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    You are at:Home»Technology»Show HN: Lstr – A modern, interactive tree command written in Rust
    Technology

    Show HN: Lstr – A modern, interactive tree command written in Rust

    TechAiVerseBy TechAiVerseJune 18, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read5 Views
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    Show HN: Lstr – A modern, interactive tree command written in Rust
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    Show HN: Lstr – A modern, interactive tree command written in Rust

    lstr



    A blazingly fast, minimalist directory tree viewer, written in Rust. Inspired by the command line program tree, with a powerful interactive mode.


    An interactive overview of lstr‘s project structure… using lstr.

    Philosophy

    • Fast: Runs directory scans in parallel by default to maximize speed on modern hardware.
    • Minimalist: Provides essential features without the bloat. The core experience is clean and uncluttered.
    • Interactive: An optional TUI mode for fluid, keyboard-driven exploration.

    Features

    • High-performance: Scans directories in parallel to be as fast as possible.
    • Classic and interactive modes: Use lstr for a classic tree-like view, or launch lstr interactive for a fully interactive TUI.
    • Rich information display (optional):
      • Display file-specific icons with --icons (requires a Nerd Font).
      • Show file permissions with -p.
      • Show file sizes with -s.
      • Git Integration: Show file statuses (Modified, New, Untracked, etc.) directly in the tree with the -G flag.
    • Smart filtering:
      • Respects your .gitignore files with the -g flag.
      • Control recursion depth (-L) or show only directories (-d).

    Installation

    You need the Rust toolchain installed on your system to build lstr.

    1. Clone the repository:

      git clone https://github.com/bgreenwell/lstr.git
      cd lstr
    2. Build and install using Cargo:

      # This compiles in release mode and copies the binary to ~/.cargo/bin
      cargo install --path .

    Usage

    lstr [OPTIONS] [PATH]
    lstr interactive [OPTIONS] [PATH]

    Note that PATH defaults to the current directory (.) if not specified.

    Option Description
    -a, --all List all files and directories, including hidden ones.
    --color Specify when to use color output (always, auto, never).
    -d, --dirs-only List directories only, ignoring all files.
    -g, --gitignore Respect .gitignore and other standard ignore files.
    -G, --git-status Show git status for files and directories.
    --icons Display file-specific icons; requires a Nerd Font.
    -L, --level Maximum depth to descend.
    -p, --permissions Display file permissions (Unix-like systems only).
    -s, --size Display the size of files.
    --expand-level Interactive mode only: Initial depth to expand the interactive tree.


    Interactive mode

    Launch the TUI with lstr interactive [OPTIONS] [PATH].

    Keyboard controls

    Key(s) Action
    ↑ / k Move selection up.
    ↓ / j Move selection down.
    Enter Context-aware action:
    – If on a file: Open it in the default editor ($EDITOR).
    – If on a directory: Toggle expand/collapse.
    q / Esc Quit the application normally.
    Ctrl+s Shell integration: Quits and prints the selected path to stdout.

    Examples

    1. List the contents of the current directory

    2. Explore a project interactively, ignoring gitignored files

    lstr interactive -g --icons

    3. Display a directory with file sizes and permissions (classic view)

    4. See the git status of all files in a project

    5. Start an interactive session with all data displayed

    lstr interactive -gG --icons -s -p

    Piping and shell interaction

    The classic view mode is designed to work well with other command-line tools via pipes (|).

    Interactive fuzzy finding with fzf

    This is a powerful way to instantly find any file in a large project.

    fzf will take the tree from lstr and provide an interactive search prompt to filter it.

    Paging large trees with less or bat

    If a directory is too large to fit on one screen, pipe the output to a pager.

    # Using less (the -R flag preserves color)
    lstr -L 10 | less -R
    
    # Using bat (a modern pager that understands colors)
    lstr --icons | bat

    Changing directories with lstr

    You can use lstr as a visual cd command. Add the following function to your shell’s startup file (e.g., ~/.bashrc, ~/.zshrc):

    # A function to visually change directories with lstr
    lcd() {
        # Run lstr and capture the selected path into a variable.
        # The TUI will draw on stderr, and the final path will be on stdout.
        local selected_dir
        selected_dir="$(lstr interactive -g --icons)"
    
        # If the user selected a path (and didn't just quit), `cd` into it.
        # Check if the selection is a directory.
        if [[ -n "$selected_dir" && -d "$selected_dir" ]]; then
            cd "$selected_dir"
        fi
    }

    After adding this and starting a new shell session (or running source ~/.bashrc), you can simply run:

    This will launch the lstr interactive UI. Navigate to the directory you want, press Ctrl+s, and your shell’s current directory will instantly change.

    Performance and concurrency

    By default, lstr uses a parallel directory walker to maximize speed on multi-core systems. This parallelism is managed by the excellent rayon thread pool, which is used internally by lstr‘s directory traversal engine.

    For advanced use cases, such as benchmarking or limiting CPU usage, you can control the number of threads by setting the RAYON_NUM_THREADS environment variable before running the command.

    To force single-threaded (serial) execution:

    RAYON_NUM_THREADS=1 lstr .

    Inspiration

    The philosophy and functionality of lstr are heavily inspired by the excellent C-based tree command line program. This project is an attempt to recreate that classic utility in modern, safe Rust.

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