Sets Work | Xshell Highlight

: You can choose between changing only the text color ( Term Color ) or applying a background highlight to ensure important data stands out immediately.

| Typo pattern | Highlight | Example | |--------------|-----------|---------| | rm -rf / (space before slash) | Red background + white text | rm -rf / home | | dd of=/dev/sda | Flashing red | Disk overwrite | | > /dev/sdb | Yellow background | Raw disk redirect |

Once you’ve developed effective Highlight Sets, consider sharing them with the community. Post your .hls files on: xshell highlight sets

Xshell does not natively merge sets, but you can copy rules between sets. Use the and Paste buttons in the Highlight Sets manager to duplicate rules from a master set into a specialized set.

Let’s say you want all instances of the word “ERROR” to appear with a bright red background and bold white text. Here’s how: : You can choose between changing only the

Xshell’s highlight system uses pattern matching to identify specific strings or patterns in terminal output. When a match is found, Xshell applies your chosen visual formatting to that text. The system is flexible and supports two matching modes:

Visual anchors allow your eyes to skim past irrelevant data and focus on what matters. Use the and Paste buttons in the Highlight

Here are essential RegEx patterns tailored for Xshell highlight sets: 1. Matching IP Addresses

To enable Regex matching, simply check the box when adding a keyword to your Highlight Set. Essential Regex Snippets for Xshell