- Last update: 2024/06/24
- Requires fzf 0.54.0 or later
- Introduction
- Display modes
- Dynamic reloading of the list
- Ripgrep integration
- Log tailing
- Key bindings for git objects
- Color themes
fzf is an interactive Unix filter program that is designed to be used with other Unix tools. It reads a list of items from the standard input, allows you to select a subset of the items, and prints the selected ones to the standard output. You can think of it as an interactive version of grep, and it's already useful even if you don't know any of its options.
# 1. ps: Feed the list of processes to fzf
# 2. fzf: Interactively select a process using fuzzy matching algorithm
# 3. awk: Take the PID from the selected line
# 3. kill: Kill the process with the PID
ps -ef | fzf | awk '{print $2}' | xargs kill -9
While the above example succinctly summarizes the fundamental concept of fzf, you can build much more sophisticated interactive workflows using fzf once you learn its wide variety of features.
- To see the full list of options and features, see
man fzf
- To see the latest additions, see CHANGELOG.md
This document will guide you through some examples that will familiarize you with the advanced features of fzf.
fzf by default opens in fullscreen mode, but it's not always desirable.
Oftentimes, you want to see the current context of the terminal while using
fzf. --height
is an option for opening fzf below the cursor in
non-fullscreen mode so you can still see the previous commands and their
results above it.
fzf --height=40%
You might also want to experiment with other layout options such as
--layout=reverse
, --info=inline
, --border
, --margin
, etc.
fzf --height=40% --layout=reverse
fzf --height=40% --layout=reverse --info=inline
fzf --height=40% --layout=reverse --info=inline --border
fzf --height=40% --layout=reverse --info=inline --border --margin=1
fzf --height=40% --layout=reverse --info=inline --border --margin=1 --padding=1
(See Layout
section of the man page to see the full list of options)
But you definitely don't want to repeat --height=40% --layout=reverse --info=inline --border --margin=1 --padding=1
every time you use fzf. You
could write a wrapper script or shell alias, but there is an easier option.
Define $FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS
like so:
export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS="--height=40% --layout=reverse --info=inline --border --margin=1 --padding=1"
(Requires tmux 3.3 or later)
If you're using tmux, you can open fzf in a tmux popup using --tmux
option.
# Open fzf in a tmux popup at the center of the screen with 70% width and height
fzf --tmux 70%
--tmux
option is silently ignored if you're not on tmux. So if you're trying
to avoid opening fzf in fullscreen, try specifying both --height
and --tmux
.
# --tmux is specified later so it takes precedence over --height when on tmux.
# If you're not on tmux, --tmux is ignored and --height is used instead.
fzf --height 70% --tmux 70%
You can also specify the position, width, and height of the popup window in the following format:
[center|top|bottom|left|right][,SIZE[%]][,SIZE[%]]
# 100% width and 60% height
fzf --tmux 100%,60% --border horizontal
# On the right (50% width)
fzf --tmux right
# On the left (40% width and 70% height)
fzf --tmux left,40%,70%
Tip
You might also want to check out my tmux plugins which support this popup window layout.
fzf can dynamically update the candidate list using an arbitrary program with
reload
bindings (The design document for reload
can be found
here).
This example shows how you can set up a binding for dynamically updating the list without restarting fzf.
(date; ps -ef) |
fzf --bind='ctrl-r:reload(date; ps -ef)' \
--header=$'Press CTRL-R to reload\n\n' --header-lines=2 \
--preview='echo {}' --preview-window=down,3,wrap \
--layout=reverse --height=80% | awk '{print $2}' | xargs kill -9
- The initial command is
(date; ps -ef)
. It prints the current date and time, and the list of the processes. - With
--header
option, you can show any message as the fixed header. - To disallow selecting the first two lines (
date
andps
header), we use--header-lines=2
option. --bind='ctrl-r:reload(date; ps -ef)'
binds CTRL-R toreload
action that runsdate; ps -ef
, so we can update the list of the processes by pressing CTRL-R.- We use simple
echo {}
preview option, so we can see the entire line on the preview window below even if it's too long
You're not limited to just one reload binding. Set up multiple bindings so you can switch between data sources.
find * | fzf --prompt 'All> ' \
--header 'CTRL-D: Directories / CTRL-F: Files' \
--bind 'ctrl-d:change-prompt(Directories> )+reload(find * -type d)' \
--bind 'ctrl-f:change-prompt(Files> )+reload(find * -type f)'
The above example uses two different key bindings to toggle between two modes, but can we just use a single key binding?
