3.9 KiB
Configuration Files
wezterm
will look for a lua
configuration file using the logic shown below.
The recommendation is to place your configuration file at $HOME/.wezterm.lua
to get started.
More complex configurations that need to span multiple files can be placed in
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/wezterm/wezterm.lua
(for X11/Wayland) or
$HOME/.config/wezterm/wezterm.lua
(for all other systems).
graph TD
X[Locate Configuration file] --> A{{--config-file CLI argument specified?}}
A -->|Yes| B{{Can that file be loaded?}}
B -->|Yes| C[Use it]
B -->|No| D[Use built-in default configuration]
A -->|No| E{{$WEZTERM_CONFIG_FILE<br/>environment set?}}
E -->|Yes| B
E -->|No| F{{"Running on Windows and<br/>wezterm.lua exists in same<br/>dir as wezterm.exe?<br/>(Thumb drive mode)"}}
F -->|Yes| B
F -->|No| H{{Is $XDG_CONFIG_HOME<br/>environment set and<br/>wezterm/wezterm.lua<br/>exists inside it?}}
H -->|Yes| C
J --> B
H -->|No| K{{Does $HOME/.config/wezterm/wezterm.lua exist?}}
K -->|Yes| B
K -->|No| J[Use $HOME/.wezterm.lua]
Prior to version 20210314-114017-04b7cedd, if the candidate file exists but failed to parse, wezterm would treat it as though it didn't exist and continue to try other candidate file locations. In all current versions of wezterm, an error will be shown and the default configuration will be used instead.
Note that on Windows, to support uses that carry their wezterm application and configuration around on a thumb drive, wezterm will look for the config file in the same location as wezterm.exe. That is shown in the chart above as thumb drive mode.
wezterm
will watch the config file that it loads; if/when it changes, the
configuration will be automatically reloaded and the majority of options will
take effect immediately. You may also use the CTRL+SHIFT+R
keyboard shortcut
to force the configuration to be reloaded.
The configuration file may be evaluated multiple times for each wezterm process both at startup and in response to the configuration file being reloaded. You should avoid taking actions in the main flow of the config file that have side effects; for example, unconditionally launching background processes can result in many of them being spawned over time if you launch many copies of wezterm, or are frequently reloading your config file.
Configuration Overrides
since: 20210314-114017-04b7cedd
wezterm
allows overriding configuration values via the command line; here are
a couple of examples:
$ wezterm --config enable_scroll_bar=true
$ wezterm --config 'exit_behavior="Hold"'
Configuration specified via the command line will always override the values provided by the configuration file, even if the configuration file is reloaded.
Each window can have an additional set of window-specific overrides applied to it by code in your configuration file. That's useful for eg: setting transparency or any other arbitrary option on a per-window basis. Read the window:set_config_overrides documentation for more information and examples of how to use that functionality.
Configuration File Structure
The wezterm.lua
configuration file is a lua script which allows for a high
degree of flexibility. The script is expected to return a configuration
table, so a basic empty configuration file will look like this:
return {
}
Throughout these docs you'll find configuration fragments that demonstrate configuration and that look something like this:
return {
color_scheme = "Batman",
}
and perhaps another one like this:
local wezterm = require 'wezterm';
return {
font = wezterm.font("JetBrains Mono"),
}
If you wanted to use both of these in the same file, you would merge them together like this:
local wezterm = require 'wezterm';
return {
font = wezterm.font("JetBrains Mono"),
color_scheme = "Batman",
}