Installing Bashish
Not all the links on the Bashish Download Page seem to be working, however the source tarball is working fine. Once extracted, it can be installed from the command line with
If you need details on the above steps, see How to Install Software from a Tarball in Linux.
You’ll need to restart your shell for Bashish to take effect.
Choosing Themes
Bashish comes with several themes in the base package, and you can list them with the command
And once you’ve seen a theme you’d like to try, just enter There is an alternate method, which will allow you to browse the themes instead of specifying one-at-a-time, but in the tests performed for this article, the theme manager failed to apply changes to theme selection, so the above method is recommended. Should you wish to try the theme manager, it can be run with the command bashishtheme and requires the dialog program in order to run properly.
Disabling Bashish
There are some cases in which Bashish might cause problems with software run through it, so the developers have included a fairly simple way to temporarily suspend Bashish for the duration of a process. To run a command without Bashish, run it as
Recommended Themes
Of the themes included with Bashish, there are a few that stand out as especially cool (at least in this author’s opinion). The following themes are the ones we’d most recommend, either for usefulness or simply because of the cool factor.
The Box theme applies a border around each section of your output, marking a clear distinction between events.
The Bashish2 theme is an elegant 2-liner with some minimal information.
The default theme BlueSteel, and with good reason. It looks lovely and contains several bits of useful info.
Elite and Elite2 are favorites as well, because they pack a lot of info into a small space, and include bash history number in the top line.
The LCARS theme is clearly more about style than substance, as it’s intended to resemble the LCARS computer interface seen on several Star Trek series. It doesn’t give much in the ways of useful info, and it takes up a lot of space, but it deserves a mention.
Finally, for those who want a clear visual split between commands, but not a bunch of text in the way, we’ve got the simplistic Uberprompt.
Conclusion
If you want a fancy shell without trying to decode a line like PS1="[\033[35m]\t[\033[m]-[\033[36m]\u[\033[m]@[\033[32m]\h:[\033[33;1m]\w[\033[m]$ " to do it, Bashish is a great way to go. There are enough built-in themes to satisfy just about anyone, and for the most part, they look great. This author will probably be using BlueSteel for quite a while.