Hi, i found the answer myself :) You have to create a own dircolors file in your homedir with dircolors -p > .colorsrc. This file one have to load into the LS_COLORS environment variable with eval `dircolors .dircolorsrc`. This works fine now :)
Greets, Matthias > Hello, > > how does this color feature of ls work? > If i make an alias like ls='ls --color' the output of ls is colored in > some > way. > It colores executable files, subdirectories and symbolic links. > As far as i have seen yet, there's a file called DIR_COLORS under /etc/ > where a lot of more color stuff is configured. But ls doesn't color things > like > .tgz files although this type of file is configured in the DIR_COLORS > file. > Any hint why this doesn't work for me or some advice what i should change? > Thanks a lot! > > Greetings, > Matthias > > -- > GMX - Die Kommunikationsplattform im Internet. > http://www.gmx.net > > GMX Tipp: > > Machen Sie Ihr Hobby zu Geld bei unserem Partner 1&1! > http://profiseller.de/info/index.php3?ac=OM.PS.PS003K00596T0409a > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > -- GMX - Die Kommunikationsplattform im Internet. http://www.gmx.net GMX Tipp: Machen Sie Ihr Hobby zu Geld bei unserem Partner 1&1! http://profiseller.de/info/index.php3?ac=OM.PS.PS003K00596T0409a