I have been using tmux in iTerm2 for a while now but I have not been using the tmux integration that now comes with iTerm2.
I started looking at using the tmux intergration as it allows you to use the shell intergration inside tmux.
The problem i am encountering is that after i do tmux -CC none of the key bindings inside my .tmux.conf work... I cant even get any of the defaults to work. I would really like to use tmux integration but cant unless i can get the key bindings in my .tmux.conf to work.
Some of the bindings that are not working are;
Rebound the prefix key to C-s
bind-key \ split-window -v -c '#{pane_current_path}'
bind-key - split-window -h -c '#{pane_current_path}'
These are just a couple of examples but basically nothing seems to be working...
My .tmux.conf is
# improve colors
set-option -g default-terminal "screen-256color"
# set base Prefix key to ctrl-s
unbind C-b
set -g prefix C-s
bind-key -r C-s send-prefix
# reload the source config
bind-key r source-file ~/.tmux.conf \; display-message "~/.tmux.conf reloaded"
# Smart pane switching with awareness of Vim splits.
# See: https://github.com/christoomey/vim-tmux-navigator
is_vim="ps -o state= -o comm= -t '#{pane_tty}' \
| grep -iqE '^[^TXZ ]+ +(\\S+\\/)?g?(view|n?vim?x?)(diff)?$'"
bind-key -n C-h if-shell "$is_vim" "send-keys C-h" "select-pane -L"
bind-key -n C-j if-shell "$is_vim" "send-keys C-j" "select-pane -D"
bind-key -n C-k if-shell "$is_vim" "send-keys C-k" "select-pane -U"
bind-key -n C-l if-shell "$is_vim" "send-keys C-l" "select-pane -R"
bind-key -n C-\ if-shell "$is_vim" "send-keys C-\\" "select-pane -l"
set-option -g status-keys "emacs"
#change colour of status bar
set-option -g status-bg '#666666'
set-option -g status-fg '#aaaaaa'
# set window split
bind-key - split-window -v -c '#{pane_current_path}'
bind-key \ split-window -h -c '#{pane_current_path}'
# set text in status bar
set -g status-interval 1
set -g status-justify centre # center align window list
set -g status-left-length 50
set -g status-right-length 140
set -g status-left '#[fg=green]#H #[fg=black]• #[fg=green,bright]#(uname -r | cut -c 1-6)#[default]'
set -g status-right '#[fg=green,bg=default,bright]#(tmux-mem-cpu-load -i 1) #[fg=red,dim,bg=default]#(battery -at) #[fg=white,bg=default]%a%l:%M:%S %p#[default] #[fg=blue]%Y-%m-%d'
# Fine adjustment (1 or 2 cursor cells per bump)
bind -n S-Left resize-pane -L 2
bind -n S-Right resize-pane -R 2
bind -n S-Down resize-pane -D 1
bind -n S-Up resize-pane -U 1
# new window opens in same directory
bind c new-window -c "#{pane_current_path}"
# set window numbering to start from 1
set -g base-index 1
set -g renumber-windows on
# allow to take a pane and put it into new window
bind-key b break-pane -d
# allows ctrl-j to open tree of tmux sessions
bind-key C-j choose-tree
# Use vim keybindings in copy mode
setw -g mode-keys vi
# Setup 'v' to begin selection as in Vim
bind-key -t vi-copy v begin-selection
bind-key -t vi-copy y copy-pipe "reattach-to-user-namespace pbcopy"
# Update default binding of `Enter` to also use copy-pipe
unbind -t vi-copy Enter
bind-key -t vi-copy Enter copy-pipe "reattach-to-user-namespace pbcopy"
# History
set -g history-limit 10000
# Mouse mode
set-option -g mouse on
# Rename Tab
set-option -g set-titles on
# Terminal notifier doesnt work with tmux
set -g default-command "which reattach-to-user-namespace > /dev/null && reattach-to-user-namespace -l $SHELL || $SHELL -l"
set-option -sg escape-time 10
Copying my answer at https://stackoverflow.com/a/47171067/4200039 over:
Someone reported a similar bug at iTerm2 Tmux Integration Default Keybindings not working in 2015. The response from the developer George Nachman suggests that keybindings are not supported:
One of the main goals of the tmux integration is that you use iTerm2's
keystrokes, not tmux's. If there's a specific workflow that you can't
accomplish natively, let me know--there is a lot of power in the
ability to remap keys in iTerm2.
