brew install lstr ``` ### From source (all platforms) You need the Rust toolchain installed on your system to build `lstr`. 1. **Clone the repository:** ```bash git clone [https://github.com/bgreenwell/lstr.git](https://github.com/bgreenwell/lstr.git) cd lstr ``` 2. **Build and install using Cargo:** ```bash cargo install --path . ``` ## Usage ```bash lstr [OPTIONS] [PATH] lstr interactive [OPTIONS] [PATH] ``` Note that `PATH` defaults to the current directory (`.`) if not specified. | Option | Description | | :--------------------- | :-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `-a`, `--all` | List all files and directories, including hidden ones. | | `--color ` | Specify when to use color output (`always`, `auto`, `never`). | | `-d`, `--dirs-only` | List directories only, ignoring all files. | | `-g`, `--gitignore` | Respect `.gitignore` and other standard ignore files. | | `-G`, `--git-status` | Show git status for files and directories. | | `--icons` | Display file-specific icons; requires a [Nerd Font](https://www.nerdfonts.com/). | | `-L`, `--level `| Maximum depth to descend. | | `-p`, `--permissions` | Display file permissions (Unix-like systems only). | | `-s`, `--size` | Display the size of files. | | `--expand-level `| **Interactive mode only:** Initial depth to expand the interactive tree. | ----- ## Interactive mode Launch the TUI with `lstr interactive [OPTIONS] [PATH]`. ### Keyboard controls | Key(s) | Action | | :------ | :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | | `↑` / `k` | Move selection up. | | `↓` / `j` | Move selection down. | | `Enter` | **Context-aware action:**\- If on a file: Open it in the default editor (`$EDITOR`).\- If on a directory: Toggle expand/collapse. | | `q` / `Esc` | Quit the application normally. | | `Ctrl`+`s` | **Shell integration:** Quits and prints the selected path to stdout. | ## Examples **1. List the contents of the current directory** ```bash lstr ``` **2. Explore a project interactively, ignoring gitignored files** ```bash lstr interactive -g --icons ``` **3. Display a directory with file sizes and permissions (classic view)** ```bash lstr -sp ``` **4. See the git status of all files in a project** ```bash lstr -aG ``` **5. Start an interactive session with all data displayed** ```bash lstr interactive -gG --icons -s -p ``` ## Piping and shell interaction The classic `view` mode is designed to work well with other command-line tools via pipes (`|`). ### Interactive fuzzy finding with `fzf` This is a powerful way to instantly find any file in a large project. ```bash lstr -a -g --icons | fzf ``` `fzf` will take the tree from `lstr` and provide an interactive search prompt to filter it. ### Paging large trees with `less` or `bat` If a directory is too large to fit on one screen, pipe the output to a *pager*. ```bash # Using less (the -R flag preserves color) lstr -L 10 | less -R # Using bat (a modern pager that understands colors) lstr --icons | bat ``` ### Changing directories with `lstr` You can use `lstr` as a visual `cd` command. Add the following function to your shell's startup file (e.g., `~/.bashrc`, `~/.zshrc`): ```bash # A function to visually change directories with lstr lcd() { # Run lstr and capture the selected path into a variable. # The TUI will draw on stderr, and the final path will be on stdout. local selected_dir selected_dir="$(lstr interactive -g --icons)" # If the user selected a path (and didn't just quit), `cd` into it. # Check if the selection is a directory. if [[ -n "$selected_dir" && -d "$selected_dir" ]]; then cd "$selected_dir" fi } ``` After adding this and starting a new shell session (or running `source ~/.bashrc`), you can simply run: ```bash lcd ``` This will launch the `lstr` interactive UI. Navigate to the directory you want, press `Ctrl+s`, and your shell's current directory will instantly change. ## Color customization `lstr` respects your terminal's color theme by default. It reads the `LS_COLORS` environment variable to colorize files and directories according to your system's configuration. This is the same variable used by GNU `ls` and other modern command-line tools. ### Linux On most Linux distributions, this variable is already set. You can customize it by modifying your shell's startup file. ### macOS macOS does not set the `LS_COLORS` variable by default. To enable this feature, you can install `coreutils`: ```bash brew install coreutils ```` Then, add the following line to your shell's startup file (e.g., `~/.zshrc` or `~/.bash_profile`): ```bash # Use gdircolors from the newly installed coreutils eval "$(gdircolors)" ``` ### Windows Windows does not use the `LS_COLORS` variable natively, but you can set it manually to enable color support in modern terminals like Windows Terminal. First, copy a standard `LS_COLORS` string, such as this one: `rs=0:di=01;34:ln=01;36:ex=01;32:*.zip=01;31:*.png=01;35:`. This string defines colors for various file types: * **Directories:** Displayed in **bold blue**. * **Executable files:** Displayed in **bold green** (e.g., `.sh` scripts). * **Symbolic links:** Displayed in **bold cyan**. * **Archives:** Displayed in **bold red** (e.g., `.zip`, `.tar.gz`). * **Image files:** Displayed in **bold magenta** (e.g., `.png`, `.jpg`). * **Other files:** Displayed in the terminal's default text color. To set it for your current **PowerShell** session, run: ```powershell $env:LS_COLORS="rs=0:di=01;34:ln=01;36:ex=01;32:*.zip=01;31:*.png=01;35:" ``` To set it for your current **Command Prompt** (cmd) session, run: ```cmd set LS_COLORS=rs=0:di=01;34:ln=01;36:ex=01;32:*.zip=01;31:*.png=01;35: ``` To make the setting permanent, you can add the command to your PowerShell profile or set it in the system's "Environment Variables" dialog. After setting the variable and starting a new shell session, `lstr` will automatically display your configured colors. ## Inspiration The philosophy and functionality of `lstr` are heavily inspired by the excellent C-based [tree](https://github.com/Old-Man-Programmer/tree) command line program. This project is an attempt to recreate that classic utility in modern, safe Rust. ## License This project is licensed under the terms of the [MIT License](https://www.google.com/search?q=LICENSE).