Inputrc for bash history completion using up/down arrows
The bashrc file stores key mappings. Use your own bashrc by putting export INPUTRC=~/.inputrc in your .bash_profile or .bashrc
This page, Creating the /etc/inputrc File and this page, Super-useful inputrc give some useful advice about things you can put in those files.
One of things I most often find myself doing is searching my command line history. I frequently use the cursor up and down to scroll through my most recent commands. Often, I want to re-use a particular grep or find that I used recently, but I don't remember the specifics of it. With the text below in your .inputrc, you can type in the first few letters, say gr or f and press the cursor keys and it will scroll through your command history, showing the commands that began with those characters. Nice. :)
# By default up/down are bound to previous-history # and next-history respectively. The following does the # same but gives the extra functionality where if you # type any text (or more accurately, if there is any text # between the start of the line and the cursor), # the subset of the history starting with that text # is searched (like 4dos for e.g.). # Note to get rid of a line just Ctrl-C "\e[B": history-search-forward "\e[A": history-search-backward $if Bash # F10 toggles mc on and off # Note Ctrl-o toggles panes on and off in mc "\e[21~": "mc\C-M" #do history expansion when space entered Space: magic-space $endif # Include system wide settings which are ignored # by default if one has their own .inputrc $include /etc/inputrc
Source: Inputrc for bash history completion using up/down arrows