To make a key binding behave differently each time it is pressed, we need:
- a way to store the current state. i.e. "which mode are we in?"
- and a way to dynamically perform different actions depending on the state.
The following example shows how to 1. store the current mode in the prompt
string, 2. and use this information ($FZF_PROMPT
) to determine which
actions to perform using the transform
action.
fd --type file |
fzf --prompt 'Files> ' \
--header 'CTRL-T: Switch between Files/Directories' \
--bind 'ctrl-t:transform:[[ ! $FZF_PROMPT =~ Files ]] &&
echo "change-prompt(Files> )+reload(fd --type file)" ||
echo "change-prompt(Directories> )+reload(fd --type directory)"' \
--preview '[[ $FZF_PROMPT =~ Files ]] && bat --color=always {} || tree -C {}'
fzf is pretty fast for filtering a list that you will rarely have to think about its performance. But it is not the right tool for searching for text inside many large files, and in that case you should definitely use something like Ripgrep.
In the next example, Ripgrep is the primary filter that searches for the given text in files, and fzf is used as the secondary fuzzy filter that adds interactivity to the workflow. And we use bat to show the matching line in the preview window.
This is a bash script and it will not run as expected on other non-compliant
shells. To avoid the compatibility issue, let's save this snippet as a script
file called rfv
.
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# 1. Search for text in files using Ripgrep
# 2. Interactively narrow down the list using fzf
# 3. Open the file in Vim
rg --color=always --line-number --no-heading --smart-case "${*:-}" |
fzf --ansi \
--color "hl:-1:underline,hl+:-1:underline:reverse" \
--delimiter : \
--preview 'bat --color=always {1} --highlight-line {2}' \
--preview-window 'up,60%,border-bottom,+{2}+3/3,~3' \
--bind 'enter:become(vim {1} +{2})'
And run it with an initial query string.
# Make the script executable
chmod +x rfv
# Run it with the initial query "algo"
./rfv algo
Ripgrep will perform the initial search and list all the lines that contain
algo
. Then we further narrow down the list on fzf.
I know it's a lot to digest, let's try to break down the code.
- Ripgrep prints the matching lines in the following format
The first token delimited by
man/man1/fzf.1:54:.BI "--algo=" TYPE man/man1/fzf.1:55:Fuzzy matching algorithm (default: v2) man/man1/fzf.1:58:.BR v2 " Optimal scoring algorithm (quality)" src/pattern_test.go:7: "github.com/junegunn/fzf/src/algo"
:
is the file path, and the second token is the line number of the matching line. They respectively correspond to{1}
and{2}
in the preview command.--preview 'bat --color=always {1} --highlight-line {2}'
- As we run
rg
with--color=always
option, we should tell fzf to parse ANSI color codes in the input by setting--ansi
. - We customize how fzf colors various text elements using
--color
option.-1
tells fzf to keep the original color from the input. Seeman fzf
for available color options. - The value of
--preview-window
option consists of 5 components delimited by,
up
— Position of the preview window60%
— Size of the preview windowborder-bottom
— Preview window border only on the bottom side+{2}+3/3
— Scroll offset of the preview contents~3
— Fixed header
- Let's break down the latter two. We want to display the bat output in the
preview window with a certain scroll offset so that the matching line is
positioned near the center of the preview window.
+{2}
— The base offset is extracted from the second token+3
— We add 3 lines to the base offset to compensate for the header part ofbat
output-
───────┬────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── │ File: CHANGELOG.md ───────┼────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── 1 │ CHANGELOG 2 │ ========= 3 │ 4 │ 0.26.0 5 │ ------
-
/3
adjusts the offset so that the matching line is shown at a third position in the window~3
makes the top three lines fixed header so that they are always visible regardless of the scroll offset
- Instead of using shell script to process the final output of fzf, we use
become(...)
action which was added in fzf 0.38.0 to turn fzf into a new process that opens the file withvim
(vim {1}
) and move the cursor to the line (+{2}
).
We have learned that we can bind reload
action to a key (e.g.
--bind=ctrl-r:execute(ps -ef)
). In the next example, we are going to bind
reload
action to change
event so that whenever the user changes the
query string on fzf, reload
action is triggered.
