Quickly go back to a parent directory in linux instead of typing "cd ../../.." repeatedly
Quickly go back to a specific parent directory in bash instead of typing "cd ../../.." redundantly.
Installation
For OS X/macOS
Using MacPorts:
sudo port install bd
For Debian/Ubuntu
Packages available here:
https://tracker.debian.org/pkg/bd
https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/bd
For Arch Linux
AUR packages available here:
https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/bd
https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/bd-git
For other OS
wget --no-check-certificate -O /usr/local/bin/bd https://raw.github.com/vigneshwaranr/bd/master/bd
chmod +rx /usr/local/bin/bd
echo 'alias bd=". bd -si"' >> ~/.bashrc
source ~/.bashrc
# If you need autocomplete support, follow these two steps
wget -O /etc/bash_completion.d/bd https://raw.github.com/vigneshwaranr/bd/master/bash_completion.d/bd
source /etc/bash_completion.d/bd
To enable case-sensitive directory name matching, use -s
instead of -si
in the alias.
How to use:
If you are in this path /home/user/project/src/org/main/site/utils/file/reader/whatever
and you want to go to site
directory quickly,
then just type:
bd site
In fact, You can simply type bd <starting few letters>
like bd s
or bd si
If there are more than one directories with same name up in the hierarchy, bd will take you to the closest. (Not considering the immediate parent.)
Other uses:
Using bd within backticks (`bd <letter(s)>`
) prints out the path without changing the current directory.
You can take advantage of that by combining `bd <letter(s)>`
with other commands such as ls, ln, echo, zip, tar etc..
Example:
If you just want to list the contents of a parent directory,
without going there, then you can use:
ls `bd p`
in the given example, it will list the contents of
/home/user/project/
If you want to execute a file somewhere in a parent directory,
`bd p`/build.sh
will execute /home/user/project/build.sh
while not changing the
current directory.
If you reside in /home/user/project/src/org/main/site/utils/file/reader/whatever
and want to change to /home/user/project/test
, then try
cd `bd p`/test
Screenshot:
Thanks:
See also: