Tmux: How do I find out the currently running version of tmux? - tmux

I know that I can run tmux -V to find the version of tmux that is in my PATH, but how can I get the version of tmux that is currently running?

As pointed out in a comment, tmux -V returns the version:
$ tmux -V
tmux 3.0a
Tested on Centos 7 and OSX 12.5.

Most obvious, but not 100% correct way is to execute this command in console
$ tmux -V
and receive output like this tmux 2.9a with version of tmux INSTALLED, not currently running.
In 99% cases it is enough, but there can be subtle nuances.
Command tmux -V will return version of tmux installed at /usr/bin/tmux or any other directory inside your PATH variable. If you have tmux already running, it is possible that tmux can be started from binary of other version and from different place (for example, tmux can be started from /home/user/bin/tmux).
In this case, you have to call
$ ps -e | grep tmux
to see PID of all tmux processes currently running. It will output something like this
[vodolaz095#ivory ~]$ ps -e | grep tmux
19699 pts/0 00:00:00 tmux: client
19701 ? 00:00:00 tmux: server
Here, number 19701 depicts process id (PID) of currently running tmux server.
After getting PID of tmux server, you can ran command
$ lsof -p 19701
to get information about CURRENTLY RUNNING tmux server process (in my case its 19701) that will output something like this (Figure 1)
COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE/OFF NODE NAME
tmux:\x20 19701 vodolaz095 cwd DIR 8,33 4096 22544385 /home/vodolaz095
tmux:\x20 19701 vodolaz095 rtd DIR 8,1 4096 2 /
tmux:\x20 19701 vodolaz095 txt REG 8,1 677760 3675332 /usr/bin/tmux
tmux:\x20 19701 vodolaz095 mem REG 8,1 6406312 131327 /var/lib/sss/mc/group
as you can see, tmux currently running was executed from binary placed in /usr/bin/tmux.
Or, you can call one liner
lsof -p `pgrep 'tmux: server'`
to achieve the same output as Figure 1
After you get path to tmux binary CURRENTLY RUNNING, (in my case, it was /usr/bin/tmux), you can execute this binary with flag -V to get its version
/usr/bin/tmux -V
or, if tmux was installed by limited user into /home/user/bin/tmux,
/home/user/bin/tmux -V
And, as result, you'll get version of tmux currently running, not the one, that was installed.

To get the version of the tmux server you can use display-message.
./tmux2.3 display-message -p "#{version}"
Will show the version of the server (2.7 in my case)
-p will direct the output of stdout so you can script with it and {version} can be anything from the FORMATS section in the man page.
The following will give you the executable of your tmux server, on linux:
realpath /proc/$(tmux display-message -p "#{pid}")/exe
And on macos, proc_pidpath can be used, see https://stackoverflow.com/a/8149380

To find the actual version of the tmux that is running, you have to find the PID of the tmux:
pgrep tmux
With this info, you can check the version by running:
lsof -p $tmuxPID | grep REG | grep -i -e deleted -e "tmux$"
If there is not a (deleted) next to the tmux file listed, you can just run that file with a -V.
If it results in files that are "(deleted)", you are running an old, uninstalled version. If you are on linux, you can figure out what it is by running:
/proc/$tmuxPID/exe -V`
If you are on OS X, you are stuck with whatever information is in the path to the filename, possibly something like Cellar/tmux/<version number>/bin/tmux.
You can combine many of these steps into the following one-liner:
for tmuxPID in $(pgrep tmux); do lsof -p $tmuxPID | grep REG | grep -i -e deleted -e "tmux$"; done
Or if you are on Linux, this always works:
for tmuxPID in $(pgrep tmux); do /proc/$tmuxPID/exe -V; done

Related

Can tmux query physical terminal? (Maybe iTerm2 only)

