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RANGER(1) ranger manual RANGER(1)
NAME
ranger - visual file manager
SYNOPSIS
ranger [--version] [--help] [--debug] [--clean] [--confdir=directory]
[--copy-config=which] [--choosefile=target] [--choosefiles=target]
[--choosedir=target] [--selectfile=filepath] [--list-unused-keys]
[--list-tagged-files=tag] [--profile] [--cmd=command] [path]
DESCRIPTION
ranger is a console file manager with VI key bindings.
RESOURCES
This manual contains instructions on how to use and configure ranger.
Inside ranger, you can press ? for a list of key bindings, commands or
settings.
The README contains install instructions.
The file HACKING.md contains guidelines for code modification.
The directory doc/configs contains configuration files. They are
usually installed to /usr/share/doc/ranger/config and can be obtained
with ranger's --copy-config option.
The directory examples contains reference implementations for ranger
plugins, sample configuration files and some programs for integrating
ranger with other software. They are usually installed to
/usr/share/doc/ranger/examples.
The man page of rifle(1) describes the functions of the file opener
The section LINKS of this man page contains further resources.
OPTIONS
-d, --debug Activate the debug mode: Whenever an error occurs, ranger
will exit and print a full traceback. The default
behavior is to merely print the name of the exception in
the statusbar/log and try to keep running.
-c, --clean Activate the clean mode: ranger will not access or
create any configuration files nor will it leave any
traces on your system. This is useful when your
configuration is broken, when you want to avoid clutter,
etc.
-r dir, --confdir=dir
Change the configuration directory of ranger from
~/.config/ranger to "dir".
--copy-config=file
Create copies of the default configuration files in your
local configuration directory. Existing ones will not be
overwritten. Possible values: all, commands,
commands_full, rc, rifle, scope.
Note: You may want to disable loading of the global
configuration files by exporting
RANGER_LOAD_DEFAULT_RC=FALSE in your environment. See
also: FILES, ENVIRONMENT
--copy-config=commands will copy only a small sample
configuration file with a thoroughly commented example.
It is recommended to keep this file tidy to avoid getting
defunct commands on ranger upgrades. The full default
commands.py can be copied with
--copy-config=commands_full, but that file will be
ignored by ranger and serves only as a reference for
making your own commands.
--choosefile=targetfile
Allows you to pick a file with ranger. This changes the
behavior so that when you open a file, ranger will exit
and write the absolute path of that file into targetfile.
--choosefiles=targetfile
Allows you to pick multiple files with ranger. This
changes the behavior so that when you open a file, ranger
will exit and write the absolute paths of all selected
files into targetfile, adding one newline after each
filename.
--choosedir=targetfile
Allows you to pick a directory with ranger. When you
exit ranger, it will write the last visited directory
into targetfile.
--selectfile=targetfile
Open ranger with targetfile selected.
--list-unused-keys
List common keys which are not bound to any action in the
"browser" context. This list is not complete, you can
bind any key that is supported by curses: use the key
code returned by "getch()".
--list-tagged-files=tag
List all files which are tagged with the given tag.
Note: Tags are single characters. The default tag is "*"
--profile Print statistics of CPU usage on exit.
--cmd=command Execute the command after the configuration has been
read. Use this option multiple times to run multiple
commands.
--version Print the version and exit.
-h, --help Print a list of options and exit.
CONCEPTS
This part explains how certain parts of ranger work and how they can be
used efficiently.
TAGS
Tags are single characters which are displayed left of a filename. You
can use tags however you want. Press "t" to toggle tags and "ut" to
remove any tags of the selection. The default tag is an Asterisk ("*"),
but you can use any tag by typing "<tagname>.
PREVIEWS
By default, only text files are previewed, but you can enable external
preview scripts by setting the option "use_preview_script" and
"preview_files" to true.
This default script is ~/.config/ranger/scope.sh. It contains more
documentation and calls to the programs lynx and elinks for html,
highlight for text/code, img2txt for images, atool for archives,
pdftotext for PDFs and mediainfo for video and audio files.
Install these programs (just the ones you need) and scope.sh will
automatically use them.
Independently of the preview script, there is a feature to preview
images by drawing them directly into the terminal. To enable this
feature, set the option "preview_images" to true and enable one of the
image preview modes:
w3m
This does not work over ssh, requires certain terminals (tested on
"xterm" and "urxvt") and is incompatible with tmux, although it works
with screen.
