2.1 KiB
Configuration Files
wezterm
will look for a lua
configuration file in the following locations, stopping at the first file that
it finds:
- If the environment variable
$WEZTERM_CONFIG_FILE
is set, it will be treated as the path to a configuration file. - On Windows,
wezterm.lua
from the directory that containswezterm.exe
. This is handy for users that want to carry their wezterm install around on a thumb drive. $HOME/.config/wezterm/wezterm.lua
,$HOME/.wezterm.lua
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.
To support our early adopters upgrading from an earlier release, wezterm
can
also load TOML based configuration files; the structure supported by both lua
and TOML configuration is the same. If both lua and TOML configuration files
are present wezterm
prefers to read the lua configuration.
Support for loading from TOML will be removed in the nearish future; some of the newer capabilities are not supported in TOML configuration files which makes it a burden to continue supporting.
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",
}