I'm trying to detect the presence of iTerm2 and if I run the following in iTerm2 (echo -n $'\e[5n'; read -s -t 0.1 line; printf '%q\n' "$line") the terminal responds with $'\033'\[ITERM2\ 3.2.1n$'\033'\[0n
However, if I am running a tmux session in the terminal, then tmux responds and gives me nothing.
Any idea how I can ask tmux to query the physical terminal to report its status?
Footnotes
Here is a description of [5n in the tmux source: https://github.com/tmux/tmux/blob/486ce9b09855ae30a2bf5e576cb6f7ad37792699/tools/ansicode.txt#L577
This might be iTerm2 only, since I haven't seen a response on any other terminal
According to ft in freenode's #tmux (and as seen in this Super User answer), you can use:
'\ePtmux;\e" STUFF_FOR_THE_TERMINAL_HERE "\e\\'
So, it would be something like:
echo -n $'\ePtmux;\e\e[5n\e\\'

Byobu unable to attach to running tmux

I´m a happy user of byobu, but recently I noted that I cannot attach anymore to open sessions.
With ps aux | grep tmux I can clearly see many tmux processes, but unfortunatly, when I try to attach with:
tmux attach
byobu attach
I get no results but a no session error. Moreover, with byobu-select-session I got a failed to connect to server instead.
There is a commant to connect tmux to a given socket, which I found using
lsof -U | grep '^tmux'. But still no session attached. My session files are in /tmp/user/tmux-1000/default, but I can see some sockets being used.
From ps aux I can see that byobu launches tmux with: tmux -2 -f /usr/share/byobu/profiles/tmuxrc new-session -n - /usr/bin/byobu-shell
Unfortunately, either with byobu -S path or byobu -L socketname I am not able to attach to previously open session, and byobu simply start a new session.
I run into a similar situation caused by accidentally removing the tmux socket in /tmp. The method described here solved the problem for me (either killall -SIGUSR1 tmux or kill -USR1 $PID_FOR_RUNNING_TMUX).

Accidentally used -S when creating my tmux session instead of -s, where is my session?

I created a new session of tmux, intending to use the -s flag to name it, but confused the command with -S which specifies a socket. I know the session is alive, because the processes I started in it are still running. But when I try to list running sessions it does not appear. Where is my session and how do I recover it?
In tmux option -S means socket path (from man tmux):
-S socket-path
Specify a full alternative path to the server socket. If -S is specified, the default
socket directory is not used and any -L flag is ignored.
So you have to find out the parent directory where tmux was run with
-S option and pass this option to tmux to point it to the
alternative socket path. You could for example find PID of the
tmux process:
$ ps aux | grep '[t]mux'
ja 15121 0.0 0.0 20252 2236 pts/6 S+ 00:44 0:00 tmux -S new
And then check this process cwd in /proc like this:
$ ls -l /proc/15121/cwd
lrwxrwxrwx 1 ja users 0 Aug 19 00:52 /proc/15121/cwd -> /home/ja
And then to refer to this tmux session:
$ tmux -S /home/ja/new ls
0: 1 windows (created Sat Aug 19 00:44:46 2017) [212x65] (attached)

How to auto-update SSH agent environment variables when attaching to existing tmux sessions?

