4.4 KiB
Scrollback
WezTerm provides a searchable scrollback buffer with a configurable maximum size limit that allows you to review information that doesn't fit in the physical window size. As content is printed to the display the display may be scrolled up to accommodate newly added lines. The scrolled lines are moved into the scrollback buffer and can be reviewed by scrolling the window up or down.
This section describes working with the scrollback and discusses some configuration options; be sure to read the configuration docs to learn how to change your settings!
Controlling the scrollback size
This value serves as an upper bound on the number of lines. The larger this value, the more memory is required to manage the tab. If you have a lot of long lived tabs then making this value very large may put some pressure on your system depending on the amount of RAM you have available.
return {
-- How many lines of scrollback you want to retain per tab
scrollback_lines = 3500,
}
Clearing the scrollback buffer
By default, CTRL-SHIFT-K
and CMD-K
will trigger the ClearScrollback
action and discard the contents of the scrollback buffer. There is no way
to undo discarding the scrollback.
See the ClearScrollback docs for information on rebinding this key.
Enable/Disable scrollbar
You can control whether WezTerm displays a scrollbar via your configuration file:
return {
-- Enable the scrollbar.
-- It will occupy the right window padding space.
-- If right padding is set to 0 then it will be increased
-- to a single cell width
enable_scroll_bar = true,
}
You may change the color of the scrollbar if you wish!
Scrolling without a scrollbar
By default, SHIFT-PageUp
and SHIFT-PageDown
will adjust the viewport scrollback position
by one full screen for each press.
See the ScrollByPage docs for more information on this key binding assignment.
Searching the scrollback
By default, CTRL-SHIFT-F
and CMD-F
(F
for Find
) will activate the
search overlay in the current tab.
When the search overlay is active the behavior of wezterm changes:
- Typing (or pasting) text will populate the search pattern in the bar at the bottom of the screen
- Text from the scrollback that matches the search pattern will be highlighted and the number of matches shown in the search bar
- The bottom-most match will be selected and the viewport scrolled to show the selected text.
Enter
,UpArrow
andCTRL-P
will cause the selection to move to any prior matching textPageUp
will traverse to previous matches one page at a time.CTRL-N
andDownArrow
will cause the selection to move to any next matching textPageDown
will traverse to the next match one page at a time.CTRL-R
will cycle through the pattern matching mode; the initial mode is case-sensitive text matching, the next will match ignoring case and the last will match using the regular expression syntax described here. The matching mode is indicated in the search bar.CTRL-SHIFT-C
will copy the selected text to the clipboardEscape
will cancel the search overlay, leaving the currently selected text selected with the viewport scrolled to that location.
Configuring Saved Searches
since: 20200607-144723-74889cd4
If you find that you're often searching for the same things then you may wish to assign a keybinding to trigger that search.
For example, if you find that you're frequently running git log
and then reaching
for your mouse to copy and paste a relevant git commit hash then you might like
this:
local wezterm = require 'wezterm';
return {
keys = {
-- search for things that look like git hashes
{key="H", mods="SHIFT|CTRL", action=wezterm.action{Search={Regex="[a-f0-9]{6,}"}}},
},
}
With that in your config you can now:
CTRL-SHIFT-H
to highlight all the git hashes and select the closest one to the bottom of the screen.- Use
ENTER
/CTRL-N
/CTRL-P
to cycle through the git hashes CTRL-SHIFT-C
to copyEscape
CTRL-SHIFT-V
(orSHIFT-Insert
) to Paste
without needing to reach for your mouse.
See the Search action docs for more information on
using the Search
action.