To enable this feature, install the program "w3m" and set the option
"preview_images_method" to w3m.
iTerm2
This only works in iTerm2 compiled with image preview support, but
works over ssh.
To enable this feature, set the option "preview_images_method" to
iterm2.
SELECTION
The selection is defined as "All marked files IF THERE ARE ANY,
otherwise the current file." Be aware of this when using the :delete
command, which deletes all files in the selection.
You can mark files by pressing <Space>, v, etc. A yellow Mrk symbol at
the bottom right indicates that there are marked files in this
directory.
MACROS
Macros can be used in commands to abbreviate things.
%f the highlighted file
%d the path of the current directory
%s the selected files in the current directory.
%t all tagged files in the current directory
%c the full paths of the currently copied/cut files
The macros %f, %d and %s also have upper case variants, %F, %D and %S,
which refer to the next tab. To refer to specific tabs, add a number
in between. (%7s = selection of the seventh tab.)
%c is the only macro which ranges out of the current directory. So you
may "abuse" the copying function for other purposes, like diffing two
files which are in different directories:
Yank the file A (type yy), move to the file B, then type
@diff %c %f
Macros for file paths are generally shell-escaped so they can be used
in the "shell" command.
Additionally, if you create a key binding that uses <any>, a special
statement which accepts any key, then the macro %any (or %any0, %any1,
%any2, ...) can be used in the command to get the key that was pressed.
The macro %rangerdir expands to the directory of ranger's python
library, you can use it for something like this command:
alias show_commands shell less %rangerdir/config/commands.py
The macro %space expands to a space character. You can use it to add
spaces to the end of a command when needed, while preventing editors to
strip spaces off the end of the line automatically.
BOOKMARKS
Type m<key> to bookmark the current directory. You can re-enter this
directory by typing `<key>. <key> can be any letter or digit. Unlike
vim, both lowercase and uppercase bookmarks are persistent.
Each time you jump to a bookmark, the special bookmark at key ` will be
set to the last directory. So typing "``" gets you back to where you
were before.
Bookmarks are selectable when tabbing in the :cd command.
Note: The bookmarks ' (Apostrophe) and ` (Backtick) are the same.
RIFLE
Rifle is the file opener of ranger. It can be used as a standalone
program or a python module. It is located at ranger/ext/rifle.py. In
contrast to other, more simple file openers, rifle can automatically
find installed programs so it can be used effectively out of the box on
a variety of systems.
It's configured in rifle.conf through a list of conditions and
commands. For each line the conditions are checked and if they are
met, the respective command is taken into consideration. By default,
simply the first matching rule is used. In ranger, you can list and
choose rules by typing "r" or simply by typing "<rulenumber><enter>".
If you use rifle standalone, you can list all rules with the "-l"
option and pick a rule with "-p <number>".
The rules, along with further documentation, are contained in
ranger/config/rifle.conf.
FLAGS
Flags give you a way to modify the behavior of the spawned process.
They are used in the commands ":open_with" (key "r") and ":shell" (key
"!").
f Fork the process. (Run in background)
c Run the current file only, instead of the selection
r Run application with root privilege (requires sudo)
t Run application in a new terminal window
There are some additional flags that can currently be used only in the
"shell" command: (for example ":shell -w df")
p Redirect output to the pager
s Silent mode. Output will be discarded.
w Wait for an Enter-press when the process is done
By default, all the flags are off unless specified otherwise in the
rifle.conf configuration file. You can specify as many flags as you
want. An uppercase flag negates the effect: "ffcccFsf" is equivalent
to "cs".
The terminal program name for the "t" flag is taken from the
environment variable $TERMCMD. If it doesn't exist, it tries to
extract it from $TERM and uses "xterm" as a fallback if that fails.
Examples: ":open_with c" will open the file that you currently point
at, even if you have selected other files. ":shell -w df" will run
"df" and wait for you to press Enter before switching back to ranger.
PLUGINS
ranger's plugin system consists of python files which are located in
~/.config/ranger/plugins/ and are imported in alphabetical order when
starting ranger. A plugin changes rangers behavior by overwriting or
extending a function that ranger uses. This allows you to change
pretty much every part of ranger, but there is no guarantee that things
will continue to work in future versions as the source code evolves.
There are some hooks that are specifically made for the use in plugins.