Here is a variation of the above rfv
script. fzf will restart Ripgrep every
time the user updates the query string on fzf. Searching and filtering is
completely done by Ripgrep, and fzf merely provides the interactive interface.
So we lose the "fuzziness", but the performance will be better on larger
projects, and it will free up memory as you narrow down the results.
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# 1. Search for text in files using Ripgrep
# 2. Interactively restart Ripgrep with reload action
# 3. Open the file in Vim
RG_PREFIX="rg --column --line-number --no-heading --color=always --smart-case "
INITIAL_QUERY="${*:-}"
fzf --ansi --disabled --query "$INITIAL_QUERY" \
--bind "start:reload:$RG_PREFIX {q}" \
--bind "change:reload:sleep 0.1; $RG_PREFIX {q} || true" \
--delimiter : \
--preview 'bat --color=always {1} --highlight-line {2}' \
--preview-window 'up,60%,border-bottom,+{2}+3/3,~3' \
--bind 'enter:become(vim {1} +{2})'
- Instead of starting fzf in the usual
rg ... | fzf
form, we make it start the initial Ripgrep process immediately viastart:reload
binding for the consistency of the code. - Filtering is no longer a responsibility of fzf; hence
--disabled
{q}
in the reload command evaluates to the query string on fzf prompt.sleep 0.1
in the reload command is for "debouncing". This small delay will reduce the number of intermediate Ripgrep processes while we're typing in a query.
In the previous example, we lost fuzzy matching capability as we completely
delegated search functionality to Ripgrep. But we can dynamically switch to
fzf-only search mode by "unbinding" reload
action from change
event.
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Two-phase filtering with Ripgrep and fzf
#
# 1. Search for text in files using Ripgrep
# 2. Interactively restart Ripgrep with reload action
# * Press alt-enter to switch to fzf-only filtering
# 3. Open the file in Vim
RG_PREFIX="rg --column --line-number --no-heading --color=always --smart-case "
INITIAL_QUERY="${*:-}"
fzf --ansi --disabled --query "$INITIAL_QUERY" \
--bind "start:reload:$RG_PREFIX {q}" \
--bind "change:reload:sleep 0.1; $RG_PREFIX {q} || true" \
--bind "alt-enter:unbind(change,alt-enter)+change-prompt(2. fzf> )+enable-search+clear-query" \
--color "hl:-1:underline,hl+:-1:underline:reverse" \
--prompt '1. ripgrep> ' \
--delimiter : \
--preview 'bat --color=always {1} --highlight-line {2}' \
--preview-window 'up,60%,border-bottom,+{2}+3/3,~3' \
--bind 'enter:become(vim {1} +{2})'
- We added
--prompt
option to show that fzf is initially running in "Ripgrep launcher mode". - We added
alt-enter
binding that- unbinds
change
event, so Ripgrep is no longer restarted on key press - changes the prompt to
2. fzf>
- enables search functionality of fzf
- clears the current query string that was used to start Ripgrep process
- and unbinds
alt-enter
itself as this is a one-off event
- unbinds
- We reverted
--color
option for customizing how the matching chunks are displayed in the second phase
fzf 0.30.0 added rebind
action so we can "rebind" the bindings
that were previously "unbound" via unbind
.
This is an improved version of the previous example that allows us to switch between Ripgrep launcher mode and fzf-only filtering mode via CTRL-R and CTRL-F.
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Switch between Ripgrep launcher mode (CTRL-R) and fzf filtering mode (CTRL-F)
rm -f /tmp/rg-fzf-{r,f}
RG_PREFIX="rg --column --line-number --no-heading --color=always --smart-case "
INITIAL_QUERY="${*:-}"
fzf --ansi --disabled --query "$INITIAL_QUERY" \
--bind "start:reload($RG_PREFIX {q})+unbind(ctrl-r)" \
--bind "change:reload:sleep 0.1; $RG_PREFIX {q} || true" \
--bind "ctrl-f:unbind(change,ctrl-f)+change-prompt(2. fzf> )+enable-search+rebind(ctrl-r)+transform-query(echo {q} > /tmp/rg-fzf-r; cat /tmp/rg-fzf-f)" \
--bind "ctrl-r:unbind(ctrl-r)+change-prompt(1. ripgrep> )+disable-search+reload($RG_PREFIX {q} || true)+rebind(change,ctrl-f)+transform-query(echo {q} > /tmp/rg-fzf-f; cat /tmp/rg-fzf-r)" \
--color "hl:-1:underline,hl+:-1:underline:reverse" \
--prompt '1. ripgrep> ' \
--delimiter : \
--header '╱ CTRL-R (ripgrep mode) ╱ CTRL-F (fzf mode) ╱' \
--preview 'bat --color=always {1} --highlight-line {2}' \
--preview-window 'up,60%,border-bottom,+{2}+3/3,~3' \
--bind 'enter:become(vim {1} +{2})'
- To restore the query string when switching between modes, we store the
current query in
/tmp/rg-fzf-{r,f}
files and restore the query usingtransform-query
action which was added in fzf 0.36.0. - Also note that we unbind
ctrl-r
binding onstart
event which is triggered once when fzf starts.
