Tutorial

How To Install Z Shell (zsh) on a Cloud Server

Published on June 27, 2013
How To Install Z Shell (zsh) on a Cloud Server

Status: Deprecated

This article covers a version of Ubuntu that is no longer supported. If you are currently operate a server running Ubuntu 12.04, we highly recommend upgrading or migrating to a supported version of Ubuntu:

Reason: Ubuntu 12.04 reached end of life (EOL) on April 28, 2017 and no longer receives security patches or updates. This guide is no longer maintained.

See Instead:
This guide might still be useful as a reference, but may not work on other Ubuntu releases. If available, we strongly recommend using a guide written for the version of Ubuntu you are using. You can use the search functionality at the top of the page to find a more recent version.

Introduction

Z shell, or zsh, is a shell for Linux and other Unix-like operating systems. It is built to be a drop-in replacement for the traditional bash shell. The zsh offers modern auto-completion and auto-correction, powerful scripting capabilities, and extensibility with modules.

In this guide, we will install zsh on Ubuntu 12.04 cloud server and configure it with some useful defaults. We will then go over some of the features that might make zsh a strong contender for being your default shell.

Installation

Since zsh is in Ubuntu’s default repositories, installation is quite easy and straightforward.

sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install zsh

We now have zsh on our VPS, but nothing has happened yet. For now, we’ll have to start zsh like any other program. Later, we’ll go over how you can change your default shell to zsh once you are comfortable with it. Let’s get started.

zsh

Since this is our first time running zsh, we won’t be dropped immediately into a Z shell session. Instead, we are greeted by a menu that will help us choose some good default configuration settings. We recommend that you choose option (1).

(1)  Continue to the main menu.

You will see a new menu where you can choose some of what you’d like in your configuration file. For the first three options, you should probably follow the recommended configurations unless you have a reason to change something.

One thing that might not be clear is that you need to select each option and set it for it to be added to your configuration. The zsh-newuser-install script (the menuing system you are now viewing) will not add any configuration settings by default, even if they are recommended.

Keep in mind that it is easy to change these settings by editing the ~/.zshrc file, so don’t worry about it too much if you aren’t sure about something right now.

We’re going to choose the default options for the first three menu items, and we’re going to move on to some shell options with selection (4). So make sure you go through the first 3 menu items and set them up with the defaults. The first three items should be marked with “(Unsaved changes.)” following your selections.

(1)  Configure settings for history, i.e. command lines remembered
     and saved by the shell.  (Unsaved changes.)

(2)  Use the new completion system.  (Unsaved changes.)

(3)  Configure how keys behave when editing command lines.  (Unsaved changes.)

Next, we’re going to set some options in item (4). Choose this from the menu.

(4)  Pick some of the more common shell options.  These are simple "on"
     or "off" switches controlling the shell's features.

In this sub-menu we want to turn option 1, 2, and 3 on. Do this by selecting each item and then hitting “s” to turn it on when you are presented with the appropriate sub-menu.

The menu should look like this when you are complete.

# (1) Change directory given just path.
setopt autocd                                               (set but not saved)
# (2) Use additional pattern matching features.
setopt extendedglob                                         (set but not saved)
# (3) Append new history lines instead of overwriting.
setopt appendhistory                                        (set but not saved)

The other options in this menu are up to your personal preference. Feel free to adjust them if you would like. When you are finished, type (0) to save your changes and return to the main menu.

(0)  Remember edits and return to main menu (does not save file yet)

At this point, we are done with our initial configuration with the menu. We can type (0) to exit and save our settings.

(0)  Exit, saving the new settings.  They will take effect immediately.

We are finally dropped to the zsh for the first time. Let’s check out the configuration file generated by the zsh-newuser-install script.

nano ~/.zshrc

It looks pretty good so far. This is the file we’ll want to edit if we want to change the way that zsh works later on.

Let’s try it out now by changing our prompt. We need to either exit out of nano with ctrl-X or start a new zsh session to try out the different options we have. Once you’re back to a zsh prompt, type this.

autoload -U promptinit
promptinit

We’ve now loaded our prompt-styling mechanisms. Let’s choose one of the default styles to try out. To get a list of available styles, type this into the prompt:

prompt -l
adam1 adam2 bart bigfade clint elite2 elite fade fire off oliver pws redhat suse walters zefram

This will give you a list of available prompt themes. Let’s try out the “clint” theme.

prompt clint

You should see your prompt change to reflect your new theme. When you find one that you want, we’ll add it to our .zshrc so that it because the permanent default.

nano ~/.zshrc

At the end, add the following

autoload -U promptinit
promptinit
prompt clint

Now, the next time you start a zsh in your VPS, you will have your prompt configured the way you like it.

To make changes available immediately, you’ll want to source your configuration file.

source ~/.zshrc

To learn more about zshell's functionality, check out our how to use zshell tutorial.

By Justin Ellingwood

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7 Comments


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Kamal Nasser
DigitalOcean Employee
DigitalOcean Employee badge
April 7, 2014

@Fille: Try running <code>zsh-newuser-install</code> manually. Does that work?

Followed instructions, but… when I sudo apt-get install zsh, I get a FATAL -> Failed to fork. :-( Any suggestion?

I’ve found using grml’s zsh configuration to be very useful:

http://grml.org/zsh

To use:

# IMPORTANT: please note that you might override an existing
# configuration file in the current working directory! =>
wget -O .zshrc http://git.grml.org/f/grml-etc-core/etc/zsh/zshrc

I love your tutorials, and I am trying this out on a Ubuntu Droplet but I am not getting the “first-time-install” configuration menu. I cant find a way to launch it. Is there a way to do this?

I have tried removing .zshrc but it doesnt seem to matter.

Maybe there is a way to like restart the whole process, clean cache… or other settings … ?

Any ideas ?

Kamal Nasser
DigitalOcean Employee
DigitalOcean Employee badge
March 8, 2014

@Dominique: Thanks, we’ll correct it.

The Link at the end of the tutorial to the next is broken it should be https://www.digitalocean.com/community/articles/how-to-use-z-shell-zsh-on-a-cloud-server

Z shell is awesome! I just discovered it when I was in DrupalCamp SP 2013. Some hackers were using Z shell and I take it to play. Today I can’t spend more than 10 minutes in Bash without missing Z shell!

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