fzf is a general-purpose command-line fuzzy finder.
It's an interactive filter program for any kind of list; files, command history, processes, hostnames, bookmarks, git commits, etc. It implements a "fuzzy" matching algorithm, so you can quickly type in patterns with omitted characters and still get the results you want.
I would like to thank all the sponsors of this project who make it possible for me to continue to improve fzf.
If you'd like to sponsor this project, please visit https://github.com/sponsors/junegunn.
You can use Homebrew (on macOS or Linux) to install fzf.
brew install fzf
[!IMPORTANT] To set up shell integration (key bindings and fuzzy completion), see the instructions below.
fzf is also available via MacPorts: sudo port install fzf
Package Manager | Linux Distribution | Command |
---|---|---|
APK | Alpine Linux | sudo apk add fzf |
APT | Debian 9+/Ubuntu 19.10+ | sudo apt install fzf |
Conda | conda install -c conda-forge fzf |
|
DNF | Fedora | sudo dnf install fzf |
Nix | NixOS, etc. | nix-env -iA nixpkgs.fzf |
Pacman | Arch Linux | sudo pacman -S fzf |
pkg | FreeBSD | pkg install fzf |
pkgin | NetBSD | pkgin install fzf |
pkg_add | OpenBSD | pkg_add fzf |
Portage | Gentoo | emerge --ask app-shells/fzf |
Spack | spack install fzf |
|
XBPS | Void Linux | sudo xbps-install -S fzf |
Zypper | openSUSE | sudo zypper install fzf |
[!IMPORTANT] To set up shell integration (key bindings and fuzzy completion), see the instructions below.
On Windows, fzf is available via Chocolatey, Scoop, Winget, and MSYS2:
Package manager | Command |
---|---|
Chocolatey | choco install fzf |
Scoop | scoop install fzf |
Winget | winget install fzf |
MSYS2 (pacman) | pacman -S $MINGW_PACKAGE_PREFIX-fzf |
Alternatively, you can "git clone" this repository to any directory and run install script.
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/junegunn/fzf.git ~/.fzf
~/.fzf/install
The install script will add lines to your shell configuration file to modify
$PATH
and set up shell integration.
You can download the official fzf binaries from the releases page.
Add the following line to your shell configuration file.
# Set up fzf key bindings and fuzzy completion
eval "$(fzf --bash)"
# Set up fzf key bindings and fuzzy completion
source <(fzf --zsh)
# Set up fzf key bindings
fzf --fish | source
[!NOTE]
--bash
,--zsh
, and--fish
options are only available in fzf 0.48.0 or later. If you have an older version of fzf, or want finer control, you can source individual script files in the /shell directory. The location of the files may vary depending on the package manager you use. Please refer to the package documentation for more information. (e.g.apt show fzf
)[!TIP] You can disable CTRL-T or ALT-C binding by setting
FZF_CTRL_T_COMMAND
orFZF_ALT_C_COMMAND
to an empty string when sourcing the script. For example, to disable ALT-C binding:
- bash:
FZF_ALT_C_COMMAND= eval "$(fzf --bash)"
- zsh:
FZF_ALT_C_COMMAND= source <(fzf --zsh)
- fish:
fzf --fish | FZF_ALT_C_COMMAND= source
Setting the variables after sourcing the script will have no effect.
If you use vim-plug, add this to your Vim configuration file:
Plug 'junegunn/fzf', { 'do': { -> fzf#install() } }
Plug 'junegunn/fzf.vim'
junegunn/fzf
provides the basic library functions
fzf#install()
makes sure that you have the latest binaryjunegunn/fzf.vim
is a separate project
that provides a variety of useful commandsTo learn more about the Vim integration, see README-VIM.md.