In contrast to the previous version, we use just one hotkey to toggle between
ripgrep and fzf mode. This is achieved by using the $FZF_PROMPT
as a state
within the transform
action, a feature introduced in fzf 0.45.0. A
more detailed explanation of this feature can be found in a previous section -
Toggling with a single keybinding.
When using the transform
action, the placeholder (\{q}
) should be escaped to
prevent immediate evaluation.
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Switch between Ripgrep mode and fzf filtering mode (CTRL-T)
rm -f /tmp/rg-fzf-{r,f}
RG_PREFIX="rg --column --line-number --no-heading --color=always --smart-case "
INITIAL_QUERY="${*:-}"
fzf --ansi --disabled --query "$INITIAL_QUERY" \
--bind "start:reload:$RG_PREFIX {q}" \
--bind "change:reload:sleep 0.1; $RG_PREFIX {q} || true" \
--bind 'ctrl-t:transform:[[ ! $FZF_PROMPT =~ ripgrep ]] &&
echo "rebind(change)+change-prompt(1. ripgrep> )+disable-search+transform-query:echo \{q} > /tmp/rg-fzf-f; cat /tmp/rg-fzf-r" ||
echo "unbind(change)+change-prompt(2. fzf> )+enable-search+transform-query:echo \{q} > /tmp/rg-fzf-r; cat /tmp/rg-fzf-f"' \
--color "hl:-1:underline,hl+:-1:underline:reverse" \
--prompt '1. ripgrep> ' \
--delimiter : \
--header 'CTRL-T: Switch between ripgrep/fzf' \
--preview 'bat --color=always {1} --highlight-line {2}' \
--preview-window 'up,60%,border-bottom,+{2}+3/3,~3' \
--bind 'enter:become(vim {1} +{2})'
fzf can run long-running preview commands and render partial results before
completion. And when you specify follow
flag in --preview-window
option,
fzf will "tail -f
" the result, automatically scrolling to the bottom.
# With "follow", preview window will automatically scroll to the bottom.
# "\033[2J" is an ANSI escape sequence for clearing the screen.
# When fzf reads this code it clears the previous preview contents.
fzf --preview-window follow --preview 'for i in $(seq 100000); do
echo "$i"
sleep 0.01
(( i % 300 == 0 )) && printf "\033[2J"
done'
Admittedly, that was a silly example. Here's a practical one for browsing Kubernetes pods.
pods() {
command='kubectl get pods --all-namespaces' fzf \
--info=inline --layout=reverse --header-lines=1 \
--prompt "$(kubectl config current-context | sed 's/-context$//')> " \
--header $'╱ Enter (kubectl exec) ╱ CTRL-O (open log in editor) ╱ CTRL-R (reload) ╱\n\n' \
--bind 'start:reload:$command' \
--bind 'ctrl-r:reload:$command' \
--bind 'ctrl-/:change-preview-window(80%,border-bottom|hidden|)' \
--bind 'enter:execute:kubectl exec -it --namespace {1} {2} -- bash' \
--bind 'ctrl-o:execute:${EDITOR:-vim} <(kubectl logs --all-containers --namespace {1} {2})' \
--preview-window up:follow \
--preview 'kubectl logs --follow --all-containers --tail=10000 --namespace {1} {2}' "$@"
}
- The preview window will "log tail" the pod
- Holding on to a large amount of log will consume a lot of memory. So we
limited the initial log amount with
--tail=10000
.