I am trying to find a nice way to restore the SSH agent when I reconnect a disconnected tmux session.
The cause seems to be that the SSH agent session changes but the environment variable from the tmux session is not updated.
How can I automate this, before attaching the session itself? Because the session I am attaching to does not always have a bash prompt, so I cannot afford to type something inside it. It has to be something to run before creating or attaching the tmux session.
An example of the code I'm running is at https://gist.github.com/ssbarnea/8646491 -- a small ssh wrapper that is using tmux to create persistem ssh connections. This works quite well, but sometimes the ssh agent stops working so I am no longer able to use it to connect to other hosts.
There's an excellent gist by Martijn Vermaat, which addresses your problem in great depth, although it is intended for screen users, so I'm adjusting it for tmux here.
To summarize:
create ~/.ssh/rc if it doesn't exist yet, and add the following content:
#!/bin/bash
# Fix SSH auth socket location so agent forwarding works with tmux.
if test "$SSH_AUTH_SOCK" ; then
ln -sf $SSH_AUTH_SOCK ~/.ssh/ssh_auth_sock
fi
Make it work in tmux, add this to your ~/.tmux.conf:
# fix ssh agent when tmux is detached
setenv -g SSH_AUTH_SOCK $HOME/.ssh/ssh_auth_sock
Extra work is required if you want to enable X11 forwarding, see the gist.
While tmux updates SSH variables by default, there is no need to
change/add socket path
change the SSH_AUTH_SOCKET variable
I like the solution by Chris Down which I changed to add function
fixssh() {
eval $(tmux show-env \
|sed -n 's/^\(SSH_[^=]*\)=\(.*\)/export \1="\2"/p')
}
into ~/.bashrc. Call fixssh after attaching session or before ssh/scp/rsync.
Newer versions of tmux support -s option for show-env, so only
eval $(tmux show-env -s |grep '^SSH_')
is possible.
Here's what I use for updating SSH_AUTH_SOCK inside a tmux window (based on Hans Ginzel's script):
alias fixssh='eval $(tmux showenv -s SSH_AUTH_SOCK)'
Or for tmux that does not have showenv -s:
alias fixssh='export $(tmux showenv SSH_AUTH_SOCK)'
Here is my solution which includes both approaches, and does not require extra typing when I reconnect to tmux session
alias ssh='[ -n "$TMUX" ] && eval $(tmux showenv -s SSH_AUTH_SOCK); /usr/bin/ssh'
There are lots of good answers here. But there are cases where tmux show-environment doesn't see SSH_AUTH_SOCK. In that case you can use find to locate it explicitly.
export SSH_AUTH_SOCK=$(find /tmp -path '*/ssh-*' -name 'agent*' -uid $(id -u) 2>/dev/null | tail -n1)
That's long and complicated, so I'll break it down...
01 export SSH_AUTH_SOCK=$(
02 find /tmp \
03 -path '*/ssh-*'
04 -name 'agent*'
05 -uid $(id -u)
06 2>/dev/null
07 | tail -n1
08 )
export the SSH_AUTH_SOCK environment variable set to the output of the $() command substitution
find files starting in /tmp
limit results to only those with /ssh- in the path
limit results to only those whose name begins with agent
limit results to only those with a user id matching the current user
silence all (permissions, etc.) errors
take only the last result if there are multiple
You may be able to leave off 6 & 7 if you know that there will only be 1 result and you don't care about stderr garbage.
I use a variation of the previous answers:
eval "export $(tmux show-environment -g SSH_AUTH_SOCK)"
assuming that you did the ssh agent started from the outer environment. Same goes for other environment variables such as DISPLAY.
I prefer to avoid configuring TMUX (etc) and keep everything purely in ~/.ssh/. On the remote system:
Create ~/.ssh/rc:
#!/bin/bash
# Fix SSH auth socket location so agent forwarding works within tmux
if test "$SSH_AUTH_SOCK" ; then
ln -sf $SSH_AUTH_SOCK ~/.ssh/ssh_auth_sock
fi
Add following to ~/.ssh/config so it no longer relies on $SSH_AUTH_SOCK, which goes stale in detached terminals:
Host *
IdentityAgent ~/.ssh/ssh_auth_sock
Known limitations
ssh-add doesn't use ~/.ssh/config and so cannot communicate with ssh-agent. Commands like ssh-add -l produce errors, even though ssh user#host works fine, as does updating git remotes which are accessed via SSH.