This should be flagged as a duplicate of iTerm 2 not honoring key bindings declared in .tmux.conf but I can't flag it until it has an accepted or upvoted answer.
When I type ctrl+b(keep them pressing) button and then hit c button nothing happens. No ctrl+b command combinations work. Only these two commands work:
tmux new-session -s {session-name}
tmux kill-session -t {session-name}
Also I am not able to create new nested session. How to create new session. Are there modes for using tmux like vim. For eg. hit esc for normal/command mode, hit i for insert mode and v for visual mode. I am asking this question because I doubt if I need to press some key before giving key commands like ctrl+b+n. They just get written as normal text in terminal.
Characters are inputted in terminal. See the screenshot below. I am using all my tmux, zsh, vim configurations from here
Please check my tmux.config file
set -g default-command "reattach-to-user-namespace -l zsh"
# tmux display things in 256 colors
set -g default-terminal "screen-256color"
set -g status-utf8 on
# automatically renumber tmux windows
set -g renumber-windows on
# unbind default prefix and set it to Ctrl+a
unbind C-b
set -g prefix C-a
bind C-a send-prefix
# for nested tmux sessions
bind-key a send-prefix
# Activity Monitoring
setw -g monitor-activity off
set -g visual-activity off
# Rather than constraining window size to the maximum size of any client
# connected to the *session*, constrain window size to the maximum size of any
# client connected to *that window*. Much more reasonable.
setw -g aggressive-resize on
# make delay shorter
set -sg escape-time 0
# make window/pane index start with 1
set -g base-index 1
setw -g pane-base-index 1
######################
#### Key Bindings ####
######################
# reload config file
bind r source-file ~/.tmux.conf \; display "Config Reloaded!"
# split window and fix path for tmux 1.9
bind | split-window -h -c "#{pane_current_path}"
bind - split-window -v -c "#{pane_current_path}"
# synchronize all panes in a window
bind y setw synchronize-panes
# pane movement shortcuts
bind h select-pane -L
bind j select-pane -D
bind k select-pane -U
bind l select-pane -R
bind -r C-h select-window -t :-
bind -r C-l select-window -t :+
# Resize pane shortcuts
bind -r H resize-pane -L 10
bind -r J resize-pane -D 10
bind -r K resize-pane -U 10
bind -r L resize-pane -R 10
# enable mouse support for switching panes/windows
# NOTE: This breaks selecting/copying text on OSX
# To select text as expected, hold Option to disable it (iTerm2)
setw -g mode-mouse on
set -g mouse-select-pane on
set -g mouse-resize-pane on
set -g mouse-select-window on
# set vi mode for copy mode
setw -g mode-keys vi
# more settings to make copy-mode more vim-like
unbind [
bind Escape copy-mode
unbind p
bind p paste-buffer
bind -t vi-copy 'v' begin-selection
bind -t vi-copy 'y' copy-selection
# Buffers to/from Mac clipboard, yay tmux book from pragprog
bind C-c run "tmux save-buffer - | reattach-to-user-namespace pbcopy"
bind C-v run "tmux set-buffer $(reattach-to-user-namespace pbpaste); tmux paste-buffer"
You have changed the default escape-sequence in your configuration: from Ctrl-B (tmux default) to Ctrl-A (just like the similar terminal multiplexer screen).
The relevant configuration lines are in the third paragraph:
# unbind default prefix and set it to Ctrl+a
unbind C-b
set -g prefix C-a
bind C-a send-prefix
If you want to use tmux default one just comment out (with a leading #) or remove the lines above in your tmux.conf.
I have also recently came across the same problem in Linux Mint, but this thread fixed it
For the vertical splitting: Instead of (Ctrl+B) + % => (Ctrl+B) + (Ctrl+%).
For the horizontal splitting: Instead of (Ctrl+B) + " => (Ctrl+B) + (Ctrl+")
Also, do not forget to release (Ctrl+B) before pressing the (Ctrl+%) or (Ctrl+").