- Holding on to a large amount of log will consume a lot of memory. So we
limited the initial log amount with
execute
bindings allow you to run any command without leaving fzf- Press enter key on a pod to
kubectl exec
into it - Press CTRL-O to open the log in your editor
- Press enter key on a pod to
- Press CTRL-R to reload the pod list
- Press CTRL-/ repeatedly to rotate through a different sets of preview
window options
80%,border-bottom
hidden
- Empty string after
|
translates to the default options from--preview-window
Oftentimes, you want to put the identifiers of various Git object to the command-line. For example, it is common to write commands like these:
git checkout [SOME_COMMIT_HASH or BRANCH or TAG]
git diff [SOME_COMMIT_HASH or BRANCH or TAG] [SOME_COMMIT_HASH or BRANCH or TAG]
fzf-git.sh project defines a set of fzf-based key bindings for Git objects. I strongly recommend that you check them out because they are seriously useful.
CTRL-GCTRL-F
CTRL-GCTRL-B
CTRL-GCTRL-H
You can customize how fzf colors the text elements with --color
option. Here
are a few color themes. Note that you need a terminal emulator that can
display 24-bit colors.
# junegunn/seoul256.vim (dark)
export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS='--color=bg+:#3F3F3F,bg:#4B4B4B,border:#6B6B6B,spinner:#98BC99,hl:#719872,fg:#D9D9D9,header:#719872,info:#BDBB72,pointer:#E12672,marker:#E17899,fg+:#D9D9D9,preview-bg:#3F3F3F,prompt:#98BEDE,hl+:#98BC99'
# junegunn/seoul256.vim (light)
export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS='--color=bg+:#D9D9D9,bg:#E1E1E1,border:#C8C8C8,spinner:#719899,hl:#719872,fg:#616161,header:#719872,info:#727100,pointer:#E12672,marker:#E17899,fg+:#616161,preview-bg:#D9D9D9,prompt:#0099BD,hl+:#719899'
# morhetz/gruvbox
export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS='--color=bg+:#3c3836,bg:#32302f,spinner:#fb4934,hl:#928374,fg:#ebdbb2,header:#928374,info:#8ec07c,pointer:#fb4934,marker:#fb4934,fg+:#ebdbb2,prompt:#fb4934,hl+:#fb4934'
# arcticicestudio/nord-vim
export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS='--color=bg+:#3B4252,bg:#2E3440,spinner:#81A1C1,hl:#616E88,fg:#D8DEE9,header:#616E88,info:#81A1C1,pointer:#81A1C1,marker:#81A1C1,fg+:#D8DEE9,prompt:#81A1C1,hl+:#81A1C1'
# tomasr/molokai
export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS='--color=bg+:#293739,bg:#1B1D1E,border:#808080,spinner:#E6DB74,hl:#7E8E91,fg:#F8F8F2,header:#7E8E91,info:#A6E22E,pointer:#A6E22E,marker:#F92672,fg+:#F8F8F2,prompt:#F92672,hl+:#F92672'
fzf Theme Playground created by Vitor Mello is a webpage where you can interactively create fzf themes.
The Vim plugin of fzf can generate --color
option from the current color
scheme according to g:fzf_colors
variable. You can find the detailed
explanation here.
Here is an example. Add this to your Vim configuration file.
let g:fzf_colors =
\ { 'fg': ['fg', 'Normal'],
\ 'bg': ['bg', 'Normal'],
\ 'preview-bg': ['bg', 'NormalFloat'],
\ 'hl': ['fg', 'Comment'],
\ 'fg+': ['fg', 'CursorLine', 'CursorColumn', 'Normal'],
\ 'bg+': ['bg', 'CursorLine', 'CursorColumn'],
\ 'hl+': ['fg', 'Statement'],
\ 'info': ['fg', 'PreProc'],
\ 'border': ['fg', 'Ignore'],
\ 'prompt': ['fg', 'Conditional'],
\ 'pointer': ['fg', 'Exception'],
\ 'marker': ['fg', 'Keyword'],
\ 'spinner': ['fg', 'Label'],
\ 'header': ['fg', 'Comment'] }
Then you can see how the --color
option is generated by printing the result
of fzf#wrap()
.
:echo fzf#wrap()
Use this command to append export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS="..."
line to the end of
the current file.
:call append('$', printf('export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS="%s"', matchstr(fzf#wrap().options, "--color[^']*")))