I may have worked out a solution that is fully encapsulated in the ~/.tmux.conf configuration file. It is a different approach than modifying the ~/.bash_profile and ~/.ssh/rc.
Solution only using ~/.tmux.conf
Just cut and paste the following code into your ~/.tmux.conf
# ~/.tmux.conf
# SSH agent forwarding
#
# Ensure that SSH-Agent forwarding will work when re-attaching to the tmux
# session from a different SSH connection (after a dropped connection).
# This code will run upon tmux create, tmux attach, or config reload.
#
# If there is an SSH_AUTH_SOCK originally defined:
# 1) Remove all SSH related env var names from update-environment.
# Without this, setenv cannot override variables such as SSH_AUTH_SOCK.
# Verify update-environment with: tmux show-option -g update-environment
# 2) Force-set SSH_AUTH_SOCK to be a known location
# /tmp/ssh_auth_sock_tmux
# 3) Force-create a link of the first found ssh-agent socket at the known location
if-shell '[ -n $SSH_AUTH_SOCK ]' " \
set-option -sg update-environment \"DISPLAY WINDOWID XAUTHORITY\"; \
setenv -g SSH_AUTH_SOCK /tmp/ssh_auth_sock_tmux; \
run-shell \"ln -sf $(find /tmp/ssh-* -type s -readable | head -n 1) /tmp/ssh_auth_sock_tmux\" \
"
Caveat
The above solution along with the other solutions are susceptible to a race condition when initiating multiple connections to the same machine. Consider this:
Client 1 Connect: SSH to machineX, start/attach tmux (writes ssh_auth_sock link)
Client 2 Connect: SSH to machineX, start/attach tmux (overwrites ssh_auth_sock link)
Client 2 Disconnect: Client 1 is left with a stale ssh_auth_sock link, thus breaking ssh-agent
However, this solution is slightly more resilient because it only overwrites the ssh_auth_sock link upon tmux start/attach, instead of upon initialization of a bash shell ~/.bash_profile or ssh connection ~/.ssh/rc
To cover this last race condition, one may add a key binding to reload the tmux configuration with a (Ctrl-b r) key sequence.
# ~/.tmux.conf
# reload config file
bind r source-file ~/.tmux.conf
From within an active tmux session, executing this sequence when the ssh_auth_sock link goes stale will refresh the ssh-agent connection.
In case other fish shell users are wondering how to deal with this when using fish (as well as for my future self!). In my fish_prompt I added a call to the following function:
function _update_tmux_ssh
if set -q TMUX
eval (tmux show-environment SSH_AUTH_SOCK | sed 's/\=/ /' | sed 's/^/set /')
end
end
I suppose that more advanced *nix users would know how to replace sed with something better, but this works (tmux 3.0, fish 3.1).
Following up on #pymkin's answer above, add the following, which worked with tmux 3.2a on macOS 11.5.3:
To ~/.tmux.conf:
# first, unset update-environment[SSH_AUTH_SOCK] (idx 3), to prevent
# the client overriding the global value
set-option -g -u update-environment[3]
# And set the global value to our static symlink'd path:
set-environment -g SSH_AUTH_SOCK $HOME/.ssh/ssh_auth_sock
To ~/.ssh/rc:
#!/bin/sh
# On SSH connection, create stable auth socket path for Tmux usage
if test "$SSH_AUTH_SOCK"; then
ln -sf "$SSH_AUTH_SOCK" ~/.ssh/ssh_auth_sock
fi
What's going on? Tmux has the semi-helpful update-environment variable/feature to pick up certain environment variables when a client connects. I.e. when you do tmux new or tmux attach, it'll update the tmux environment from when you ran those commands. That's nice for new shells or commands you run inside tmux afterwards, but it doesn't help those shells you've started prior to the latest attach. To solve this, you could use some of the other answers here to have existing shells pick up this updated environment, but that's not the route I chose.
Instead, we're setting a static value for SSH_AUTH_SOCK inside tmux, which will be ~/.ssh/ssh_auth_sock. All shells inside tmux would pick that up, and never have to be updated later. Then, we configure ssh so that, upon connection, it updates that static path with a symlink to the latest real socket that ssh knows.
The missing piece from #pymkin's answer is that Tmux will have the session value override the global value, so doing set-environment -g isn't sufficient; it gets squashed whenever you re-attach. You also have to also tell tmux not to update SSH_AUTH_SOCK in the session environment, so that the global value can make it through. That's what the set-option -g -u is about.
