cfiles is a terminal file manager with vim like keybindings, written in C using the ncurses
library. It aims to provide an interface like ranger while being lightweight, fast and
minimal.
ncurseswcpandmvfor copying and movingfzffor searchingw3mimgdisplayorÜberzugfor image previewsmediainfofor viewing media info and file sizesatoolfor archive previewspoppler(specificallypdftoppm) for pdf previews
Arch Linux users can use the AUR package.
macOS users can use brew or macports
To compile, run
make
and then run,
sudo make install
to install.
| Key | Function |
|---|---|
| h j k l | Navigation keys |
| G | Go to end |
| g | Go to top |
| H | Go to top of current view |
| M | Go to middle of current view |
| L | Go to bottom of current view |
| pgup | Scroll Up One Page |
| pgdn | Scroll Down One Page |
| f | Search using fzf |
| F | Search using fzf in the present directory |
| S | Open Shell in present directory |
| space | Add/Remove to/from selection list |
| tab | View selection list |
| e | Edit selection list |
| u | Empty selection list |
| y | Copy files from selection list |
| v | Move files from selection list |
| a | Rename Files in selection list |
| dd | Move files from selection list to trash |
| dD | Remove selected files |
| i | View mediainfo and general info |
| I | View preview |
| . | Toggle hidden files |
| b | Toggle borders |
| ' | View/Goto bookmarks |
| m | Add bookmark |
| E | Edit bookmarks |
| p | Run external script |
| r | Reload |
| q | Quit |
cfiles uses $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/cfiles directory to store the clipboard file. This is used so that the clipboard
can be shared between multiple instances of cfiles. That's why I won't be adding tabs in cfiles because multiple
instances can be openend and managed by any terminal multiplexer or your window manager.
Note that this also means the selection list will persist even if all instances are closed.
cfiles also uses $HOME/.local/share/Trash/files as the Trash Directory, so make sure this directory exists before you try to delete a file.
For storing bookmarks, cfiles uses $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/cfiles/bookmarks file. Bookmarks are stored in the form <key>:<path>. You can either edit this file directly
or press m in cfiles to add new bookmarks.
cfiles looks for external scripts in the $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/cfiles/scripts directory. Make sure the scripts are executable before moving them to the scripts directory.
If $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is not set, then $HOME/.config is used.
You can set FILE_OPENER in config.h to specify your file opening program. It is set to use xdg-open by default but you can change it to anything like thunar. macOS users need to set it to open.
You can either go with w3mimgdisplay or Überzug (link) for image previews.
Each method has it's own pros and cons.
- Überzug
To use Überzug for image previews, set DISPLAYIMG and CLEARIMG in config.h to the paths of displayimg_uberzug and clearimg_uberzug scripts respectively.
- Pros
- Better previews when compared to
w3mimgdisplay
- Better previews when compared to
- Cons
- Can't generate previews for mp3 album arts
- Non functional scrolling with arrow keys
I recommend Überzug because the previews scale well with change in terminal size and don't disappear on changing workspaces.
- w3mimgdisplay
To use w3mimgdisplay for image previews, set DISPLAYIMG and CLEARIMG in config.h to the paths of displayimg and clearimg scripts respectively.
- Pros
- Faster scrolling
- Can generate previews of album arts for mp3 files
- Cons
- Previews are very inconsistent and may disappear on resizing the terminal or changing workspaces
- You may have to redraw the UI while scrolling by pressing
KEY_RELOAD(defaults to R)
You may have to modify the scripts a little, about which you can read here.
I wanted to improve my C and learn ncurses so I decided this would be an ideal project.
Apart from this, I have always wanted an alternative to ranger that is faster while still having a similar UI.