They are functions that start with hook_ and can be found throughout
the code.
grep 'def hook_' -r /path/to/rangers/source
Also try:
pydoc ranger.api
Note that you should NOT simply overwrite a function unless you know
what you're doing. Instead, save the existing function and call it
from your new one. This way, multiple plugins can use the same hook.
There are several sample plugins in the /usr/share/doc/ranger/examples/
directory, including a hello-world plugin that describes this
procedure.
KEY BINDINGS
Key bindings are defined in the file ranger/config/rc.conf. Check this
file for a list of all key bindings. You can copy it to your local
configuration directory with the --copy-config=rc option.
Many key bindings take an additional numeric argument. Type 5j to move
down 5 lines, 2l to open a file in mode 2, 10<Space> to mark 10 files.
This list contains the most useful bindings:
MAIN BINDINGS
h, j, k, l Move left, down, up or right
^D or J, ^U or K
Move a half page down, up
H, L Move back and forward in the history
gg Move to the top
G Move to the bottom
[, ] Move up and down in the parent directory.
^R Reload everything
^L Redraw the screen
i Inspect the current file in a bigger window.
E Edit the current file in $EDITOR ("nano" by default)
S Open a shell in the current directory
? Opens this man page
W Opens the log window where you can review messages that
pop up at the bottom.
w Opens the task window where you can view and modify
background processes that currently run in ranger. In
there, you can type "dd" to abort a process and "J" or
"K" to change the priority of a process. Only one
process is run at a time.
^C Stop the currently running background process that ranger
has started, like copying files, loading directories or
file previews.
<octal>=, +<who><what>, -<who><what>
Change the permissions of the selection. For example,
"777=" is equivalent to "chmod 777 %s", "+ar" does "chmod
a+r %s", "-ow" does "chmod o-w %s" etc.
yy Copy (yank) the selection, like pressing Ctrl+C in modern
GUI programs.
dd Cut the selection, like pressing Ctrl+X in modern GUI
programs.
pp Paste the files which were previously copied or cut, like
pressing Ctrl+V in modern GUI programs.
po Paste the copied/cut files, overwriting existing files.
pl, pL Create symlinks (absolute or relative) to the copied
files
phl Create hardlinks to the copied files
pht Duplicate the subdirectory tree of the copied directory,
then create hardlinks for each contained file into the
new directory tree.
mX Create a bookmark with the name X
`X Move to the bookmark with the name X
n Find the next file. By default, this gets you to the
newest file in the directory, but if you search something
using the keys /, cm, ct, ..., it will get you to the
next found entry.
N Find the previous file.
oX Change the sort method (like in mutt)
zX Change settings. See the settings section for a list of
settings and their hotkey.
u? Universal undo-key. Depending on the key that you press
after "u", it either restores closed tabs (uq), removes
tags (ut), clears the copy/cut buffer (ud), starts the
reversed visual mode (uV) or clears the selection (uv).
f Quickly navigate by entering a part of the filename.
Space Mark a file.
v Toggle the mark-status of all files
V Starts the visual mode, which selects all files between
the starting point and the cursor until you press ESC.
To unselect files in the same way, use "uV".
/ Search for files in the current directory.
: Open the console.
! Open the console with the content "shell " so you can
quickly run commands
@ Open the console with the content "shell %s", placing
the cursor before the " %s" so you can quickly run
commands with the current selection as the argument.
r Open the console with the content "open with " so you can
decide which program to use to open the current file
selection.
cd Open the console with the content "cd "
Alt-N Open a tab. N has to be a number from 0 to 9. If the tab
doesn't exist yet, it will be created.
gn, ^N Create a new tab.
gt, gT Go to the next or previous tab. You can also use TAB and
SHIFT+TAB instead.
gc, ^W Close the current tab. The last tab cannot be closed
this way.
M A key chain that allows you to quickly change the line
mode of all the files of the current directory. For a
more permanent solution, use the command
"default_linemode" in your rc.conf.
READLINE-LIKE BINDINGS IN THE CONSOLE
^B, ^F Move left and right (B for back, F for forward)
^P, ^N Move up and down (P for previous, N for Next)
^A, ^E Move to the start or to the end
^D Delete the current character.
^H Backspace.
MOUSE BUTTONS
Left Mouse Button
Click on something and you'll move there. To run a file, "enter"
it, like a directory, by clicking on the preview.
Right Mouse Button
Enter a directory or run a file.
