Shell prompt that is based on location in filesystem Shell prompt that is based on location in filesystem shell shell

Shell prompt that is based on location in filesystem


You can hook into cd to change the prompt every time you are changing the working directory. I've asked myself often how to hook into cd but I think that I now found a solution. What about adding this to your ~/.bashrc?:

## Wrapper function that is called if cd is invoked# by the current shell#function cd {    # call builtin cd. change to the new directory    builtin cd $@    # call a hook function that can use the new working directory    # to decide what to do    color_prompt}## Changes the color of the prompt depending# on the current working directory#function color_prompt {    pwd=$(pwd)    if [[ "$pwd/" =~ ^/home/ ]] ; then        PS1='\[\033[01;32m\]\u@\h:\w\[\033[00m\]\$ '    elif [[ "$pwd/" =~ ^/etc/ ]] ; then        PS1='\[\033[01;34m\]\u@\h:\w\[\033[00m\]\$ '    elif [[ "$pwd/" =~ ^/tmp/ ]] ; then        PS1='\[\033[01;33m\]\u@\h:\w\[\033[00m\]\$ '    else        PS1='\u@\h:\w\\$ '    fi    export PS1}# checking directory and setting prompt on shell startupcolor_prompt


Please try this method instead and tell us how it works e.g. how your prompt changes in your home directory, your project or scratch directory, and other directories besides those. Tell us what error messages you see as well. The problem lies within it.

Tell me also how you run it, if it's by script, by direct execution, or through a startup script like ~/.bashrc.

top_level_dir (){    __DIR=$PWD    case "$__DIR" in    *home*)        echo home        ;;    *scratch*)        echo scratch        ;;    *project*)        echo project        ;;    *)        echo "$__DIR"        ;;    esac}export PS1='$(top_level_dir) : 'export -f top_level_dir

If it doesn't work, try changing __DIR=$PWD to __DIR=$(pwd) and tell us if it helps too. I also would like to confirm if you're really running bash. Note that there are many variants of sh like bash, zsh, ksh, and dash and the one installed and used by default depends on every system. To confirm that you're using Bash, do echo "$BASH_VERSION" and see if it shows a message.

You should also make sure that you're running export PS1='$(top_level_dir) : ' with single quotes and not with double quotes: export PS1="$(top_level_dir) : ".