Configuration

The core reads ~/.config/radare2/radare2rc while starting. You can add e commands to this file to tune radare2 configuration to your taste.

To prevent radare2 from parsing this file at the start, pass it -N option.

All the configuration of radare2 is done with the eval commands. A typical startup configuration file looks like this:

$ cat ~/.radare2rc
e scr.color = true
e dbg.bep   = loader

Configuration can also be changed with -e command-line option. This way you can adjust configuration from the command line, keeping the .radare2rc file intact. For example, to start with empty configuration and then adjust scr.color and asm.syntax the following line may be used:

$ radare2 -N -e scr.color=true -e asm.syntax=intel -d /bin/ls

Internally, the configuration is stored in a hash table. The variables are grouped in namespaces: cfg., file., dbg., scr. and so on.

To get a list of all configuration variables just type e in the command line prompt. To limit output to a selected namespace, pass it with an ending dot to e. For example, e file. will display all variables defined inside the "file" namespace.

To get help about e command type e?:

Usage: e[?] [var[=value]]
e?              show this help
e?asm.bytes     show description
e??             list config vars with description
e               list config vars
e-              reset config vars
e*              dump config vars in r commands
e!a             invert the boolean value of 'a' var
er [key]        set config key as readonly. no way back
ec [k] [color]  set color for given key (prompt, offset, ...)
e a             get value of var 'a'
e a=b           set var 'a' the 'b' value
env [k[=v]]     get/set environment variable

A simpler alternative to e command is accessible from the visual mode. Type Ve to enter it, use arrows (up, down, left, right) to navigate the configuration, and q to exit it. The start screen for the visual configuration edit looks like this:

[EvalSpace]

    >  anal
       asm
       scr
       asm
       bin
       cfg
       diff
       dir
       dbg
       cmd
       fs
       hex
       http
       graph
       hud
       scr
       search
       io

For configuration values that can take one of several values, you can use the =? operator to get a list of valid values:

[0x00000000]> e scr.nkey = ?
scr.nkey = fun, hit, flag

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