Scroll Wheel
Scrolls up or down. You can point at the column of the parent
directory while scrolling to switch directories.
SETTINGS
This section lists all built-in settings of ranger. The valid types
for the value are in [brackets]. The hotkey to toggle the setting is
in <brokets>, if a hotkey exists.
Settings can be changed in the file ~/.config/ranger/rc.conf or on the
fly with the command :set option value. Examples:
set column_ratios 1,2,3
set show_hidden true
The different types of settings and an example for each type:
setting type | example values
---------------+----------------------------
bool | true, false
integer | 1, 23, 1337
string | foo, hello world
list | 1,2,3,4
none | none
You can view a list of all settings and their current values by
pressing "3?" in ranger.
automatically_count_files [bool]
Should ranger count and display the number of files in each
directory as soon as it's visible? This gets slow with remote file
sytems. Turning it off will still allow you to see the number of
files after entering the directory.
autosave_bookmarks [bool]
Save bookmarks (used with mX and `X) instantly? This helps to
synchronize bookmarks between multiple ranger instances but leads
to *slight* performance loss. When false, bookmarks are saved when
ranger is exited.
autoupdate_cumulative_size [bool]
You can display the "real" cumulative size of directories by using
the command :get_cumulative_size or typing "dc". The size is
expensive to calculate and will not be updated automatically. You
can choose to update it automatically though by turning on this
option.
cd_bookmarks [bool]
Specify whether bookmarks should be included in the tab completion
of the "cd" command.
collapse_preview [bool] <zc>
When no preview is visible, should the last column be squeezed to
make use of the whitespace?
colorscheme [string]
Which colorscheme to use? These colorschemes are available by
default: default, jungle, snow. Snow is a monochrome scheme,
jungle replaces blue directories with green ones for better
visibility on certain terminals.
column_ratios [list]
How many columns are there, and what are their relative widths?
For example, a value of 1,1,1 would mean 3 evenly sized columns.
1,1,1,1,4 means 5 columns with the preview column being as large as
the other columns combined.
confirm_on_delete [string]
Ask for a confirmation when running the "delete" command? Valid
values are "always" (default), "never", "multiple". With
"multiple", ranger will ask only if you delete multiple files at
once.
dirname_in_tabs [bool]
Display the directory name in tabs?
display_size_in_main_column [bool]
Display the file size in the main column?
display_size_in_status_bar [bool]
Display the file size in the status bar?
display_tags_in_all_columns [bool]
Display tags in all columns?
draw_borders [bool]
Draw borders around columns?
draw_progress_bar_in_statusbar [bool]
Draw a progress bar in the status bar which displays the average
state of all currently running tasks which support progress bars?
flushinput [bool] <zi>
Flush the input after each key hit? One advantage is that when
scrolling down with "j", ranger stops scrolling instantly when you
release the key. One disadvantage is that when you type commands
blindly, some keys might get lost.
hidden_filter [string]
A regular expression pattern for files which should be hidden. For
example, this pattern will hide all files that start with a dot or
end with a tilde.
set hidden_filter ^\.|~$
idle_delay [integer]
The delay that ranger idly waits for user input, in milliseconds,
with a resolution of 100ms. Lower delay reduces lag between
directory updates but increases CPU load.
max_console_history_size [integer, none]
How many console commands should be kept in history? "none" will
disable the limit.
max_history_size [integer, none]
How many directory changes should be kept in history?
metadata_deep_search [bool]
When the metadata manager module looks for metadata, should it only
look for a ".metadata.json" file in the current directory, or do a
deep search and check all directories above the current one as
well?
mouse_enabled [bool] <zm>
Enable mouse input?
padding_right [bool]
When collapse_preview is on and there is no preview, should there
remain a little padding on the right? This allows you to click
into that space to run the file.
preview_directories [bool] <zP>
Preview directories in the preview column?
preview_files [bool] <zp>
Preview files in the preview column?
preview_images [bool]
Draw images inside the console with the external program
w3mimgpreview?
preview_max_size [int]
Avoid previewing files that exceed a certain size, in bytes. Use a
value of 0 to disable this feature.
preview_script [string, none]
Which script should handle generating previews? If the file
doesn't exist, or use_preview_script is off, ranger will handle
previews itself by just printing the content.
save_console_history [bool]
Should the console history be saved on exit? If disabled, the
console history is reset when you restart ranger.