[!TIP] If you use Neovim and prefer Lua-based plugins, check out fzf-lua.
fzf is being actively developed, and you might want to upgrade it once in a while. Please follow the instruction below depending on the installation method used.
cd ~/.fzf && git pull && ./install
brew update; brew upgrade fzf
sudo port upgrade fzf
choco upgrade fzf
:PlugUpdate fzf
See BUILD.md.
fzf will launch interactive finder, read the list from STDIN, and write the selected item to STDOUT.
find * -type f | fzf > selected
Without STDIN pipe, fzf will traverse the file system under the current directory to get the list of files.
vim $(fzf)
[!NOTE] You can override the default behavior
- Either by setting
$FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND
to a command that generates the desired list- Or by setting
--walker
,--walker-root
, and--walker-skip
options in$FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS
[!WARNING] A more robust solution would be to use
xargs
but we've presented the above as it's easier to graspfzf --print0 | xargs -0 -o vim
[!TIP] fzf also has the ability to turn itself into a different process.
fzf --bind 'enter:become(vim {})'
See Turning into a different process for more information.
CTRL-K
/ CTRL-J
(or CTRL-P
/ CTRL-N
) to move cursor up and downEnter
key to select the item, CTRL-C
/ CTRL-G
/ ESC
to exit-m
), TAB
and Shift-TAB
to mark multiple itemsfzf by default runs in fullscreen mode, but there are other display modes.
--height
modeWith --height HEIGHT[%]
, fzf will start below the cursor with the given height.
fzf --height 40%
reverse
layout and --border
goes well with this option.
fzf --height 40% --layout reverse --border
By prepending ~
to the height, you're setting the maximum height.
# Will take as few lines as possible to display the list
seq 3 | fzf --height ~100%
seq 3000 | fzf --height ~100%
Height value can be a negative number.
# Screen height - 3
fzf --height -3
--tmux
modeWith --tmux
option, fzf will start in a tmux popup.
# --tmux [center|top|bottom|left|right][,SIZE[%]][,SIZE[%]]
fzf --tmux center # Center, 50% width and height
fzf --tmux 80% # Center, 80% width and height
fzf --tmux 100%,50% # Center, 100% width and 50% height
fzf --tmux left,40% # Left, 40% width
fzf --tmux left,40%,90% # Left, 40% width, 90% height
fzf --tmux top,40% # Top, 40% height
fzf --tmux bottom,80%,40% # Bottom, 80% height, 40% height
--tmux
is silently ignored when you're not on tmux.
[!NOTE] If you're stuck with an old version of tmux that doesn't support popup, or if you want to open fzf in a regular tmux pane, check out fzf-tmux script.
[!TIP] You can add these options to
$FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS
so that they're applied by default. For example,# Open in tmux popup if on tmux, otherwise use --height mode export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS='--height 40% --tmux bottom,40% --layout reverse --border top'
Unless otherwise specified, fzf starts in "extended-search mode" where you can
type in multiple search terms delimited by spaces. e.g. ^music .mp3$ sbtrkt !fire
Token | Match type | Description |
---|---|---|
sbtrkt |
fuzzy-match | Items that match sbtrkt |
'wild |
exact-match (quoted) | Items that include wild |
'wild' |
exact-boundary-match (quoted both ends) | Items that include wild at word boundaries |
^music |
prefix-exact-match | Items that start with music |
.mp3$ |
suffix-exact-match | Items that end with .mp3 |
!fire |
inverse-exact-match | Items that do not include fire |
!^music |
inverse-prefix-exact-match | Items that do not start with music |
!.mp3$ |
inverse-suffix-exact-match | Items that do not end with .mp3 |
If you don't prefer fuzzy matching and do not wish to "quote" every word,
start fzf with -e
or --exact
option. Note that when --exact
is set,
'
-prefix "unquotes" the term.
A single bar character term acts as an OR operator. For example, the following
query matches entries that start with core
and end with either go
, rb
,
or py
.
^core go$ | rb$ | py$
FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND
export FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND='fd --type f'
FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS
export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS="--layout=reverse --inline-info"
FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS_FILE
export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS_FILE=~/.fzfrc
[!WARNING]
FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND
is not used by shell integration due to the slight difference in requirements.
