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- tmux frequently asked questions
- ******************************************************************************
- * PLEASE NOTE: most display problems are due to incorrect TERM! Before *
- * reporting problems make SURE that TERM settings are correct inside and *
- * outside tmux. *
- * *
- * Inside tmux TERM must be "screen" or similar (such as "screen-256color"). *
- * Don't bother reporting problems where it isn't! *
- * *
- * Outside, it must match your terminal: particularly, use "rxvt" for rxvt *
- * and derivatives. *
- ******************************************************************************
- * How is tmux different from GNU screen?
- tmux and GNU screen have many similarities. Some of the main differences I am
- aware of are (bearing in mind I haven't used screen for a few years now):
- - tmux uses a client-server model. Each server has single Unix domain socket in
- /tmp and within one server there are multiple sessions which may be attached
- to multiple clients (terminals).
- This has advantages, notably: windows may be linked simultaneously to
- multiple sessions; windows may be moved freely between sessions; and a client
- may be switched between sessions easily (C-b D). There is one major
- disadvantage: if the server crashes, game over, all sessions die. In
- practice, however, tmux is quite stable and gets more so as people report any
- bugs they hit :-).
- This model is different from screen, where typically each new screen instance
- is independent. tmux supports the same behaviour by using multiple servers
- with the -L option but it is not typically recommended.
- - Different command interfaces. One of the goals of tmux is that the shell
- should be easily usable as a scripting language - almost all tmux commands
- can be used from the shell and behave identically whether used from the
- shell, from a key binding or from the command prompt. Personally I also find
- tmux's command interface much more consistent and clearer, but this is
- subjective.
- - tmux calls window names (what you see in the status line) "names", screen
- calls them "titles".
- - tmux has a multiple paste buffers. Not a major one but comes in handy quite a
- lot.
- - tmux supports automatically renaming windows to the running application
- without gross hacks using escape sequences. Its even on by default.
- - tmux has a choice of vi or emacs key layouts. Again, not major, but I use
- emacs so if tmux did support only one key set it would be emacs and then all
- the vi users would get humpy. Key bindings may be completely reconfigured in
- any case.
- - tmux has an option to limit the window size.
- - tmux has search in windows (C-b f).
- - The window split (pane) model is different. tmux has two objects, windows and
- panes; screen has just windows. This difference has several implications:
- * In screen you can have a window appear in several layouts, in tmux a pane
- can only be in one window (fixing this is a big todo item but quite
- invasive).
- * tmux layouts are immutable and do not get changed unless you modify them.
- * In tmux, all panes are closed when you kill a window.
- * tmux panes do not have individual names, titles and so on.
- I think tmux's model is much easier to manage and navigate within a window,
- but breaking panes off from and joining them to windows is more clumsy.
- tmux also has support for preset pane layouts.
- - tmux's status line syntax is more readable and easier to use. I think it'd be
- hard for anyone to argue with this. tmux doesn't support running a command
- constantly and always using the last line of its output, commands must be run
- again each time.
- - tmux has modern, easily extended code. Again hard to argue screen is better
- if you have looked at the code.
- - tmux depends on libevent. I don't see this as a disadvantage: libevent is
- small and portable, and on modern systems with current package management
- systems dependencies are not an issue. libevent brings advantages in code
- simplicity and performance.
- - screen allows the window to be bigger than the terminal and can pan around
- it. tmux limits the size to the largest attached client. This is a big todo
- item for tmux but it is not trivial.
- - screen has builtin serial and telnet support; this is bloat and is unlikely
- to be added to tmux.
- - Environment handling is different.
- - tmux tends to be more demanding on the terminal so tends to show up terminal
- and application bugs which screen does not.
- - screen has wider platform support, for example IRIX, and for odd terminals.
- * I found a bug! What do I do?
- Check the latest version of tmux from Git to see if the problem is still
- reproducible. Sometimes the length of time between releases means a lot of
- fixes can be sitting in Git and the problem might already be fixed.
- Please send bug reports by email to nicholas.marriott@gmail.com or
- tmux-users@googlegroups.com. Please include as much of the following
- information as possible:
- - the version of tmux you are running;
- - the operating system you are using and its version;
- - the terminal emulator you are using and the TERM setting when tmux was
- started;
- - a description of the problem;
- - if the problem is repeatable, the steps to repeat the problem;
- - for screen corruption issues, a screenshot and the output of "infocmp $TERM"
- from outside tmux are often very useful.