I would like to have tmux to automatically rename the window with the current working directory (cwd). As it is by default, it names the tab/window as the name of the current process, such as zsh or vim.
When I open a new window in tmux, the name is reattach-to-use-namespace and then it immediately switches to zsh.
I'm on OS X 10.10.2, I use zshell, and I have tmux 1.9a.
To be clear, I don't want the entire path in the name of the window, just the current directory, so for example, I want projectName, not /Users/username/Development/projectName.
If you want to see my current tmux.conf, here it is.
With tmux 2.3+, the b: format modifier shows the "basename" (or "tail") of a path.
set-option -g status-interval 5
set-option -g automatic-rename on
set-option -g automatic-rename-format '#{b:pane_current_path}'
The FORMATS section of man tmux describes other modifiers, such as #{d:} and even #{s/foo/bar/:}.
With tmux 2.2 or older, the basename shell command can be used instead.
set-option -g status-interval 5
set-option -g automatic-rename on
set-option -g automatic-rename-format '#(basename "#{pane_current_path}")'
Expanding on what Josef wrote, you can put the basename of the directory in the status using a shell snippet:
# be sure to see note* below
set -g window-status-format '#I:#(pwd="#{pane_current_path}"; echo ${pwd####*/})#F'
set -g window-status-current-format '#I:#(pwd="#{pane_current_path}"; echo ${pwd####*/})#F'
# status bar updates every 15s by default**, change to 1s here
# (this step is optional - a lower latency might have negative battery/cpu usage impacts)
set -g status-interval 1
*Note that what would be ${pwd##*/} is escaped to ${pwd####*/} since # has special meaning in the format string.
**See here for an example default tmux config.
Show the top N components
Showing just the basename generates too much ambiguity, but full paths are too much clutter, so I settled for:
the/last/path
instead of:
/a/very/long/the/last/path
or just:
path
.tmux.conf
set-window-option -g window-status-current-format '#[fg=white,bold]** #{window_index} #[fg=green]#{pane_current_command} #[fg=blue]#(echo "#{pane_current_path}" | rev | cut -d'/' -f-3 | rev) #[fg=white]**|'
set-window-option -g window-status-format '#[fg=white,bold]#{window_index} #[fg=green]#{pane_current_command} #[fg=blue]#(echo "#{pane_current_path}" | rev | cut -d'/' -f-3 | rev) #[fg=white]|'
Trick taken from: Remove part of path on Unix
If that still does not solve ambiguity, I go for:
bind-key -r w choose-window -F '#{window_index} | #{pane_current_command} | #{host} | #{pane_current_path}'
Tested on Tmux 2.1, Ubuntu 16.04.
To get the best of both worlds - window name is path when you're at a shell prompt, but name of executable when you're running something, try this:
set-option -g status-interval 1
set-option -g automatic-rename on
set-option -g automatic-rename-format "#{?#{==:#{pane_current_command},bash},#{b:pane_current_path},#{pane_current_command}}"
Replace "bash" with whatever shell you're using.
Adding this config to your ~/.tmux.conf file should work:
set-option -g window-status-current-format '#I:#{pane_current_path}#F'
set-option -g window-status-format '#I:#{pane_current_path}#F'
set-option -g status-interval 1
It depends however on your Tmux version. I wasn't able to make it work on 1.9a3 (in Cygwin) - but with Tmux 1.8 on Ubuntu (in Vagrant) it worked fine.
I use the following in ~/.tmux.conf to achieve this (working on OSX, zsh, tmux-2.3):
set -g automatic-rename-format '#{pane_current_path}'
set -g status-interval 5
You can set status-interval to 1 to make it respond faster to changing directories.
According to the changelog (https://raw.githubusercontent.com/tmux/tmux/master/CHANGES) this should work in tmux 1.9 and up.
Using ssh into a CentOS machine with tmux 2.3 the window name doesn't change until I press return in the new panel, not sure why that is happening.
