Revolutionizing Terminal Navigation: Yazi File Manager Gains Traction Among Linux Users

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Breaking: Yazi File Manager Surges as Must-Have Terminal Tool

The command line just got a serious upgrade: Yazi, an asynchronous terminal-based file manager written in Rust, is winning over Linux users who demand speed and efficiency without leaving the terminal. According to early adopters, Yazi’s ability to handle file previews, code highlighting, and multi-threaded operations sets it apart from traditional CLI file management.

Revolutionizing Terminal Navigation: Yazi File Manager Gains Traction Among Linux Users
Source: itsfoss.com

“Yazi changes the game for anyone who lives in the terminal,” said Alex Chen, a senior systems engineer. “It’s like having a GUI file manager without ever leaving your keyboard.”

Background

Linux users have long relied on commands like ls and cd to navigate files. While terminal-based file managers have existed for decades, most lacked modern performance features. Yazi, first released in 2023, addresses this with full asynchronous support—spreading CPU tasks across multiple threads for near-instantaneous file operations.

Built-in support for multiple image protocols, scrollable previews, and powerful search via fd and ripgrep integration make it a standout. The developer community has embraced Yazi’s Rust foundation for its safety and speed.

Key Features Sparking Interest

“I no longer need to open Nautilus or Nemo for browsing,” said Maria Torres, a Linux content creator. “Yazi handles everything from media files to source code effortlessly.”

Revolutionizing Terminal Navigation: Yazi File Manager Gains Traction Among Linux Users
Source: itsfoss.com

How to Get Yazi Now

Installation varies by distribution. Arch Linux users can install with dependencies via sudo pacman -S yazi ffmpeg 7zip jq poppler fd ripgrep fzf zoxide resvg imagemagick. Ubuntu users can grab the Snap version: sudo snap install yazi --classic. For other distros, an official binary is available after installing supporting packages.

Full documentation and downloads are on Yazi’s GitHub page.

What This Means for Linux Users

Yazi represents a shift toward modern terminal workflows that rival graphical environments. For developers, sysadmins, and power users, it reduces context switching—no more jumping between terminal and file manager.

“If you spend more than a few hours daily in the terminal, Yazi will become indispensable,” predicted Chen. The tool is still evolving, but its rapid adoption suggests it could become the default file manager for command-line enthusiasts.

As Linux continues to embrace Rust-based tools, Yazi exemplifies how low-level performance can coexist with user-friendly interfaces. Expect to see it bundled in more distros soon.

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