Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@jirutka
Last active October 31, 2023 09:07
Show Gist options
  • Save jirutka/99d57c82fa8981f56fb5 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Save jirutka/99d57c82fa8981f56fb5 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
How to use terminal on Windows and don’t go crazy…

How to use terminal on Windows without going crazy…

Windows is really horrible system for developers and especially for devops. It doesn’t even have a usable terminal and shell, so working with command line is really pain in the ass. If you really don’t want to switch to any usable system (OS X, Linux, BSD…), then this guide should help you to setup somewhat reasonable environment – usable terminal, proper shell, ssh client, git and Sublime Text as a default editor for shell.

Install stuff

  1. Download and install Git for Windows* with:
    • [✘] Use Git from the Windows Command Prompt
    • [✘] Checkout as-is, commit Unix-style line endings
  2. Download ConEmu Installer (stable or preview) and install x86 (32bit**) version.
  3. Download and install Sublime Text 3 – text editor for real coders. ;)
    • If you’re using 64bit Windows, then download the 64bit version. If you don’t know what the heck this means, just pick the 32bit version.

* Wait a moment… why Git? Well, every developer needs a Version Control System and git is the best one! However, the main reason is that “Git for Windows” is not just a git, it’s a bundle of some basic “unix utilities” – the easiest way to install it on Windows.

** Why 32bit version when you’re maybe running 64bit Windows? Well, just because I didn’t want to test this guide twice, or risk that something will be different on 64bit version and people start to complain…

Configure ConEmu

  1. Start ConEmu (press Win key, write ConEmu and hit enter), the fast configuration screen should appear on the first launch, just click on OK.
  2. Open Settings (Win+Alt+P) and set:
    • Startup:
      • [✘] Specified named task: {Bash::Git bash}
    • Startup/Environment:
      • Copy these lines to the text box:

        set LANG=en_GB.UTF-8
        set LC_ALL=en_GB.UTF-8
        
    • Main:
      • [✘] Clear Type
    • Main/Confirm:
      • [_] Confirm creating new console/tab (Win+W, toolbar [+])
      • [_] Confirm tab closing
    • Main/Update:
      • [✘] Check on startup
      • [✘] Stable (or Preview)
  3. Restart ConEmu.

Configure shell and ssh

  1. Generate SSH key, if you don’t have one yet:
    • ssh-keygen (copy&paste to terminal and hit enter)
    • Use default key file location.
    • Enter some password to protect your SSH key! You’ll be prompted to enter this password after opening terminal, but just once per Windows session (i.e. only after Windows reboot).
  2. Enable SSH Agent Forwarding in .ssh/config:
    • cd; echo 'ForwardAgent yes' >> .ssh/config (copy&paste to terminal and hit enter)
  3. Download preconfigured .bashrc:
    • cd; curl https://gist.githubusercontent.com/jirutka/99d57c82fa8981f56fb5/raw/.bashrc > .bashrc (copy&paste to terminal and hit enter)
  4. Restart ConEmu.

Learn new tricks

Just some basic shortcuts and commands for a decent productivity.

ConEmu

  • Open new tab:
    • Win+W
  • Close the tab:
    • Win+Del
  • Switch to next tab:
    • Win+Alt+Arrow right
  • Switch to previous tab:
    • Win+Alt+Arrow left
  • Cycle tabs:
    • Ctr+Tab
  • Copy text from console to the system clipboard:
    • Press and hold Shift, use arrows to make a selection and then hit Ctrl+C.
    • Press and hold left mouse button, make a selection and release the button.
  • Paste text from the system clipboard to console:
    • Press Ctrl+V to paste the first line from the clipboard, or Shift+Insert to paste all the clipboard content (use with caution!)
    • Press right mouse button to paste all the clipboard content.

Bash

Alternative keys in parenthesis are environment-specific (works in ConEmu).

  • Autocomplete file/directory name:
    • Type first few characters of the file/directory name and then hit Tab.
  • Scroll your command history:
    • Arrow up and Arrow down
  • Search your commands history backwards:
    • Press Ctrl+R, start typing what you’re looking for; hit Ctrl+R again and again to scroll through history.
  • Move cursor to the beginning of the line:
    • Ctrl+A (or Home)
  • Move cursor to the end of the line:
    • Ctrl+E (or End)
  • Move cursor back (left) one word:
    • Alt+B
  • Move cursor forward (right) one word:
    • Alt+F
  • Remove one word before the cursor:
    • Ctrl+W (or Alt+Backspace)

Basic bash commands

  • List content of the current directory:
    • ls (or ll)
  • Go up one directory:
    • cd .. (or ..)
  • Go to a subdirectory:
    • cd DIRECTORY
  • Go to the home directory:
    • cd
  • Connect to a remote machine as specified user using SSH:
    • ssh REMOTE-USER@SERVER-DOMAIN
  • Open file in the default text editor (Sublime Text 3 if you’ve installed it) *:
    • edit FILE
  • Copy content of a file to system clipboard (then you can paste it using Ctrl+V) *:
    • cat FILE > clip

* This will work only on your local computer, not on a remote server via SSH!

#
# Bash settings
#
# Append to the history file instead of overwrite it
shopt -s histappend
# Append the previous command to history each time a prompt is shown
PROMPT_COMMAND="history -a; $PROMPT_COMMAND"
# Increase history size
export HISTSIZE=1000
export HISTFILESIZE=1000
# Customize prompt
export PS1='\[\033[01;32m\]\u@localhost:\[\033[01;34m\] \w \$\[\033[00m\] '
#
# Set EDITOR
#
editors=(
"@PROGRAMFILES@\Sublime Text 3\sublime_text.exe!-w -n"
"@PROGRAMFILES@\Sublime Text 2\sublime_text.exe!-w -n"
"@PROGRAMFILES@\Notepad++\notepad++.exe!-nosession -multiInst"
)
editor=
for item in "${editors[@]}"; do
if [[ "$item" = *@PROGRAMFILES@* ]]; then
for pfpath in "$PROGRAMFILES" "$PROGRAMW6432"; do
cmd="${item/@PROGRAMFILES@/$pfpath}"
if [ -f "${cmd%!*}" ]; then
editor="$cmd"
break 2
fi
done
elif [ -f "${item%!*}" ]; then
editor="$item"
break
fi
done
if [ -n "$editor" ]; then
export EDITOR="'${editor%!*}' ${editor#*!}"
else
export EDITOR=${EDITOR:-vim}
echo
echo "!! Cannot find Sublime Text or Notepad++! If you don't want to use $EDITOR"
echo "!! as your default editor, then install one of these, or you will cry..."
echo
fi
#
# Auto-launch ssh-agent
# Source: https://help.github.com/articles/working-with-ssh-key-passphrases
#
# Note: ~/.ssh/environment should not be used, as it
# already has a different purpose in SSH.
env=~/.ssh/agent.env
# Note: Don't bother checking SSH_AGENT_PID. It's not used
# by SSH itself, and it might even be incorrect
# (for example, when using agent-forwarding over SSH).
agent_is_running() {
if [ "$SSH_AUTH_SOCK" ]; then
# ssh-add returns:
# 0 = agent running, has keys
# 1 = agent running, no keys
# 2 = agent not running
ssh-add -l >/dev/null 2>&1 || [ $? -eq 1 ]
else
false
fi
}
agent_has_keys() {
ssh-add -l >/dev/null 2>&1
}
agent_load_env() {
. "$env" >/dev/null
}
agent_start() {
(umask 077; ssh-agent >"$env")
. "$env" >/dev/null
}
if ! agent_is_running; then
agent_load_env
fi
# if your keys are not stored in ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub or ~/.ssh/id_dsa.pub, you'll need
# to paste the proper path after ssh-add
if ! agent_is_running; then
agent_start
ssh-add
elif ! agent_has_keys; then
ssh-add
fi
unset env
#
# Aliases
#
alias ..='cd ..'
alias ...='cd ../..'
alias ....='cd ../../..'
alias cd..='cd ..'
alias cp='cp -irv'
alias du='du -h --max-depth=1'
alias ll='ls -FGahl --show-control-chars --color=always'
alias ls='ls -AF --show-control-chars --color=always'
alias md='mkdir -p'
alias mv='mv -iv'
alias rm='rm -ir'
alias edit='eval "$EDITOR"'
@KeichiSama
Copy link

Thanks!

@PhilipRoman
Copy link

Awesome! For Windows 10 users, I can recommend the ubuntu subsystem - it is trivial to install as a Windows store app but it is actually a full ubuntu. Its fast, and everything works without hacks - you can run any linux OR windows executable from it (apt, git, tmux, ssh, vim, cron, gcc ...). I now use it as my main shell! C: is mounted as /mnt/c. Unfortunately, you cant access ubuntu files from windows (hasn't been a problem).

@rwarren
Copy link

rwarren commented Mar 4, 2019

scoop install gow will also make people happy in several ways. Forget Git for Windows.

@gpotter2
Copy link

gpotter2 commented Feb 3, 2021

This has aged pretty poorly 😄

@pedrosc1967
Copy link

Great tutorial.
As an alternative to Sublime (I have tried it and it's very good) I suggest vim.
vim is the minimalistic editor that every low resources system should contain.

The UI is back from the 80's and this makes it to have a learning curve that needs to be climbed
When you learn 20% of it's capabilities (like in my case) you end up loving it.
https://www.vim.org/download.php

@pedrosc1967
Copy link

This has aged pretty poorly 😄

WSL asks you to join the Windows Insiders Program and install a preview build of Windows 10 (OS build 20262 or higher),
I don't trust MS so much!

@gpotter2
Copy link

That's incorrect, I'm using a normal release build without windows insider.

@pedrosc1967
Copy link

How did you make it? Is it good for a low performance system?
Could you share step-by-step details?

@carloswm85
Copy link

Thanks.

@jpluimers
Copy link

jpluimers commented Jan 17, 2022

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment