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AnsiColorOut

Introduction

AnsiColorOut is an attempt at a different approach to coloring PowerShell output.

It uses custom formatting files used with Format-XXX cmdlets to write output with embedded ANSI color escape sequences and relies on PowerShell 5's built-in support for ANSI escape sequences, or external utilities, like GNU less or AnsiCon to interpret them.

Currently, AnsiColorOut supports FileInfo/DirectoryInfo (e.g. Get-ChildItem output for drives) and Process (e.g. Get-Process) formatting.

The module also expands FileInfo and DirectoryInfo types with the ExtendedMode property, which can show all suported file/directory attributes. ExtendedMode output format is configurable.

Installation

Install the module from the PowerShell Gallery:

Install-Module -Name AnsiColorOut

Download the file from the releases page and unzip the zip file to your modules directory.

Changelog

You can find full change log here.

Configuration

FileInfo/DirInfo

File/dir color output is configured using the Set-FileSystemColors cmdlet:

Set-FileSystemColors -Colors $fileSystemColors

The input parameter is an array of Hashtables:

$fileSystemColors = @(
    @{
        Match = ...;
        Color = [System.ConsoleColor]::Gray
    },
    ...
)

Match is an object used to match a file/dir to a console color. The first matching entry is used to determine the text color.

Match can be:

  • An array of file extension strings (without leading .) - only matched against files
  • A System.IO.FileAttributes (or a combination), which are matched against file/dir attributes
  • A regular expression, which is matched against file/dir name (just the name, not the full path)
  • A script block with a single System.IO.FileSystemInfo parameter returning bool.

For example:

$fileSystemColors = @(
    # this entry will match directories
    @{
        Match = [System.IO.FileAttributes]::Directory;
        Color = [System.ConsoleColor]::Gray
    },
    # alternatively, we could've used a script block to match directories
    @{
        Match = { param($f) $f.PSIsContainer };
        Color = [System.ConsoleColor]::Gray
    },
    # this entry will match files with extensions log, err or out
    @{
        Match = @("log", "err", "out");
        Color = [System.ConsoleColor]::DarkGreen
    },
    # this entry will match all files with a leading . in the name
    @{
        Match = [regex] "^\..*";
        Color = [System.ConsoleColor]::DarkGray
    }
)

Process

Process color output is configured using the Set-ProcessColors cmdlet:

Set-ProcessColors -Colors $processColors

The input parameter is an array of Hashtables:

$processColors = @(
    @{
        Match = ...;
        Color = [System.ConsoleColor]::Gray
    },
    ...
)

Match is an object used to match a process to a console color. The first matching entry is used to determine the text color.

Match can be:

  • One of the [ProcessPriorityClass] enum values
  • A string corresponding to one of the [ProcessPriorityClass] enum value names

For example:

$processColors = @(
    @{
        Match = [System.Diagnostics.ProcessPriorityClass]::Idle
        Color = [System.ConsoleColor]::DarkMagenta
    @{
        Match = "BelowNormal"
        Color = [System.ConsoleColor]::DarkCyan
    }
    @{
        Match = "Normal"
        Color = [System.ConsoleColor]::White
    }
    @{
        Match = "AboveNormal"
        Color = [System.ConsoleColor]::Green
    }
    @{
        Match = "High"
        Color = [System.ConsoleColor]::Yellow
    }
    @{
        Match = "RealTime"
        Color = [System.ConsoleColor]::Red
    }
)

For a sample configurations, please look at the SampleProfile.ps1 file.

Custom formatting files

The module is distributed with two custom formatting files: FileSystem.format.ps1xml and Process.format.ps1xml. They define custom views for formatting output.

The files are automatically loaded when importing the module. The views are used in appropriate Format-XXX cmdlets.

Files/directories

FileSystem.format.ps1xml contains table, wide and custom views, all named "ansi".

Get-ChildItem C:\Windows | Format-Table -View ansi Get-ChildItem C:\Windows | Format-Wide -View ansi Get-ChildItem C:\Windows | Format-Custom -View ansi

Process

Process.format.ps1xml contains ADD VIEWS HERE

Known issues and limitations

The color code strings may get line-wrapped if the console window is not wide enough, which will result in corrupt output.

If you are piping Format-XXX output into something like less -rEX, custom table output may get corrupt, because custom formats print out ANSI escape sequence strings, which are not interpreted by PowerShell, but passed on to less.

It is recommended to use custom views in those cases.

At the time of this writing, it looks like Cygwin programs (e.g. less.exe) clear ENABLE_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_PROCESSING standard output flag when they run, which disables ANSI escape sequence processing in PowerShell. This module provides a helper method to re-enable the flag.

If you're using Cygwin utilities from PowerShell, you might want to add the following call to your custom prompt function (which will ensure that the flag is set whenever the prompt is rendered):

[Bozho.PowerShell.Console]::EnableVirtualTerminalProcessing()

License

The MIT License (MIT)

Copyright (c) 2016-2017 Marko Bozikovic

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

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ANSI color output for PowerShell

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