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Alacritty - A fast, cross-platform, OpenGL terminal emulator
About
Alacritty is a modern terminal emulator that comes with sensible defaults, but
allows for extensive configuration. By integrating with other
applications, rather than reimplementing their functionality, it manages to
provide a flexible set of features with high performance.
The supported platforms currently consist of BSD, Linux, macOS and Windows.
The software is considered to be at a beta level of readiness; there are
a few missing features and bugs to be fixed, but it is already used by many as
a daily driver.
Alacritty can be installed by using various package managers on Linux, BSD,
macOS and Windows.
Prebuilt binaries for macOS and Windows can also be downloaded from the
GitHub releases page.
For everyone else, the detailed instructions to install Alacritty can be found
here.
Requirements
At least OpenGL ES 2.0
[Windows] ConPTY support (Windows 10 version 1809 or higher)
Configuration
You can find the documentation for Alacritty's configuration in man 5 alacritty, or by looking at the website if you do not have the manpages
installed.
Alacritty doesn't create the config file for you, but it looks for one in the
following locations:
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/alacritty/alacritty.toml
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/alacritty.toml
$HOME/.config/alacritty/alacritty.toml
$HOME/.alacritty.toml
/etc/alacritty/alacritty.toml
On Windows, the config file will be looked for in:
%APPDATA%\alacritty\alacritty.toml
Contributing
A guideline about contributing to Alacritty can be found in the
CONTRIBUTING.md file.
FAQ
Is it really the fastest terminal emulator?
Benchmarking terminal emulators is complicated. Alacritty uses
vtebench to quantify terminal emulator
throughput and manages to consistently score better than the competition using
it. If you have found an example where this is not the case, please report a
bug.
Other aspects like latency or framerate and frame consistency are more difficult
to quantify. Some terminal emulators also intentionally slow down to save
resources, which might be preferred by some users.
If you have doubts about Alacritty's performance or usability, the best way to
quantify terminal emulators is always to test them with your specific
usecases.
Why isn't feature X implemented?
Alacritty has many great features, but not every feature from every other
terminal. This could be for a number of reasons, but sometimes it's just not a
good fit for Alacritty. This means you won't find things like tabs or splits
(which are best left to a window manager or terminal multiplexer) nor
niceties like a GUI config editor.