Uhom 5
Uhom 5
List information about the FILEs (the current directory by default). Sort entri
alphabetically if none of -cftuvSUX nor --sort is specified.
Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too.
-a, --all
do not ignore entries starting with .
-A, --almost-all
do not list implied . and ..
--author
with -l, print the author of each file
-b, --escape
print C-style escapes for nongraphic characters
--block-size=SIZE
scale sizes by SIZE before printing them. E.g., '--block-size=M' prints sizes
units of 1,048,576 bytes. See SIZE format below.
-B, --ignore-backups
do not list implied entries ending with ~
-c with -lt: sort by, and show, ctime (time of last modification of file stat
information) with -l: show ctime and sort by name otherwise: sort by ctime, newe
first
--color[=WHEN]
colorize the output. WHEN defaults to 'always' or can be 'never' or 'auto'. Mo
info below
-d, --directory
list directory entries instead of contents, and do not dereference symbolic links
-D, --dired
generate output designed for Emacs' dired mode
-F, --classify
append indicator (one of */=>@|) to entries
--file-type
likewise, except do not append '*'
--format=WORD
across -x, commas -m, horizontal -x, long -l, single-column -1, verbose
vertical -C
--full-time
like -l --time-style=full-iso
--group-directories-first
group directories before files.
augment with a --sort option, but any use of --sort=none (-U) disables grouping
-G, --no-group
in a long listing, don't print group names
-h, --human-readable
with -l, print sizes in human readable format (e.g., 1K 234M 2G)
-H, --dereference-command-line
follow symbolic links listed on the command line
--dereference-command-line-symlink-to-dir
follow each command line symbolic link that points to a directory
--hide=PATTERN
do not list implied entries matching shell PATTERN (overridden by -a or
--indicator-style=WORD
append indicator with style WORD to entry names: none (default), slash (
file-type (--file-type), classify (-F)
-i, --inode
print the index number of each file
-I, --ignore=PATTERN
do not list implied entries matching shell PATTERN
-k, --kibibytes
use 1024-byte blocks
-L, --dereference
when showing file information for a symbolic link, show information for the fi
the link references rather than for the link itself
-n, --numeric-uid-gid
like -l, but list numeric user and group IDs
-N, --literal
print raw entry names (don't treat e.g. control characters specially)
-p, --indicator-style=slash
append / indicator to directories
-q, --hide-control-chars
print ? instead of non graphic characters
--show-control-chars
show non graphic characters as-is (default unless program is 'ls' and output is
terminal)
-Q, --quote-name
enclose entry names in double quotes
--quoting-style=WORD
use quoting style WORD for entry names: literal, locale, shell, shell-always,
escape
-r, --reverse
reverse order while sorting
-R, --recursive
list subdirectories recursively
-s, --size
print the allocated size of each file, in blocks
--sort=WORD
sort by WORD instead of name: none -U, extension -X, size -S, time -t, version
--time=WORD
with -l, show time as WORD instead of modification time: atime -u, access
-u, ctime -c, or status -c; use specified time as sort key if --sort=time
--time-style=STYLE
with -l, show times using style STYLE: full-iso, long-iso, iso, locale, +FORMA
FORMAT is interpreted like 'date'; if FORMAT is FORMAT1<newline>FORMAT2, FORMA
applies to non-recent files and FORMAT2 to recent files; if STYLE is prefixed wi
'posix-', STYLE takes effect only outside the POSIX locale
-T, --tabsize=COLS
assume tab stops at each COLS instead of 8
-u with -lt: sort by, and show, access time with -l: show access time and sort by na
otherwise: sort by access time
-w, --width=COLS
assume screen width instead of current value
-Z, --context
print any SELinux security context of each file
-1 list one file per line
--version
output version information and exit
SIZE is an integer and optional unit (example: 10M is 10*1024*1024). Units are K, M,
T, P, E, Z, Y (powers of 1024) or KB, MB, ... (powers of 1000).
Using color to distinguish file types is disabled both by default and with --color
With --color=auto, ls emits color codes only when standard output is connected to
terminal. The LS_COLORS environment variable can change the settings. Use the dircolo
command to set it.
Exit status:
0 if OK,
The full documentation for dir is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If the info
programs are properly installed at your site, the command