scroll_offset [integer]
Try to keep this much space between the top/bottom border when
scrolling.
shorten_title [integer]
Trim the title of the window if it gets long? The number defines
how many directories are displayed at once. A value of 0 turns off
this feature.
show_cursor [bool]
Always show the terminal cursor?
show_hidden_bookmarks [bool]
Show dotfiles in the bookmark preview window? (Type ')
show_hidden [bool] <zh>, <^H>
Show hidden files?
sort_case_insensitive [bool] <zc>
Sort case-insensitively? If true, "a" will be listed before "B"
even though its ASCII value is higher.
sort_directories_first [bool] <zd>
Sort directories first?
sort_reverse [bool] <or>
Reverse the order of files?
sort_unicode [bool]
When sorting according to some string, should the unicode
characters be compared, instead of looking at the raw character
values to save time?
sort [string] <oa>, <ob>, <oc>, <oe>, <om>, <on>, <ot>, <os>, <oz>
Which sorting mechanism should be used? Choose one of atime,
basename, ctime, extension, mtime, natural, type, size, random
Note: You can reverse the order by typing an uppercase second
letter in the key combination, e.g. "oN" to sort from Z to A.
status_bar_on_top [bool]
Put the status bar at the top of the window?
tilde_in_titlebar [bool]
Abbreviate $HOME with ~ in the title bar (first line) of ranger?
unicode_ellipsis [bool]
Use a unicode "..." character instead of "~" to mark cut-off
filenames?
update_title [bool]
Set a window title?
update_tmux_title [bool]
Set the title to "ranger" in the tmux program?
use_preview_script [bool] <zv>
Use the preview script defined in the setting preview_script?
vcs_aware [bool]
Gather and display data about version control systems. Supported
vcs: git, hg.
vcs_backend_git, vcs_backend_hg, vcs_backend_bzr [string]
Sets the state for the version control backend. The possible values
are:
disabled don't display any information.
local display only local state.
enabled display both, local and remote state. May be slow for hg and bzr.
xterm_alt_key [bool]
Enable this if key combinations with the Alt Key don't work for
you. (Especially on xterm)
COMMANDS
You can enter the commands in the console which is opened by pressing
":".
You can always get a list of the currently existing commands by typing
"2?" in ranger. For your convenience, this is a list of the "public"
commands including their parameters, excluding descriptions:
alias [newcommand] [oldcommand]
bulkrename
cd [directory]
chain command1[; command2[; command3...]]
chmod octal_number
cmap key command
console [-pSTARTPOSITION] command
copycmap key newkey [newkey2...]
copymap key newkey [newkey2...]
copypmap key newkey [newkey2...]
copytmap key newkey [newkey2...]
cunmap keys...
default_linemode [path=regexp | tag=tags] linemodename
delete
edit [filename]
eval [-q] python_code
filter [string]
filter_inode_type [dfl]
find pattern
flat level
grep pattern
help
linemode linemodename
load_copy_buffer
map key command
mark pattern
mark_tag [tags]
meta key value
mkdir dirname
open_with [application] [flags] [mode]
pmap key command
prompt_metadata [key1 [key2 [...]]]
punmap keys...
quit
quit!
relink newpath
rename_append
rename newname
save_copy_buffer
scout [-FLAGS] pattern
search pattern
search_inc pattern
set option value
setintag tags option value
setlocal [path=<path>] option value
shell [-FLAGS] command
terminal
tmap key command
touch filename
travel pattern
tunmap keys...
unmap keys...
unmark pattern
unmark_tag [tags]
There are additional commands which are directly translated to python
functions, one for every method in the ranger.core.actions.Actions
class. They are not documented here, since they are mostly for key
bindings, not to be typed in by a user. Read the source if you are
interested in them.
These are the public commands including their descriptions:
alias [newcommand] [oldcommand]
Copies the oldcommand as newcommand.
bulkrename
This command opens a list of selected files in an external editor.
After you edit and save the file, it will generate a shell script
which does bulk renaming according to the changes you did in the
file.
This shell script is opened in an editor for you to review. After
you close it, it will be executed.
cd [directory]
The cd command changes the directory. The command ":cd -" is
equivalent to typing ``.
chain command1[; command2[; command3...]]
Combines multiple commands into one, separated by semicolons.
chmod octal_number
Sets the permissions of the selection to the octal number.