After coming across so many suggestions, I finally figured out a solution that enables TMUX update the stale ssh agent after being attached. Basically, both the zshrc files on the local and remote machines need to be modified.
Insert the following codes into the local zshrc, which is based on this reference.
export SSH_AUTH_SOCK=~/.ssh/ssh-agent.$(hostname).sock
ssh-add -l 2>/dev/null >/dev/null
# The error of executing ssh-add command denotes a valid agent does not
# exist.
if [ $? -ge 1 ]; then
# remove the socket if it exists
if [ -S "${SSH_AUTH_SOCK}" ]; then
rm "${SSH_AUTH_SOCK}"
fi
ssh-agent -a "${SSH_AUTH_SOCK}" >/dev/null
# one week life time
ssh-add -t 1W path-to-private-rsa-file
fi
Insert the following code into the remote zshrc, where the tmux session will be attached.
alias fixssh='eval $(tmux showenv -s SSH_AUTH_SOCK)'
Then ssh into the remote machine. The -A option is necessary.
ssh -A username#hostname
Attach the TMUX session. Check the TMUX evironment variables
# run this command in the shell
tmux showenv -s
# or run this command after prefix CTRL+A or CTRL+B
:show-environment
Run fixssh in the previously existed panes to update the ssh agent. If a new pane is created, it will automatically get the new ssh-agent.
Here's another simple Bash solution, using PROMPT_COMMAND to update the SSH_* vars inside tmux before each prompt is generated. The downside to this solution is that it doesn't take effect in existing shells until a new prompt is generated, because PROMPT_COMMAND is only run before creating new prompts.
Just add this to your ~/.bashrc:
update_tmux_env () {
# Only run for shells inside a tmux session.
if [[ -n "$TMUX" ]]; then
eval $(tmux show-env -s | grep '^SSH_')
fi
}
export PROMPT_COMMAND=update_tmux_env
Here's a new fix to an old problem: I think it's simpler than the other fixes and there's no need to make a static socket or mess with the shell prompt or make a separate command you have to remember to run.
I added this code added to my .bashrc file:
if [[ -n $TMUX ]]; then
_fix_ssh_agent_in_tmux () { if [[ ! -S $SSH_AUTH_SOCK ]]; then eval export $(tmux show-env | grep SSH_AUTH_SOCK); fi }
ssh () { _fix_ssh_agent_in_tmux; command ssh $#; }
scp () { _fix_ssh_agent_in_tmux; command scp $#; }
git () { _fix_ssh_agent_in_tmux; command git $#; }
rsync () { _fix_ssh_agent_in_tmux; command rsync $#; }
fi
If the shell is running within tmux, it redefines 'ssh' and its ilk to bash functions which test and fix SSH_AUTH_SOCK before actually running the real commands.
Note that tmux show-env -g also returns a value for SSH_AUTH_SOCK but that one is stale, I assume it's from whenever the tmux server started. The command above queries the current tmux session's environment which seems to be correct.
I'm using tmux 2.6 (ships with with Ubuntu 18.04) and it seems to work well.

Problem with plink output

I'm using plink to run a command on a Unix remote machine.
The command is:
ls -1trd testegrep.txt |tail -1 |xargs tail -f| grep 's';
The way I'm sending this command is by using a file with a set of commands like:
plink.exe -ssh -t -l user -pw pwd tst.url.pt -m commands.out
When I run the command this way the plink does not receive any input. It seems that is waiting for input.
But if I run:
plink.exe -ssh -t -l user -pw pwd tst.url.pt "ls -1trd testegrep.txt |tail -1 |xargs tail -f| grep 's';"
I get the expected result.
I'm not using the plink with a file with the command because I choose so. I'm using a test automation software that allows me to run tests on remote hosts and this is the way the tool works.
Any thoughts on what is going wrong?
I tested the command you provided and it worked without problems.
Maybe the problem is related to:
The server's host key is not cached in the registry.
The path to the file is not correct.
The file is empty.
include server hostkey
most importantly, you need to include the unix profile using the -m paramater
You can include all your commands in the same file where the profile is kept also.
$Output = ((plink.exe -hostkey hostkey -l UNAME -i SSHKEY -P 22 -ssh server -batch -m PROFILE) | ? {$_ -ne ""})

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