- * Why doesn't tmux do $x?
- Please send feature requests by email to tmux-users@googlegroups.com.
- * Why do you use the screen terminal description inside tmux? It sucks.
- It is already widely available. It is planned to change to something else such
- as xterm-xfree86 at some point, if possible.
- * I don't see any colour in my terminal! Help!
- On some platforms, common terminal descriptions such as xterm do not include
- colour. screen ignores this, tmux does not. If the terminal emulator in use
- supports colour, use a value for TERM which correctly lists this, such as
- xterm-color.
- * tmux freezes my terminal when I attach to a session. I even have to kill -9
- the shell it was started from to recover!
- Some consoles really really don't like attempts to set the window title. Tell
- tmux not to do this by turning off the "set-titles" option (you can do this
- in .tmux.conf):
- set -g set-titles off
- If this doesn't fix it, send a bug report.
- * Why is C-b the prefix key? How do I change it?
- The default key is C-b because the prototype of tmux was originally developed
- inside screen and C-b was chosen not to clash with the screen meta key. It
- also has the advantage of not interfering with the use of C-a for start-of-line
- in emacs and the shell (although it does interfere with previous-character).
- Changing is simple: change the "prefix-key" option, and - if required - move
- the binding of the "send-prefix" command from C-b (C-b C-b sends C-b by
- default) to the new key. For example:
- set -g prefix C-a
- unbind C-b
- bind C-a send-prefix
- * How do I use UTF-8?
- When running tmux in a UTF-8 capable terminal, UTF-8 must be turned on in tmux;
- as of release 0.9, tmux attempts to autodetect a UTF-8-capable terminal by
- checking the LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE and LANG environment variables. list-clients may
- be used to check if this is detected correctly; if not, the -u command-line
- flag may be specified when creating or attaching a client to a tmux session:
- $ tmux -u new
- Since the 1.0 release, tmux will turn on UTF-8 related options automatically
- (ie status-utf8, and utf8) if the above conditions are met.
- * How do I use a 256 colour terminal?
- Provided the underlying terminal supports 256 colours, it is usually sufficient
- to add the following to ~/.tmux.conf:
- set -g default-terminal "screen-256color"
- Note that some platforms do not support "screen-256color" ("infocmp
- screen-256color" will return an error) - in this case see the next entry in
- this FAQ.
- tmux attempts to detect a 256 colour terminal both by looking at the colors
- terminfo entry and by looking for the string "256col" in the TERM environment
- variable.
- If both these methods fail, the -2 flag may be passed to tmux when attaching
- to a session to indicate the terminal supports 256 colours.
- * vim or $otherprogram doesn't display 256 colours. What's up?
- Some programs attempt to detect the number of colours a terminal is capable of
- by checking the colors terminfo or Co termcap entry. However, this is not
- reliable, and in any case is missing from the "screen" terminal description
- used inside tmux.
- There are two options (aside from using "screen-256color") to allow programs to
- recognise they are running on a 256-colour terminal inside tmux:
- - Manually force the application to use 256 colours always or if TERM is set to
- screen. For vim, you can do this by overriding the t_Co option, see
- http://vim.wikia.com/wiki/256_colors_in_vim.
- - Creating a custom terminfo file that includes colors#256 in ~/.terminfo and
- using it instead. These may be compiled with tic(1).
- * How do I make Ctrl-PgUp and Ctrl-PgDn work in vim?
- tmux supports passing through ctrl (and where supported by the client terminal,
- alt and shift) modifiers to function keys using xterm(1)-style key sequences.
- This may be enabled per window, or globally with the tmux command:
- setw -g xterm-keys on
- Because the TERM variable inside tmux must be set to "screen", vim will not
- automatically detect these keys are available; however, the appropriate key
- sequences can be overridden in .vimrc using the following:
- if &term == "screen"
- set t_kN=^[[6;*~
- set t_kP=^[[5;*~
- endif
- And similarly for any other keys for which modifiers are desired.
