Greetings,
Is this the canonical way to get the current session:
tmux display-message -p '#S'
?
Thanks for any confirmation or correction.
-m
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Greetings,
Here is the current output of tmux ls...
$ tmux ls
104: 1 windows (created Wed Aug 5 08:23:14 2020)
144: 1 windows (created Thu Aug 13 15:45:35 2020)
3: 1 windows (created Mon Jun 22 07:26:56 2020)
I would like the output to be numerically sorted by the id of the
session and also hav
Greetings,
I'm aware of the zoom option for tmux panes. Is there a mechanism to
hide individual panes?
Maybe move certain panes over to another window?
I don't use tmux windows yet, but that might be a neat option if I'm
unable to hide individual panes.
Thanks for any help!
-m
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:08 AM Nicholas Marriott <
nicholas.marri...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 02, 2019 at 03:25:33PM -0500, Matt Zagrabelny wrote:
> >Thanks for the answers Nicholas!
> >Perhaps I should just state what I currently do and see if there is a
> more
> >optimal way o
t would be nice to split the pane and do that, but the
local tmux takes the key sequence to split the pane. Then I need to ssh. It
would be nice to have my configuration "just know what I want."
Thanks,
-m
>
> Scott
>
> On Thu., 3 Oct. 2019, 06:26 Matt Zagrabelny, wrote:
&g
,
> usese tmux showenv and pane_current_path to update the parent shell,
> then kills tmux.
>
> Alternatively it would possible to add a feature where tmux replaced
> itself with a new shell with the updated environment but I don't see
> much use for this so there is little
Greetings,
Is there a way to leave tmux, but somehow seed the environment (history,
CWD, etc.) with everything that was part of the tmux environment?
Sort of like:
tmux
# do stuff
tmux --copy-environment-exec-shell
# now the shell is running without tmux
What do you folks think?
Thanks for any
On Thu, Aug 8, 2019 at 10:43 AM Nicholas Marriott <
nicholas.marri...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On all platforms except OpenBSD: splitw -c '#{pane_current_path}'
>
>
Thank you Nicholas!
-m
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Greetings,
When splitting a window into a second (or nth) pane, I'd like the working
directory of the new pane to be set to current working directory of the
pane that was focused when split command was issued.
Does anyone know of a way to accomplish this?
Thanks for any help!
-m
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t, "Kill window
> %u? ",
> + nwl->idx);
> + }
> + break;
> + case WINDOW_TREE_PANE:
> + if (nwp != NULL &&
> +
On Thu, Apr 5, 2018 at 10:13 AM, Nicholas Marriott <
nicholas.marri...@gmail.com> wrote:
> No we have moved away from configurable key bindings in choose mode.
>
Bummer.
> I don't mind having a key but it would need a confirmation prompt.
>
How about Ctrl+X for a key? Typing two keys is less
On Thu, Apr 5, 2018 at 2:17 AM, Nicholas Marriott <
nicholas.marri...@gmail.com> wrote:
> There is no key binding because it would be too easy to do by accident.
>
Sure. That is why it would have to be enabled via the config file. I'm not
suggesting a default key binding implementation, just the
Hey Nicholas,
On Wed, Apr 4, 2018 at 4:47 PM, Nicholas Marriott <
nicholas.marri...@gmail.com> wrote:
> You can press : and run kill-session.
>
Is there a way to bind a key sequence to that? If not, feature request?
> But if you kill the session you are attached to your client will be
> deta
Greetings!
Running tmux 2.6. I've "discovered" W. What a nice function.
I see the key commands for choose-tree from the man page:
KeyFunction
Enter Choose selected item
Up Select previous item
Down Select next item
< Scroll list of previews left
> Scroll list of previews rig
Greetings,
I attempting to format the output of tmux ls -F:
$ tmux ls -F "#{session_name}: #(/home/user/tmux-utils/process-display
#{pane_pid})" | head -1
189: <'/home/user/tmux-utils/process-display 8726' not ready>
I rerun the above command a few times and each time the "not ready" is
displaye
On Tue, Mar 13, 2018 at 11:59 AM, Vincenzo Romano <
vincenzo.rom...@notorand.it> wrote:
> 2018-03-13 17:52 GMT+01:00 Matt Zagrabelny :
> >
> >
> > On Tue, Mar 13, 2018 at 6:54 AM, Vincenzo Romano
> > wrote:
> >>
> >> Hi all.
> >> I am l
On Tue, Mar 13, 2018 at 6:54 AM, Vincenzo Romano <
vincenzo.rom...@notorand.it> wrote:
> Hi all.
> I am looking for a solution to get the terminal persistent in case of
> network failre.
> I mean, I don't want the user to be able to spawn multiple virtual
> terminal but rather
> to get the ability
Hello!
Suppose I run tmux on my laptop and ssh to a system where I have tmux
configured to exec for my shell. I have a tmux running inside of a tmux on
a different system.
I'd like to be able to scroll the buffer on the "inside" tmux session. Any
ideas?
Both the tmux on my laptop and server are
v 9, 2017 at 4:59 PM, Nicholas Marriott <
nicholas.marri...@gmail.com> wrote:
> It works for me, although I can't use S-NPage so I used C-NPage instead.
>
>
> On Thu, Nov 09, 2017 at 02:04:28PM -0600, Matt Zagrabelny wrote:
> >Thanks for the help, Nicholas!
> &g
Thanks for the help, Nicholas!
On Thu, Nov 9, 2017 at 1:50 PM, Nicholas Marriott <
nicholas.marri...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 1 yes if you can persuade your terminal to send S-PgUp to tmux instead
> of trying to scroll itself, and if the terminal sends the right thing
> (\e[5;2~ for page up, \e[6;2~ f
Greetings tmux-users,
In my pre-tmux-days I used Shift+PgUp/Down to scroll in my terminal. I know
with tmux I need to enter copy-mode. I've almost recreated what I was used
with the following .tmux.conf lines:
bind-key -n C-PPage copy-mode -u
bind-key -T copy-mode-vi C-NPage send-keys -X page-dow
able.
> And it is a little harder to fix if it breaks. If you don't have root or
> don't have console access to the box, I would go with the shell profile
> way. Otherwise it probably doesn't make much difference.
>
>
> On 8 Nov 2017 9:23 pm, "Matt Zagrabelny&
Greetings,
I am looking to launch tmux automatically when I launch a terminal/ssh
session.
I can:
keep my login shell set to /bin/zsh
and put the following in my .zshrc:
if [[ -z $TMUX ]]; then
exec tmux new
fi
OR
I can:
set my login shell to /usr/bin/tmux
and put the following in my .tm
Thanks, Nicholas!
-m
On Fri, Apr 28, 2017 at 2:31 PM, Nicholas Marriott <
nicholas.marri...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Hi
>
> There is no option, -F is the only way to do it.
>
>
>
>
> On Thu, Apr 27, 2017 at 10:09:23AM -0500, Matt Zagrabelny wrote:
> >He
Hello!
I know I can format the output of "tmux ls" with -F.
I can't find the config option to set the formatting in my tmux.conf file.
Any suggestions?
Besides the man page for tmux is there a good resource for what the
available config options are for tmux.conf?
Thanks for any help!
-m
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