Sadly, no changes for this. I still get the same random string of characters.
Cheers, ———————————— Justin W. Flory jflo...@gmail.com On Oct 28, 2014, at 8:19 PM, Nicholas Marriott <nicholas.marri...@gmail.com> wrote: > Does setting TERM=nsterm outside tmux help? > > > > On Tue, Oct 28, 2014 at 08:03:20PM -0400, Justin W. Flory wrote: >> I am using tmux 1.8-4.el7, as provided by the @base repository for CentOS 7. >> In terms of what terminal I am using, I am using the Mac OS X default >> Terminal.app for connecting to my server. >> >> Cheers, >> ???????????? >> >> Justin W. Flory >> jflo...@gmail.com >> >> On Oct 28, 2014, at 7:36 PM, Nicholas Marriott <nicholas.marri...@gmail.com> >> wrote: >> >>> >>> What terminal and what tmux version? >>> >>> >>> >>> On Tue, Oct 28, 2014 at 07:24:54PM -0400, Justin W. Flory wrote: >>>> Hello, >>>> This is my first time using a mailing list, so I apologize in advance if I >>>> am not following any specific etiquettes. >>>> Anyways, I have been using tmux for a good while now on a CentOS 6 machine >>>> that I rent primarily for learning purposes and so I can mess around and >>>> learn more about using Linux. Recently, I changed hosting providers and >>>> moved to a new machine, and I chose to use CentOS 7 instead of 6.5 for the >>>> machine, and I have been having some difficulty getting tmux to work out >>>> of the box. I posted [1]this question on Unix StackExchange, but I figured >>>> I*d ask here as well since I figure someone here might also have some >>>> useful information. >>>> Whenever I type any command or derivative of tmux, my terminal will move >>>> to the next line and output the string of characters *1;2c* into my >>>> current line. I have no idea why it is doing this. I have tried all sorts >>>> of things to try to get it to work (and finally, it put error logs into my >>>> home directory). I received [2]this client log and [3]this server >>>> log after running tmux a few more times and rebooting my machine (note: I >>>> did have a lot more things in my config, but I have since removed them * >>>> see the link down below for my running config). >>>> One person said something to me about my $TERM, which is currently >>>> xterm-256color. Per this user*s request, I added set -g default-terminal >>>> *screen-256color* to my .tmux.config and rebooted my machine, but this >>>> did not resolve the issue. He said that my current $TERM would be fine >>>> since it supports 256 colors. >>>> Finally, another thing I have tried is removing a line from my /etc/fstab >>>> file, as per an ArchLinux [4]forum post. However, this did not yield any >>>> results either* >>>> I appreciate any help anyone can offer towards resolving this issue. My >>>> CentOS 7 is running the latest updates of all installed software. Thank >>>> you! >>>> [5]Running config >>>> Cheers, >>>> ************ >>>> Justin W. Flory >>>> [6]jflo...@gmail.com >>>> >>>> References >>>> >>>> Visible links >>>> 1. >>>> http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/163892/tmux-unable-to-start-a-new-session-12c >>>> 2. http://pastebin.com/kwM69fQM >>>> 3. http://pastebin.com/3GC9cVAY >>>> 4. https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=168347 >>>> 5. http://pastebin.com/DjJsbvHw >>>> 6. mailto:jflo...@gmail.com >>> >>> >>> >>>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ >>> >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> tmux-users mailing list >>>> tmux-users@lists.sourceforge.net >>>> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/tmux-users >>> >> > >
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