- Please note that the "xterm-keys" setting may affect other programs, in the
- same way as running them in a standard xterm; for example most shells do not
- expect to receive xterm(1)-style key sequences so this setting may prevent keys
- such as ctrl-left and ctrl-right working correctly. tmux also passes through
- the ctrl (bit 5 set, for example ^[[5~ to ^[[5^) modifier in non-xterm(1) mode;
- it may be possible to configure vim to accept these, an example of how to do so
- would be welcome.
- vim users may also want to set the "ttyfast" option inside tmux.
- * How do I make ctrl and shift arrow keys work in emacs?
- The terminal-init-screen function in term/screen.el is called for new frames,
- but it doesn't configure any function keys.
- If the tmux xterm-keys option is on, it is enough to define the same keys as
- xterm. Add the following to init.el or .emacs to do this:
- (defadvice terminal-init-screen
- ;; The advice is named `tmux', and is run before `terminal-init-screen' runs.
- (before tmux activate)
- ;; Docstring. This describes the advice and is made available inside emacs;
- ;; for example when doing C-h f terminal-init-screen RET
- "Apply xterm keymap, allowing use of keys passed through tmux."
- ;; This is the elisp code that is run before `terminal-init-screen'.
- (if (getenv "TMUX")
- (let ((map (copy-keymap xterm-function-map)))
- (set-keymap-parent map (keymap-parent input-decode-map))
- (set-keymap-parent input-decode-map map))))
- And ensure .tmux.conf contains "set -g xterm-keys on".
- Alternatively, the screen.el file can be copied to the load path and
- customized.
- * Why doesn't elinks set the window title inside tmux?
- There isn't a way to detect if a terminal supports setting the window title, so
- elinks attempts to guess by looking at the environment. Rather than looking for
- TERM=screen, it uses the STY variable to detect if it is running in screen;
- tmux does not use this so the check fails. A workaround is to set STY before
- running elinks.
- The following shell function does this, and also clears the window title on
- exit (elinks, for some strange reason, sets it to the value of TERM):
- elinks() {
- STY= `which elinks` $*
- echo -ne \\033]0\;\\007;
- }
- * What is the proper way to escape characters with #(command)?
- When using the #(command) construction to include the output from a command in
- the status line, the command will be parsed twice. First, when it's read by the
- configuration file or the command-prompt parser, and second when the status
- line is being drawn and the command is passed to the shell. For example, to
- echo the string "(test)" to the status line, either single or double quotes
- could be used:
- set -g status-right "#(echo \\\\(test\\\\))"
- set -g status-right '#(echo \\\(test\\\))'
- In both cases, the status-right option will be set to the string "#(echo
- \\(test\\))" and the command executed will be "echo \(test\)".
- * tmux uses too much CPU. What do I do?
- Automatic window renaming may use a lot of CPU, particularly on slow computers:
- if this is a problem, turn it off with "setw -g automatic-rename off". If this
- doesn't fix it, please report the problem.
- * I use PuTTY and my tmux window pane separators are all qqqqqqqqq's!
- PuTTY is using a character set translation that doesn't support ACS line
- drawing. With a Unicode font, try setting PuTTY to use a different translation
- on the Window -> Translation configuration page. For example, change UTF-8 to
- ISO-8859-1 or CP437. It may also be necessary to adjust the way PuTTY treats
- line drawing characters in the lower part of the same configuration page.
- * What is the best way to display the load average? Why no #L?
- It isn't possible to get the load average portably in code and it is preferable
- not to add portability goop. The following works on at least Linux, *BSD and OS
- X:
- uptime|awk '{split(substr($0, index($0, "load")), a, ":"); print a[2]}'
- * How do I attach the same session to multiple clients but with a different
- current window, like screen -x?
- One or more of the windows can be linked into multiple sessions manually with
- link-window, or a grouped session with all the windows can be created with
- new-session -t.
- * Ctrl and arrow keys doesn't work in putty! What do I do?
- putty inverts the sense of the cursor key mode on ctrl, which is a bit hard for
- tmux to detect properly. To get ctrl keys right, change the terminfo settings
- so kUP5 (Ctrl-Up etc) are the adjusted versions, and disable smkx/rmkx so tmux
- doesn't change the mode. For example with this line in .tmux.conf (assuming you
- have TERM set to xterm):
- set -g terminal-overrides "xterm*:kLFT5=\eOD:kRIT5=\eOC:kUP5=\eOA:kDN5=\eOB:smkx@:rmkx@"
- Note that this will only work in tmux 1.2 and above.
