8 Where to get more information
15 GNU Midnight Commander (also referred to as MC) is a user shell with
16 text-mode full-screen interface. It can be run on the OS console,
17 in xterm and other terminal emulators.
19 GNU Midnight Commander allows you to manage files while making most of
20 you screen and giving you a clear representation of the filesystem, yet
21 it's simple enough to be run over a telnet or ssh session.
23 GNU Midnight Commander is released under the GNU General Public
24 License version 2.0 or any later version. A copy of the file is
25 included with this distribution package.
31 To compile the GNU Midnight Commander you need at least to have a copy
32 of the glib library, available at ftp://ftp.gtk.org/pub/gtk/v1.2/
33 Versions 1.2.x are recommended. Older versions are not supported.
34 Support for glib 2.0.x is experimental and has to be explicitly enabled
41 GNU Midnight Commander was conceived as a free close of John Socha's
42 Norton Commander (TM). It also takes the best from more recent software
43 with similar interfaces. GNU Midnight Commander comes with mouse support
44 on xterm and optionally on the Linux console.
46 Some features are specific to the POSIX environment MC runs on, some are
47 familiar to the users of similar software for other operating systems.
50 * Built in Virtual File System: manipulate remote file systems
51 through the FTP and SMB protocols or over secure shell, browse
52 contents of tar, ar, rpm, zip, cpio, lha and rar archives just
55 * Almost all operations work with the virtual file system,
56 enabling you to do complex tasks, like viewing files in
57 archives on an FTP server.
59 * Mouse support on most terminal emulators for X Window System
60 as well as on the Linux console.
62 * Learn Keys: GNU Midnight Commander may be configured at run
63 time to support any kind of input keys for a given terminal,
64 making its operation possible even on most weird terminals.
66 * Text and hex editors are available for you to use (hex editor
67 is a part of the viewer).
69 * Hotlist allows you to keep a list of common visited locations,
70 including remote sites and directories inside archives.
72 * Command completion: By pressing Alt-Tab in any place where a
73 filename or an executable are expected, GNU Midnight Commander
74 will complete the name for you. If you press Alt-Tab for the
75 second time, you get a list box with all possible completions.
77 * Subshell support: Run your commands by a real shell
78 interpreter. GNU Midnight Commander interacts with bash,
79 tcsh and zsh to provide you with all of the facilities
80 available in your preferred shell.
82 * Find file command can search for the file contents.
84 * Background operations allow you to copy or move files from
85 any virtual file system while you do other tasks (i.e., you
86 can do background FTP copies).
88 * FTP proxy is supported.
90 * Linux file recovery: If you are using Linux, you can recover
91 deleted files from an ext2 or ext3 partition with the undelete
92 file system. This is a low level file recovery function that
93 can recover files deleted by any program on Linux.
95 * External panelization: You can run any arbitrary external
96 command and GNU Midnight Commander will display the output
97 generated as a file listing that can be manipulated as a
100 * Emacs-like key bindings are used in all widgets.
102 * Context dependent actions (open, view, edit) are available.
104 * The built-in file viewer, together with the context dependent
105 actions is used to format man pages on the fly, coloring mail
108 * The built-in editor supports syntax highlighting and external
109 actions, such as spell checking and formatting.
115 These are hints for the text mode edition:
117 * Use the F-Keys for invoking the commands in the function key bar.
118 If your terminal doesn't support F-keys, you can use the <ESC digit>
119 sequence to invoke the corresponding F-digit key.
121 * Tab changes the current panel.
123 * All input lines have emacs-like key-bindings (command history is
124 accessed through the M-p and M-n keys).
126 * The panels accept C-n, C-p for browsing the panel (like in Emacs).
128 * M-Enter copies the currently selected file name to the input line.
130 * M-Tab completes the current word (or tries to).
132 * The Virtual File System is a cute addition to the project, you may
133 browse in tar and compressed tar files as well as browsing remote
134 machines with the mcfs file system.
136 * Please read the manual page.
138 * Read the file src/TODO for the current projects.
140 You can access the whole documentation online with the F1 key,
141 although it's not as nice as the groff printed manual page :-)
144 Where to get more information
145 -----------------------------
147 There is a webpage for GNU Midnight Commander at
149 http://www.ibiblio.org/mc/
151 This page also has current information about mailing lists and some
152 useful advices how to report bugs.
154 You can download the latest version of GNU Midnight Commander from
156 http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/utils/file/managers/mc/
162 There are two mailing lists, mc@gnome.org and mc-devel@gnome.org. Use
163 mc-devel@gnome.org if you are prepared for a more technical discussion
164 with the developers of the package, otherwise use mc@gnome.org.
166 Please don't sent HTML e-mail to either of those mailing lists.
168 Include the output of "mc --version", the operating system and the
169 distribution (if applicable) you are using, the compiler and the
170 configure flags used to compile the program (if you know them).
172 If the program crashed and produces a core dump, please provide a
173 stack trace of the program.
175 You can do this by running dbx or gdb like this: