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78 lines
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78 lines
5.0 KiB
Markdown
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[#]: collector: (lujun9972)
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[#]: translator: ( )
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[#]: reviewer: ( )
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[#]: publisher: ( )
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[#]: url: ( )
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[#]: subject: (A minimalist Mac terminal for Linux fans)
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[#]: via: (https://opensource.com/article/20/6/iterm2-mac)
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[#]: author: (Lisa Seelye https://opensource.com/users/lisa)
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A minimalist Mac terminal for Linux fans
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======
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Here is how I keep a terminal simple and my dotfiles secure through a
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lot of subtle complexity.
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![Coffee and laptop][1]
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I have a confession to make: I have been a Mac user for more than 10 years now. At first, I felt a little shame, given my strong Linux background, but the Mac gives me a Unix-like shell and a great window manager. Because of that history, I have a mix of features that will run on macOS but feel familiar to Linux users. There's no reason it can't port over to Linux (and it has!).
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### Using iTerm2 on a Mac
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For a long time, my preferred terminal was the basic built-in Terminal.app, but I recently switched to [iTerm2][2] because it has much better customization and profile support. One of its key wins for me is that it's easy to transplant settings from Mac to Mac. For daily use, I prefer the Solarized Dark theme, but for presentations, I have a separate profile that enlarges the text and uses a plain black background with more vibrant colors.
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The first thing I do to make iTerm2 usable is to configure the **Ctrl+Left** and **Ctrl+Right** arrows to respect the classic terminal behavior of jumping to the start and end of a word boundary. To do so, navigate to Preferences > Profiles > Your Profile > Keys and enter the following.
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* Keyboard Shortcut: ^←
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* Action: Send Escape Sequence
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* Esc+: b
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Then the other:
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* Keyboard Shortcut: ^→
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* Action: Send Escape Sequence
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* Esc+: f
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Learn more about what you can do with [iTerm2][3] and enjoy the custom experience.
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### A simple command prompt
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I am one of those boring terminal prompt users. I don't include Git directory or exit code, and I only use a single line. The only fancy component I use is [kubectx][4], which includes the current Kubernetes context. As an [OpenShift Dedicated][5] Site Reliability Engineer (SRE), I have to run commands with the appropriate context, and `kubectx` makes it easy to know where I am when I'm typing. So, my Bash PS1 is the boring `username@host cwd $`, save for the Kubernetes context prefix.
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There is no doubt that I'm on the minimalist side, compared to some fancy terminals I've seen. Some people enjoy transparency, and others prefer a lot of information on their prompts—from the time to the exit code and everything else. I find it distracting in my terminals, so I enjoy those setups from afar.
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### Beautifully complex dotfiles
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Compared to my minimalist terminal, it's easy to see where I put my maximalist efforts: deploying my [dotfiles][6], including my `.bash_profile` and my overall Mac setup.
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I use a [series of Makefiles][7], hosted through GitHub, to manage my Mac setup. This pulls in my [dotfile-specific deployment mechanism][8], which is also in GitHub. Why all the tooling around security you ask? IT professionals and hobbyists alike need a robust way to put secure pieces of data on new systems. Maybe you prefer your SSH config to be hidden, or maybe you're deploying credentials through a third-party system. I find it useful to keep my secure data with everything else, and I solved this problem with [Ansible Vault][9]. All my secrets are stored in Git, encrypted with Ansible Vault. Decryption is handled with Makefiles.
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Whether I'm installing for the first time or updating existing dotfiles, I (of course) must have Ansible Vault, and to avoid having to install that everywhere, I put it in a container that I run with Docker, which I do have installed everywhere. I put the decryption passphrase into a file, `run make`, and clean up everything with `make clean`. (You can learn more by [exploring the dotfiles][8].)
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I will say that this management scheme may be over the top, but some folks like complicated terminal prompts. So perhaps in the balance, it all evens out.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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via: https://opensource.com/article/20/6/iterm2-mac
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作者:[Lisa Seelye][a]
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选题:[lujun9972][b]
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译者:[译者ID](https://github.com/译者ID)
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校对:[校对者ID](https://github.com/校对者ID)
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本文由 [LCTT](https://github.com/LCTT/TranslateProject) 原创编译,[Linux中国](https://linux.cn/) 荣誉推出
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[a]: https://opensource.com/users/lisa
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[b]: https://github.com/lujun9972
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[1]: https://opensource.com/sites/default/files/styles/image-full-size/public/lead-images/coffee_cafe_brew_laptop_desktop.jpg?itok=G-n1o1-o (Coffee and laptop)
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[2]: https://www.iterm2.com/
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[3]: https://www.iterm2.com/documentation.html
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[4]: https://github.com/ahmetb/kubectx
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[5]: https://www.openshift.com/products/dedicated/
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[6]: https://opensource.com/article/19/3/move-your-dotfiles-version-control
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[7]: https://github.com/lisa/mac-setup
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[8]: https://github.com/lisa/dotrc
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[9]: https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/user_guide/vault.html
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