- * How can I blank the tmux window?
- GNU screen has a feature whereby it will blank the screen after a period of
- inactivity. To do the same thing in tmux, use the lock-command setting, for
- example (with GNU bash):
- set -g lock-command 'tput civis && read -s -n1'
- This will remove the cursor and tell the shell to quit once a key has been
- pressed. For zsh, use "read -s -k1".
- In addition, it's possible to have both blanking and locking (for instance via
- lock(1) or vlock(1)) by using the following:
- bind x set lock-command '/usr/bin/vlock' \; lock-client \; set lock-command 'tput civis && read -s -n1'
- * I don't see italics! Or less and vim show italics and reverse the wrong way round!
- GNU screen does not support italics and the "screen" terminfo description uses
- the italics escape sequence incorrectly.
- As of tmux 2.1, if default-terminal is set to "screen" or matches "screen-*",
- tmux will behave like screen and italics will be disabled.
- To enable italics, create a new terminfo entry called "tmux" (some platforms
- may already have this, you can check with "infocmp tmux"):
- $ cat <<EOF|tic -x -
- tmux|tmux terminal multiplexer,
- ritm=\E[23m, rmso=\E[27m, sitm=\E[3m, smso=\E[7m, Ms@,
- use=xterm+tmux, use=screen,
- tmux-256color|tmux with 256 colors,
- use=xterm+256setaf, use=tmux,
- EOF
- $
- And tell tmux to use it in ~/.tmux.conf:
-
- set -g default-terminal "tmux"
- If using urxvt, make sure you have an italics capable font enabled. for
- example, add to ~/.Xdefaults:
- urxvt.italicFont: xft:Bitstream Vera Sans Mono:italic:autohint=true
- * How can I make tmux use my terminal's scrollback buffer?
- Normally, tmux enables the terminal's "alternate screen". Most terminals (such
- as xterm) do not save scrollback for the alternate screen. You might prefer
- tmux to use the normal screen, so it uses your terminal's scrollback
- buffer. This way, you can access the scrollback buffer as usual, for example
- using the mouse wheel - although there is no guarantee output inside tmux will
- always (or ever) be added to the scrollback.
- You can make tmux use the normal screen by telling it that your terminal does
- not have an alternate screen. Put the following in ~/.tmux.conf:
- set -ga terminal-overrides ',xterm*:smcup@:rmcup@'
- Adjust if your $TERM does not start with xterm.
- tmux will still emulate the alternate screen for applications run under tmux,
- so you don't really lose anything with this setting. The only disadvantage is
- that when you exit tmux, it will not restore whatever was there before you
- started.
- * How do I see the default configuration?
- Show the default session options by starting a new tmux server with no
- configuration file:
- $ tmux -Lfoo -f/dev/null start\; show -g
- Or the default window options:
- $ tmux -Lfoo -f/dev/null start\; show -gw
- * How do I copy a selection from tmux to the system's clipboard?
- When running in xterm(1), tmux can automatically send copied text to the
- clipboard. This is controlled by the set-clipboard option and also needs this
- X resource to be set:
- XTerm*disallowedWindowOps: 20,21,SetXprop
- For rxvt-unicode (urxvt), there is an unofficial Perl extension here:
- http://anti.teamidiot.de/static/nei/*/Code/urxvt/
- Otherwise a key binding for copy mode using xclip (or xsel) works:
- bind -temacs-copy C-y copy-pipe "xclip -i >/dev/null"
- Or for inside and outside copy mode with the prefix key:
- bind C-y run -b "tmux save-buffer - | xclip -i"
- On OS X, reattach-to-usernamespace lets pbcopy/pbpaste work:
- https://github.com/ChrisJohnsen/tmux-MacOSX-pasteboard
-
- * Why do I see dots around a session when I attach to it?
- tmux limits the size of the window to the smallest attached session. If
- it didn't do this then it would be impossible to see the entire window.
- The dots mark the size of the window tmux can display.
- To avoid this, detach all other clients when attaching:
- $ tmux attach -d
- Or from inside tmux by detaching individual clients with C-b D or all
- using:
- C-b : attach -d
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