The octal number is between 000 and 777. The digits specify the
permissions for the user, the group and others. A 1 permits
execution, a 2 permits writing, a 4 permits reading. Add those
numbers to combine them. So a 7 permits everything.
Key bindings in the form of [-+]<who><what> and <octal>= also exist.
For example, +ar allows reading for everyone, -ow forbids others to
write and 777= allows everything.
See also: man 1 chmod
cmap key command
Binds keys for the console. Works like the "map" command.
console [-pN] command
Opens the console with the command already typed in. The cursor is
placed at N.
copycmap key newkey [newkey2 ...]
See "copymap"
copymap key newkey [newkey2 ...]
Copies the keybinding key to newkey in the "browser" context. This
is a deep copy, so if you change the new binding (or parts of it)
later, the old one is not modified.
To copy key bindings of the console, taskview, or pager use
"copycmap", "copytmap" or "copypmap".
copypmap key newkey [newkey2 ...]
See "copymap"
copytmap key newkey [newkey2 ...]
See "copymap"
cunmap [keys...]
Removes key mappings of the console. Works like the "unmap" command.
default_linemode [path=regexp | tag=tags] linemodename
Sets the default linemode. See linemode command.
Examples:
Set the global default linemode to "permissions":
:default_linemode permissions
Set the default linemode to "permissions" for all files tagged with
"p" or "P":
:default_linemode tag=pP permissions
Set the default linemode for all files in ~/books/ to "metatitle":
:default_linemode path=/home/.*?/books/.* metatitle
delete
Destroy all files in the selection with a roundhouse kick. ranger
will ask for a confirmation if you attempt to delete multiple
(marked) files or non-empty directories. This can be changed by
modifying the setting "confirm_on_delete".
edit [filename]
Edit the current file or the file in the argument.
eval [-q] python_code
Evaluates the python code. `fm' is a reference to the FM instance.
To display text, use the function `p'. The result is displayed on
the screen unless you use the "-q" option.
Examples:
:eval fm
:eval len(fm.tabs)
:eval p("Hello World!")
filter [string]
Displays only the files which contain the string in their basename.
Running this command without any parameter will reset the fitler.
This command is based on the scout command and supports all of its
options.
filter_inode_type [dfl]
Displays only the files of specified inode type. To display only
directories, use the 'd' parameter. To display only files, use the
'f' parameter. To display only links, use the 'l' parameter.
Parameters can be combined. To remove this filter, use no parameter.
find pattern
Search files in the current directory that contain the given (case-
insensitive) string in their name as you type. Once there is an
unambiguous result, it will be run immediately. (Or entered, if it's
a directory.)
This command is based on the scout command and supports all of its
options.
flat level
Flattens the directory view up to the specified level. Level -1 means
infinite level. Level 0 means standard view without flattened
directory view. Level values -2 and less are invalid.
grep pattern
Looks for a string in all marked files or directories.
help
Provides a quick way to view ranger documentations.
linemode linemodename
Sets the linemode of all files in the current directory. The
linemode may be:
"filename": display each line as "<basename>...<size>"
"fileinfo": display each line as "<basename>...<file(1) output>"
"permissions": display each line as "<permissions> <owner> <group> <basename>"
"metatitle": display metadata from .metadata.json files if
available, fall back to the "filename" linemode if no
metadata was found. See :meta command.
The custom linemodes may be added by subclassing the LinemodeBase
class. See the ranger.core.linemode module for some examples.
load_copy_buffer
Load the copy buffer from ~/.config/ranger/copy_buffer. This can be
used to pass the list of copied files to another ranger instance.
map key command
Assign the key combination to the given command. Whenever you type
the key/keys, the command will be executed. Additionally, if you use
a quantifier when typing the key, like 5j, it will be passed to the
command as the attribute "self.quantifier".
The keys you bind with this command are accessible in the file
browser only, not in the console, task view or pager. To bind keys
there, use the commands "cmap", "tmap" or "pmap".
mark pattern
Mark all files matching the regular expression pattern.
This command is based on the scout command and supports all of its
options.
mark_tag [tags]
Mark all tags that are tagged with either of the given tags. When
leaving out the tag argument, all tagged files are marked.
meta key value
Set the metadata of the currently highlighted file. Example:
:meta title The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
:meta year 1979
This metadata can be displayed by, for example, using the "metatitle"
line mode by typing Mt.
mkdir dirname
Creates a directory with the name dirname.
open_with [application] [flags] [mode]
Open the selected files with the given application, unless it is
omitted, in which case the default application is used. flags change
the way the application is executed and are described in their own
section in this man page. The mode is a number that specifies which
application to use. The list of applications is generated by the
external file opener "rifle" and can be displayed when pressing "r"
in ranger.
Note that if you specify an application, the mode is ignored.
pmap key command
Binds keys for the pager. Works like the "map" command.
prompt_metadata [keys ...]
Prompt the user to input metadata with the "meta" command for
multiple keys in a row.
punmap [keys ...]
Removes key mappings of the pager. Works like the "unmap" command.
quit
Like quit!, but closes only this tab if multiple tabs are open.
quit!
Quit ranger. The current directory will be bookmarked as ' so you
can re-enter it by typing `` or '' the next time you start ranger.
relink newpath
Change the link destination of the current symlink file to <newpath>.
First <tab> will load the original link.
rename_append
Opens the console with ":rename <current file>" with the cursor
automatically placed before the file extension
rename newname
Rename the current file. If a file with that name already exists,
the renaming will fail. Also try the key binding A for appending
something to a file name.
save_copy_buffer
Save the copy buffer to ~/.config/ranger/copy_buffer. This can be
used to pass the list of copied files to another ranger instance.
scout [-flags...] [--] pattern
Swiss army knife command for searching, traveling and filtering
files. The command takes various flags as arguments which can be
used to influence its behaviour:
-a = automatically open a file on unambiguous match
-e = open the selected file when pressing enter
-f = filter files that match the current search pattern
-g = interpret pattern as a glob pattern
-i = ignore the letter case of the files
-k = keep the console open when changing a directory with the command
-l = letter skipping; e.g. allow "rdme" to match the file "readme"
-m = mark the matching files after pressing enter
-M = unmark the matching files after pressing enter
-p = permanent filter: hide non-matching files after pressing enter
-s = smart case; like -i unless pattern contains upper case letters
-t = apply filter and search pattern as you type
-v = inverts the match
Multiple flags can be combined. For example, ":scout -gpt" would
create a :filter-like command using globbing.
search pattern
Search files in the current directory that match the given (case
insensitive) regular expression pattern.
This command is based on the scout command and supports all of its
options.
search_inc pattern
Search files in the current directory that match the given (case
insensitive) regular expression pattern. This command gets you to
matching files as you type.
This command is based on the scout command and supports all of its
options.
set option value
Assigns a new value to an option. Valid options are listed in the
settings section. Use tab completion to get the current value of an
option, though this doesn't work for functions and regular
expressions. Valid values are:
setting type | example values
---------------+----------------------------
bool | true, false
integer | 1, 23, 1337
string | foo, hello world
list | 1,2,3,4
none | none
setintag tags option value
Assigns a new value to an option, but locally for the directories
that are marked with tag. This means, that this option only takes
effect when visiting that directory.
setlocal [path=path] option value
Assigns a new value to an option, but locally for the directory given
by path. This means, that this option only takes effect when visiting
that directory. If no path is given, uses the current directory.
shell [-flags] command
Run a shell command. flags are discussed in their own section.
terminal
Spawns the x-terminal-emulator starting in the current directory.
tmap key command
Binds keys for the taskview. Works like the "map" command.
touch filename
Creates an empty file with the name filename, unless it already
exists.
travel pattern
Filters the current directory for files containing the letters in the
string, possibly with other letters in between. The filter is
applied as you type. When only one directory is left, it is entered
and the console is automatically reopened, allowing for fast travel.
To close the console, press ESC or execute a file.
This command is based on the scout command and supports all of its
options.
tunmap [keys ...]
Removes key mappings of the taskview. Works like the "unmap" command.
unmap [keys ...]
Removes the given key mappings in the "browser" context. To unmap
key bindings in the console, taskview, or pager use "cunmap",
"tunmap" or "punmap".
unmark pattern
Unmark all files matching a regular expression pattern.
This command is based on the scout command and supports all of its
options.
unmark_tag [tags]
Unmark all tags that are tagged with either of the given tags. When
leaving out the tag argument, all tagged files are unmarked.
FILES
ranger reads several configuration files which are located in
$HOME/.config/ranger or $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/ranger if $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is
defined. You can use the --copy-config option to obtain the default
configuration files. Each of the files contains further documentation.
