Buckets:
| # Prefixing | |
| ## Prefix Styles | |
| concurrently will by default prefix each command's outputs with a zero-based index, wrapped in square brackets: | |
| ```bash | |
| $ concurrently 'echo Hello there' "echo 'General Kenobi!'" | |
| [0] Hello there | |
| [1] General Kenobi! | |
| [0] echo Hello there exited with code 0 | |
| [1] echo 'General Kenobi!' exited with code 0 | |
| ``` | |
| If you've given the commands names, they are used instead: | |
| ```bash | |
| $ concurrently --names one,two 'echo Hello there' "echo 'General Kenobi!'" | |
| [one] Hello there | |
| [two] General Kenobi! | |
| [one] echo Hello there exited with code 0 | |
| [two] echo 'General Kenobi!' exited with code 0 | |
| ``` | |
| There are other prefix styles available too: | |
| | Style | Description | | |
| | --------- | --------------------------------- | | |
| | `index` | Zero-based command's index | | |
| | `name` | The command's name | | |
| | `command` | The command's line | | |
| | `time` | Time of output | | |
| | `pid` | ID of the command's process (PID) | | |
| | `none` | No prefix | | |
| Any of these can be used by setting the `--prefix`/`-p` flag. For example: | |
| ```bash | |
| $ concurrently --prefix pid 'echo Hello there' 'echo General Kenobi!' | |
| [2222] Hello there | |
| [2223] General Kenobi! | |
| [2222] echo Hello there exited with code 0 | |
| [2223] echo 'General Kenobi!' exited with code 0 | |
| ``` | |
| It's also possible to have a prefix based on a template. Any of the styles listed above can be used by wrapping it in `{}`. | |
| Doing so will also remove the square brackets: | |
| ```bash | |
| $ concurrently --prefix '{index}-{pid}' 'echo Hello there' 'echo General Kenobi!' | |
| 0-2222 Hello there | |
| 1-2223 General Kenobi! | |
| 0-2222 echo Hello there exited with code 0 | |
| 1-2223 echo 'General Kenobi!' exited with code 0 | |
| ``` | |
| ## Prefix Colors | |
| By default, there are no colors applied to concurrently prefixes, and they just use whatever the terminal's defaults are. | |
| This can be changed by using the `--prefix-colors`/`-c` flag, which takes a comma-separated list of colors to use.<br/> | |
| The available values are color names (e.g. `green`, `magenta`, `gray`, etc), a hex value (such as `#23de43`), or `auto`, to automatically select a color. | |
| ```bash | |
| $ concurrently -c red,blue 'echo Hello there' 'echo General Kenobi!' | |
| ``` | |
| <details> | |
| <summary>List of available color names</summary> | |
| - `black` | |
| - `blue` | |
| - `cyan` | |
| - `green` | |
| - `gray` | |
| - `magenta` | |
| - `red` | |
| - `white` | |
| - `yellow` | |
| </details> | |
| Colors can take modifiers too. Several can be applied at once by prepending `.<modifier 1>.<modifier 2>` and so on. | |
| ```bash | |
| $ concurrently -c red,bold.blue.dim 'echo Hello there' 'echo General Kenobi!' | |
| ``` | |
| <details> | |
| <summary>List of available modifiers</summary> | |
| - `reset` | |
| - `bold` | |
| - `dim` | |
| - `hidden` | |
| - `inverse` | |
| - `italic` | |
| - `strikethrough` | |
| - `underline` | |
| </details> | |
| A background color can be set in a similarly fashion. | |
| ```bash | |
| $ concurrently -c bgGray,red.bgBlack 'echo Hello there' 'echo General Kenobi!' | |
| ``` | |
| <details> | |
| <summary>List of available background color names</summary> | |
| - `bgBlack` | |
| - `bgBlue` | |
| - `bgCyan` | |
| - `bgGreen` | |
| - `bgGray` | |
| - `bgMagenta` | |
| - `bgRed` | |
| - `bgWhite` | |
| - `bgYellow` | |
| </details> | |
| ## Prefix Length | |
| When using the `command` prefix style, it's possible that it'll be too long.<br/> | |
| It can be limited by setting the `--prefix-length`/`-l` flag: | |
| ```bash | |
| $ concurrently -p command -l 10 'echo Hello there' 'echo General Kenobi!' | |
| [echo..here] Hello there | |
| [echo..bi!'] General Kenobi! | |
| [echo..here] echo Hello there exited with code 0 | |
| [echo..bi!'] echo 'General Kenobi!' exited with code 0 | |
| ``` | |
| It's also possible that some prefixes are too short, and you want all of them to have the same length.<br/> | |
| This can be done by setting the `--pad-prefix` flag: | |
| ```bash | |
| $ concurrently -n foo,barbaz --pad-prefix 'echo Hello there' 'echo General Kenobi!' | |
| [foo ] Hello there | |
| [foo ] echo Hello there exited with code 0 | |
| [barbaz] General Kenobi! | |
| [barbaz] echo 'General Kenobi!' exited with code 0 | |
| ``` | |
| > [!NOTE] | |
| > If using the `pid` prefix style in combination with [`--restart-tries`](./restarting.md), the length of the PID might grow, in which case all subsequent lines will match the new length.<br/> | |
| > This might happen, for example, if the PID was 99 and it's now 100. | |
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