CTRL-T
runs$FZF_CTRL_T_COMMAND
to get a list of files and directoriesALT-C
runs$FZF_ALT_C_COMMAND
to get a list of directoriesvim ~/**<tab>
runsfzf_compgen_path()
with the prefix (~/
) as the first argumentcd foo**<tab>
runsfzf_compgen_dir()
with the prefix (foo
) as the first argumentThe available options are described later in this document.
See the man page (man fzf
) for the full list of options.
If you learn by watching videos, check out this screencast by @samoshkin to explore fzf
features.
By setting up shell integration, you can use the following key bindings in bash, zsh, and fish.
CTRL-T
- Paste the selected files and directories onto the command-line
--walker file,dir,follow,hidden
option
FZF_CTRL_T_COMMAND
to a custom command that generates the desired list--walker*
options in FZF_CTRL_T_OPTS
FZF_CTRL_T_OPTS
to pass additional options to fzf
# Preview file content using bat (https://github.com/sharkdp/bat)
export FZF_CTRL_T_OPTS="
--walker-skip .git,node_modules,target
--preview 'bat -n --color=always {}'
--bind 'ctrl-/:change-preview-window(down|hidden|)'"
FZF_CTRL_T_COMMAND
to an empty string when
sourcing the scriptCTRL-R
- Paste the selected command from history onto the command-line
CTRL-R
again which toggles sorting by relevanceCTRL-/
or ALT-/
to toggle line wrappingFZF_CTRL_R_OPTS
to pass additional options to fzf
# CTRL-Y to copy the command into clipboard using pbcopy
export FZF_CTRL_R_OPTS="
--bind 'ctrl-y:execute-silent(echo -n {2..} | pbcopy)+abort'
--color header:italic
--header 'Press CTRL-Y to copy command into clipboard'"
ALT-C
- cd into the selected directory
--walker dir,follow,hidden
optionFZF_ALT_C_COMMAND
to override the default command
--walker-*
options in FZF_ALT_C_OPTS
FZF_ALT_C_OPTS
to pass additional options to fzf
# Print tree structure in the preview window
export FZF_ALT_C_OPTS="
--walker-skip .git,node_modules,target
--preview 'tree -C {}'"
FZF_ALT_C_COMMAND
to an empty string when
sourcing the scriptDisplay modes for these bindings can be separately configured via
FZF_{CTRL_T,CTRL_R,ALT_C}_OPTS
or globally via FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS
.
(e.g. FZF_CTRL_R_OPTS='--tmux bottom,60% --height 60% --border top'
)
More tips can be found on the wiki page.
Fuzzy completion for files and directories can be triggered if the word before
the cursor ends with the trigger sequence, which is by default **
.
COMMAND [DIRECTORY/][FUZZY_PATTERN]**<TAB>
# Files under the current directory
# - You can select multiple items with TAB key
vim **<TAB>
# Files under parent directory
vim ../**<TAB>
# Files under parent directory that match `fzf`
vim ../fzf**<TAB>
# Files under your home directory
vim ~/**<TAB>
# Directories under current directory (single-selection)
cd **<TAB>
# Directories under ~/github that match `fzf`
cd ~/github/fzf**<TAB>
Fuzzy completion for PIDs is provided for kill command.
# Can select multiple processes with <TAB> or <Shift-TAB> keys
kill -9 **<TAB>
For ssh and telnet commands, fuzzy completion for hostnames is provided. The names are extracted from /etc/hosts and ~/.ssh/config.
ssh **<TAB>
telnet **<TAB>
unset **<TAB>
export **<TAB>
unalias **<TAB>
# Use ~~ as the trigger sequence instead of the default **
export FZF_COMPLETION_TRIGGER='~~'
# Options to fzf command
export FZF_COMPLETION_OPTS='--border --info=inline'
# Use fd (https://github.com/sharkdp/fd) for listing path candidates.
# - The first argument to the function ($1) is the base path to start traversal
# - See the source code (completion.{bash,zsh}) for the details.
_fzf_compgen_path() {
fd --hidden --follow --exclude ".git" . "$1"
}
# Use fd to generate the list for directory completion
_fzf_compgen_dir() {
fd --type d --hidden --follow --exclude ".git" . "$1"