You don't need to copy the whole file though, most configuration files
are overlaid on top of the defaults (commands.py, rc.conf) or can be
sub-classed (colorschemes).
That being said, the user configuration files rc.conf and commands.py
are loaded only after ranger loads the default configuration files.
This may lead to some confusing situations, for example when a key is
being bound despite the corresponding line being removed from the
user's copy of the configuration file. This behavior may be disabled
with an environment variable (see also: ENVIRONMENT).
When starting ranger with the --clean option, it will not access or
create any of these files.
CONFIGURATION
rc.conf Contains a list of commands which are executed on startup.
Mostly key bindings and settings are defined here.
commands.py
A python module that defines commands which can be used in
ranger's console by typing ":" or in the rc.conf file.
commands_full.py
This file is copied by --copy-config=commands_full and serves
as a reference for custom commands. It is entirely ignored
by ranger.
rifle.conf
This is the configuration file for the built-in file launcher
called "rifle".
scope.sh This is a script that handles file previews. When the
options use_preview_script and preview_files are set, the
program specified in the option preview_script is run and its
output and/or exit code determines rangers reaction.
colorschemes/
Colorschemes can be placed here.
plugins/ Plugins can be placed here.
STORAGE
bookmarks This file contains a list of bookmarks. The syntax is
/^(.):(.*)$/. The first character is the bookmark key and the
rest after the colon is the path to the file. In ranger,
bookmarks can be set by typing m<key>, accessed by typing
'<key> and deleted by typing um<key>.
copy_buffer
When running the command :save_copy_buffer, the paths of all
currently copied files are saved in this file. You can later
run :load_copy_buffer to copy the same files again, pass them
to another ranger instance or process them in a script.
history Contains a list of commands that have been previously typed
in.
tagged Contains a list of tagged files. The syntax is /^(.:)?(.*)$/
where the first letter is the optional name of the tag and
the rest after the optional colon is the path to the file.
In ranger, tags can be set by pressing t and removed with T.
To assign a named tag, type "<tagname>.
ENVIRONMENT
These environment variables have an effect on ranger:
RANGER_LEVEL
ranger sets this environment variable to "1" or increments it
if it already exists. External programs can determine whether
they were spawned from ranger by checking for this variable.
RANGER_LOAD_DEFAULT_RC
If this variable is set to FALSE, ranger will not load the
default rc.conf. This can save time if you copied the whole
rc.conf to ~/.config/ranger/ and don't need the default one at
all.
EDITOR Defines the editor to be used for the "E" key. Defaults to
"nano".
SHELL Defines the shell that ranger is going to use with the :shell
command and the "S" key. Defaults to "/bin/sh".
TERMCMD Defines the terminal emulator command that ranger is going to
use with the :terminal command and the "t" run flag. Defaults
to "xterm".
XDG_CONFIG_HOME
Specifies the directory for configuration files. Defaults to
$HOME/.config.
PYTHONOPTIMIZE
This variable determines the optimize level of python.
Using PYTHONOPTIMIZE=1 (like python -O) will make python
discard assertion statements. You will gain efficiency at the
cost of losing some debug info.
Using PYTHONOPTIMIZE=2 (like python -OO) will additionally
discard any docstrings. Using this will disable the <F1> key
on commands.
W3MIMGDISPLAY_PATH
By changing this variable, you can change the path of the
executable file for image previews. By default, it is set to
/usr/lib/w3m/w3mimgdisplay.
EXAMPLES
There are various examples on how to extend ranger with plugins or
combine ranger with other programs. These can be found in the
/usr/share/doc/ranger/examples/ directory, or the doc/ranger/ that is
provided along with the source code.
LICENSE
GNU General Public License 3 or (at your option) any later version.
LINKS
Download: <http://ranger.nongnu.org/ranger-stable.tar.gz>
The project page: <http://ranger.nongnu.org/>
The mailing list: <http://savannah.nongnu.org/mail/?group=ranger>
IRC channel: #ranger on freenode.net
ranger is maintained with the git version control system. To fetch a
fresh copy, run:
git clone git://git.savannah.nongnu.org/ranger.git
SEE ALSO
rifle(1)
BUGS
Report bugs here: <https://github.com/hut/ranger/issues>
Please include as much relevant information as possible. For the most
diagnostic output, run ranger like this: "PYTHONOPTIMIZE= ranger
--debug"
05/04/2015 ranger-1.7.1 RANGER(1)