Do something like this in a tmux session for zsh shell:
setopt PROMPT_SUBST
export PS1=$'\ek$(basename $(pwd))\e\\> '
If someone uses bash shell:
export PS1="\033k\$(basename \$(pwd))\033\\> "
You can add these commands in the shell initialization file on the condition the $TERM env variable is set to the value "screen"
I am using zsh hook for that
Add following in ~/.zshrc
precmd () {
if [ -n "$TMUX" ]; then
tmux set-window-option -q window-status-format "#[fg=cyan bg=cyan] | #[fg=white, bg=cyan] #I | ${PWD##/*/} #[fg=cyan, bg=cyan] | "
tmux set-window-option -q window-status-current-format "#[fg=cyan, bg=cyan] | #[fg=white, bg=cyan] #I | ${PWD##/*/} #[fg=cyan, bg=cyan] | "
fi
}
This doesn't strictly answer your question--it doesn't automatically rename an existing tmux session to the current working directory.
Rather, when creating a new session, it names that session after the current working directory.
Here's what I did:
to
~/.aliases
add
alias tm='tmux new -s `basename $PWD`'
Open a new terminal window and type:
tm
This now creates a new tmux session which is named after the current working directory.
Note: This relies on basename which does not exist in Windows.
I am sure that you want use this:
set -g status-left '#{pane_current_path} '
To change what you see in the window list you can specify a format when you define the key-binding for the chose-window function like this:
bind-key '"' choose-window -F "#{session_name} | #{window_name} - #{b:pane_current_path} (#{pane_current_command})"
I recently switched from screen to tmux/powerline/tmuxinator
As shown below, there is a big unused space between the window and status bar.
What could be causing it?
.tmux.conf
set -g prefix C-t
unbind C-b
bind C-t send-prefix
set -g status-keys emacs
setw -g mod-keys emacs
set -g status-position bottom
# status bar
set-option -g status-utf8 on
# status bar
# windows
bind-key C-t last-window
# focus on first window#
select-window -t 0
source ~/.local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/powerline/bindings/tmux/powerline.conf
and tmuxinator
# ~/.tmuxinator/zibann.yml
name: zibann
root: ~/Documents/zibann/
# Optional tmux socket
# socket_name: foo
# Runs before everything. Use it to start daemons etc.
# pre: sudo /etc/rc.d/mysqld start
# Runs in each window and pane before window/pane specific commands. Useful for setting up interpreter versions.
# pre_window: rbenv shell 2.0.0-p247
# Pass command line options to tmux. Useful for specifying a different tmux.conf.
# tmux_options: -f ~/.tmux.mac.conf
# Change the command to call tmux. This can be used by derivatives/wrappers like byobu.
# tmux_command: byobu
windows:
- root: ls -l
- emacs: workon zibann && cd momsite && emacs
- cmd: workon zibann && cd momsite
- ipdb: workon zibann && cd momsite && emacs
- dbshell: workon zibann && cd momsite && python manage.py dbshell
- logs:
layout: main-vertical
panes:
- tail -f momsite/momsite/log/celeryd_error.log
- tail -f momsite/momsite/log/celerybeat_error.log
- tail -f momsite/momsite/log/uwsgi_out.log
- tail -f /var/log/nginx/error.log
- supervisor: workon zibann && cd momsite # && python manage.py supervisor --config-file=momsite/conf/supervisord.conf
C-b, D
and detached one of the clients and volla!
(So there must be one and only one client attached at one time I guess)
I started using tmux recently and things are good except for the fact that tmux prints out my last run command before output, e.g.:
~ $ pwd
pwd/Users/me
You can see that it put "pwd" before the directory there, which is annoying.
My shell(zsh) doesn't do this when I run commands outside of tmux.
show-environment -g doesn't reveal any weird options being passed to zsh or anything: SHELL=/bin/zsh
I read through the manpage and Googled around but I can't find anything.
Thanks for any help!
Figured it out -- needed to change my ~/.tmux.conf to have a different TERM(xterm instead of screen-256color):
# act like vim
setw -g mode-keys vi
bind h select-pane -L
bind j select-pane -D
bind k select-pane -U
bind l select-pane -R
bind-key -r C-h select-window -t :-
bind-key -r C-l select-window -t :+
# act like GNU screen
unbind C-b
set -g prefix C-a
# look good
#set -g default-terminal "screen-256color"
set -g default-terminal "xterm"
set -g status "off"