}
# Advanced customization of fzf options via _fzf_comprun function
# - The first argument to the function is the name of the command.
# - You should make sure to pass the rest of the arguments to fzf.
_fzf_comprun() {
local command=$1
shift
case "$command" in
cd) fzf --preview 'tree -C {} | head -200' "$@" ;;
export|unset) fzf --preview "eval 'echo \$'{}" "$@" ;;
ssh) fzf --preview 'dig {}' "$@" ;;
*) fzf --preview 'bat -n --color=always {}' "$@" ;;
esac
}
On bash, fuzzy completion is enabled only for a predefined set of commands
(complete | grep _fzf
to see the list). But you can enable it for other
commands as well by using _fzf_setup_completion
helper function.
# usage: _fzf_setup_completion path|dir|var|alias|host COMMANDS...
_fzf_setup_completion path ag git kubectl
_fzf_setup_completion dir tree
(Custom completion API is experimental and subject to change)
For a command named "COMMAND", define _fzf_complete_COMMAND
function using
_fzf_complete
helper.
# Custom fuzzy completion for "doge" command
# e.g. doge **<TAB>
_fzf_complete_doge() {
_fzf_complete --multi --reverse --prompt="doge> " -- "$@" < <(
echo very
echo wow
echo such
echo doge
)
}
--
are the options to fzf.--
, simply pass the original completion arguments unchanged ("$@"
).< <(...)
).zsh will automatically pick up the function using the naming convention but in
bash you have to manually associate the function with the command using the
complete
command.
[ -n "$BASH" ] && complete -F _fzf_complete_doge -o default -o bashdefault doge
If you need to post-process the output from fzf, define
_fzf_complete_COMMAND_post
as follows.
_fzf_complete_foo() {
_fzf_complete --multi --reverse --header-lines=3 -- "$@" < <(
ls -al
)
}
_fzf_complete_foo_post() {
awk '{print $NF}'
}
[ -n "$BASH" ] && complete -F _fzf_complete_foo -o default -o bashdefault foo
See README-VIM.md.
fzf is fast. Performance should not be a problem in most use cases. However, you might want to be aware of the options that can affect performance.
--ansi
tells fzf to extract and parse ANSI color codes in the input, and it
makes the initial scanning slower. So it's not recommended that you add it
to your $FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS
.--nth
makes fzf slower because it has to tokenize each line.--with-nth
makes fzf slower as fzf has to tokenize and reassemble each
line.You can set up key bindings for starting external processes without leaving
fzf (execute
, execute-silent
).
# Press F1 to open the file with less without leaving fzf
# Press CTRL-Y to copy the line to clipboard and aborts fzf (requires pbcopy)
fzf --bind 'f1:execute(less -f {}),ctrl-y:execute-silent(echo {} | pbcopy)+abort'
See KEY BINDINGS section of the man page for details.
become(...)
is similar to execute(...)
/execute-silent(...)
described
above, but instead of executing the command and coming back to fzf on
complete, it turns fzf into a new process for the command.
fzf --bind 'enter:become(vim {})'
Compared to the seemingly equivalent command substitution vim "$(fzf)"
, this
approach has several advantages:
fzf --multi --bind 'enter:become(vim {+})'
To be fair, running fzf --print0 | xargs -0 -o vim
instead of vim "$(fzf)"
resolves all of the issues mentioned. Nonetheless, become(...)
still offers
additional benefits in different scenarios.
fzf --bind 'enter:become(vim {}),ctrl-e:become(emacs {})'
--expect=ctrl-e
and check the first
line of the output of fzf# Open the file in Vim and go to the line
git grep --line-number . |
fzf --delimiter : --nth 3.. --bind 'enter:become(vim {1} +{2})'
By binding reload
action to a key or an event, you can make fzf dynamically
reload the candidate list. See https://github.com/junegunn/fzf/issues/1750 for
more details.
ps -ef |
fzf --bind 'ctrl-r:reload(ps -ef)' \
--header 'Press CTRL-R to reload' --header-lines=1 \
--height=50% --layout=reverse
FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND='find . -type f' \
fzf --bind 'ctrl-d:reload(find . -type d),ctrl-f:reload(eval "$FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND")' \
--height=50% --layout=reverse
The following example uses fzf as the selector interface for ripgrep. We bound
reload
action to change
event, so every time you type on fzf, the ripgrep
process will restart with the updated query string denoted by the placeholder
expression {q}
. Also, note that we used --disabled
option so that fzf
doesn't perform any secondary filtering.
