A terminal embedded in Nautilus, the GNOME's file browser
Project description
A terminal embedded in Nautilus, the GNOME’s file browser
Nautilus Terminal is a terminal embedded into Nautilus, the GNOME’s file browser. It is always opened in the current folder, and follows the navigation (the cd command is automatically executed when you navigate to an other folder).
NOTE: This is a complete re-implementation of my previous Nautilus Temrinal plugin.
NOTE²: This is an early development version, some feature are missing (see below).
Features:
Embed a Terminal in each Nautilus tab / window,
Follow the navigation: if you navigate in Nautilus, the cd command is automatically executed in the terminal,
Detects running process: if something is running in the terminal, the cd command is not send to the shell,
Automatically respawn the shell if it exits,
Supports copy / paste from / to the terminal using Ctrl+Shift+C / Ctrl+Shift+V,
Can be displayed / hidden using the F4 key,
[STRIKEOUT:Supports drag & drop of file on the terminal,] TODO
[STRIKEOUT:Allows to configure the shell] TODO (actually it is hardcoded to /bin/zsh),
[STRIKEOUT:Allows to configure the terminal appearance (colors, font,…).] TODO
Requirements:
Installing Nautilus Terminal
From PYPI
Run the following command (as root):
pip install nautilus_terminal
Then kill Nautilus to allow it to load the new extension:
nautilus -q
From sources
Clone the repositiory:
git clone git@github.com:flozz/nautilus-terminal.git cd nautilus-terminal
Install Nautilus Terminal (as root):
python setup.py install
Then kill Nautilus to allow it to load the new extension:
nautilus -q
NOTE: if the setup fails to install the Nautilus Python extension script, you can copy it manually (as root):
cp nautilus_terminal/nautilus_terminal_extension.py /usr/share/nautilus-python/extensions/
Hacking and Debug
If you want work on this software, you will first have to install the nautilus-python and psutil packages. On Debian / Ubuntu, you will find it in the python-nautilus and python-psutil packages:
sudo apt install python-nautilus python-psutil
Then you have to copy the nautilus_terminal_extension.py file in the nautilus-python’s extension folder (this script is just a minimal bootstrap that will import the nautilus_terminal module installed system wild or the one located in this repository if the right debug environment is set). This can be done by one of the script of the tools/ folder:
./tools/update-locale-extention.sh
You can now hack Nautilus Terminal as you want and you can use the following script to test your code right into nautilus:
./tools/debug-in-nautilus.sh ./tools/debug-in-nautilus.sh --no-bg # keep Nautilus attached to the console
Happy hacking! :)
Changelog
3.0.1: Script to convert the README to reStructuredText for PYPI
3.0.0: Initial Nautilus Temrinal 3 release (early development version)
License GPLv3
Nautilus Terminal - A terminal embedded in the Nautilus file browser Copyright (C) 2010-2017 Fabien LOISON <http://www.flozz.fr/> This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.