Awesome
Introduction
Rover is a file browser for the terminal.
The main goal is to provide a faster way to explore a file system from the
terminal, compared to what's possible by using cd
, ls
, etc. Rover has
vi-like key bindings for navigation and can open files in $PAGER and $EDITOR.
Basic file system operations are also implemented (see rover(1) for details).
Rover is designed to be simple, fast and portable.
Quick Start
Building and Installing:
$ make
$ sudo make install
Running:
$ rover [DIR1 [DIR2 [DIR3 [...]]]]
Basic Usage:
q - quit Rover
? - show Rover manual
j/k - move cursor down/up
J/K - move cursor down/up 10 lines
g/G - move cursor to top/bottom of listing
l - enter selected directory
h - go to parent directory
H - go to $HOME directory
0-9 - change tab
RETURN - open $SHELL on the current directory
SPACE - open $PAGER with the selected file
e - open $VISUAL or $EDITOR with the selected file
/ - start incremental search (RETURN to finish)
n/N - create new file/directory
R - rename selected file or directory
D - delete selected file or (empty) directory
Please read rover(1) for more information.
Requirements
- Unix-like system;
- curses library.
Configuration
Rover configuration (mostly key bindings and colors) can only be changed by
editing the file config.h
and rebuilding the binary.
Note that the external programs executed by some Rover commands may be changed via the appropriate environment variables. For example, to specify an editor:
$ VISUAL=vi rover
Rover will first check for variables prefixed with ROVER_. This can be used to change Rover behavior without interfering with the global environment:
$ ROVER_VISUAL=vi rover
Please read rover(1) for more information.
Copying
All of the source code and documentation for Rover is released into the public domain and provided without warranty of any kind.