: | rg_prefix='rg --column --line-number --no-heading --color=always --smart-case' \
fzf --bind 'start:reload:$rg_prefix ""' \
--bind 'change:reload:$rg_prefix {q} || true' \
--bind 'enter:become(vim {1} +{2})' \
--ansi --disabled \
--height=50% --layout=reverse
If ripgrep doesn't find any matches, it will exit with a non-zero exit status,
and fzf will warn you about it. To suppress the warning message, we added
|| true
to the command, so that it always exits with 0.
See "Using fzf as interactive Ripgrep launcher" for more sophisticated examples.
When the --preview
option is set, fzf automatically starts an external process
with the current line as the argument and shows the result in the split window.
Your $SHELL
is used to execute the command with $SHELL -c COMMAND
.
The window can be scrolled using the mouse or custom key bindings.
# {} is replaced with the single-quoted string of the focused line
fzf --preview 'cat {}'
Preview window supports ANSI colors, so you can use any program that syntax-highlights the content of a file, such as Bat or Highlight:
fzf --preview 'bat --color=always {}' --preview-window '~3'
You can customize the size, position, and border of the preview window using
--preview-window
option, and the foreground and background color of it with
--color
option. For example,
fzf --height 40% --layout reverse --info inline --border \
--preview 'file {}' --preview-window up,1,border-horizontal \
--bind 'ctrl-/:change-preview-window(50%|hidden|)' \
--color 'fg:#bbccdd,fg+:#ddeeff,bg:#334455,preview-bg:#223344,border:#778899'
See the man page (man fzf
) for the full list of options.
More advanced examples can be found here.
[!WARNING] Since fzf is a general-purpose text filter rather than a file finder, it is not a good idea to add
--preview
option to your$FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS
.# ********************* # ** DO NOT DO THIS! ** # ********************* export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS='--preview "bat --style=numbers --color=always --line-range :500 {}"' # bat doesn't work with any input other than the list of files ps -ef | fzf seq 100 | fzf history | fzf
fzf can display images in the preview window using one of the following protocols:
See bin/fzf-preview.sh script for more information.
fzf --preview 'fzf-preview.sh {}'
.gitignore
You can use fd,
ripgrep, or the silver
searcher to traverse the file
system while respecting .gitignore
.
# Feed the output of fd into fzf
fd --type f --strip-cwd-prefix | fzf
# Setting fd as the default source for fzf
export FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND='fd --type f --strip-cwd-prefix'
# Now fzf (w/o pipe) will use the fd command to generate the list
fzf
# To apply the command to CTRL-T as well
export FZF_CTRL_T_COMMAND="$FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND"
If you want the command to follow symbolic links and don't want it to exclude hidden files, use the following command:
export FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND='fd --type f --strip-cwd-prefix --hidden --follow --exclude .git'
CTRL-T
key binding of fish, unlike those of bash and zsh, will use the last
token on the command-line as the root directory for the recursive search. For
instance, hitting CTRL-T
at the end of the following command-line
ls /var/
will list all files and directories under /var/
.
When using a custom FZF_CTRL_T_COMMAND
, use the unexpanded $dir
variable to
make use of this feature. $dir
defaults to .
when the last token is not a
valid directory. Example:
set -g FZF_CTRL_T_COMMAND "command find -L \$dir -type f 2> /dev/null | sed '1d; s#^\./##'"
fzf Theme Playground created by Vitor Mello is a webpage where you can interactively create fzf themes.
https://github.com/junegunn/fzf/wiki/Related-projects
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2013-2024 Junegunn Choi