[[tmux]]
Tmux Cheat Sheet Attach and detach BY SETH KENLON opensource.com CC BY-SA 4.0Mastodon fosstodon.org/@osdc
Attach and detach $ tmux Start new tmux session $ tmux attach Attach to tmux session running in the background Ctrl+B d Detach from tmux session, leaving it running in the background Ctrl+B & Exit and quit tmux Ctrl+B ? List all key bindings (press Q to exit help screen)
Window Management Ctrl+B C Create new window Ctrl+B N Move to next window Ctrl+B P Move to previous window Ctrl+B L Move to last window Ctrl+B 0-9 Move to window by index number
Ctrl+B ) Move to next session Ctrl+B ( Move to previous session Ctrl+B Ctrl+Z Suspend session
Split window into panes Ctrl+B % Vertical split (panes side by side) Ctrl+B " Horizontal split (one pane below the other) Ctrl+B O Move to other pane Ctrl+B ! Remove all panes but the current one from the window Ctrl+B Q Display window index numbers Ctrl+B Ctrl-Up/Down Resize current pane (due north/south) Ctrl+B Ctrl-Left/Right Resize current pane (due west/east)
Multiplex Ctrl+B : Access tmux command prompt Ctrl+B :setw synchronize-panes on Synchronize panes (to send a command to many hosts)
opensource.com CC BY-SA 4.0
tmux shortcuts & cheatsheet #
start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
tmux new -s myname
attach:
tmux a # (or at, or attach)
attach to named:
tmux a -t myname
list sessions:
tmux ls
kill session:
tmux kill-session -t myname
Kill all the tmux sessions:
tmux ls | grep : | cut -d. -f1 | awk ‘{print substr($1, 0, length($1)-1)}’ | xargs kill
In tmux, hit the prefix ctrl+b (my modified prefix is ctrl+a) and then:
List all shortcuts #
to see all the shortcuts keys in tmux simply use the bind-key ? in my case that would be CTRL-B ?
Sessions #
:new<CR> new session
s list sessions
$ name session
Windows (tabs) #
c create window
w list windows
n next window
p previous window
f find window
, name window
& kill window
Panes (splits) #
% vertical split
" horizontal split
o swap panes
q show pane numbers
x kill pane
+ break pane into window (e.g. to select text by mouse to copy)
- restore pane from window
⍽ space - toggle between layouts
<prefix> q (Show pane numbers, when the numbers show up type the key to goto that pane)
<prefix> { (Move the current pane left)
<prefix> } (Move the current pane right)
<prefix> z toggle pane zoom
Sync Panes #
You can do this by switching to the appropriate window, typing your Tmux prefix (commonly Ctrl-B or Ctrl-A) and then a colon to bring up a Tmux command line, and typing:
:setw synchronize-panes
You can optionally add on or off to specify which state you want; otherwise the option is simply toggled. This option is specific to one window, so it won’t change the way your other sessions or windows operate. When you’re done, toggle it off again by repeating the command. tip source
Resizing Panes #
You can also resize panes if you don’t like the layout defaults. I personally rarely need to do this, though it’s handy to know how. Here is the basic syntax to resize panes:
PREFIX : resize-pane -D (Resizes the current pane down)
PREFIX : resize-pane -U (Resizes the current pane upward)
PREFIX : resize-pane -L (Resizes the current pane left)
PREFIX : resize-pane -R (Resizes the current pane right)
PREFIX : resize-pane -D 20 (Resizes the current pane down by 20 cells)
PREFIX : resize-pane -U 20 (Resizes the current pane upward by 20 cells)
PREFIX : resize-pane -L 20 (Resizes the current pane left by 20 cells)
PREFIX : resize-pane -R 20 (Resizes the current pane right by 20 cells)
PREFIX : resize-pane -t 2 -L 20 (Resizes the pane with the id of 2 left by 20 cells)
Copy mode: #
Pressing PREFIX [ places us in Copy mode. We can then use our movement keys to move our cursor around the screen. By default, the arrow keys work. we set our configuration file to use Vim keys for moving between windows and resizing panes so we wouldn’t have to take our hands off the home row. tmux has a vi mode for working with the buffer as well. To enable it, add this line to .tmux.conf:
setw -g mode-keys vi
With this option set, we can use h, j, k, and l to move around our buffer.
To get out of Copy mode, we just press the ENTER key. Moving around one character at a time isn’t very efficient. Since we enabled vi mode, we can also use some other visible shortcuts to move around the buffer.
For example, we can use “w” to jump to the next word and “b” to jump back one word. And we can use “f”, followed by any character, to jump to that character on the same line, and “F” to jump backwards on the line.
Function vi emacs
Back to indentation ^ M-m
Clear selection Escape C-g
Copy selection Enter M-w
Cursor down j Down
Cursor left h Left
Cursor right l Right
Cursor to bottom line L
Cursor to middle line M M-r
Cursor to top line H M-R
Cursor up k Up
Delete entire line d C-u
Delete to end of line D C-k
End of line $ C-e
Goto line : g
Half page down C-d M-Down
Half page up C-u M-Up
Next page C-f Page down
Next word w M-f
Paste buffer p C-y
Previous page C-b Page up
Previous word b M-b
Quit mode q Escape
Scroll down C-Down or J C-Down
Scroll up C-Up or K C-Up
Search again n n
Search backward ? C-r
Search forward / C-s
Start of line 0 C-a
Start selection Space C-Space
Transpose chars C-t
Misc #
d detach
t big clock
? list shortcuts
: prompt
Configurations Options: #
# Mouse support - set to on if you want to use the mouse
* setw -g mode-mouse off
* set -g mouse-select-pane off
* set -g mouse-resize-pane off
* set -g mouse-select-window off
# Set the default terminal mode to 256color mode
set -g default-terminal "screen-256color"
# enable activity alerts
setw -g monitor-activity on
set -g visual-activity on
# Center the window list
set -g status-justify centre
# Maximize and restore a pane
unbind Up bind Up new-window -d -n tmp \; swap-pane -s tmp.1 \; select-window -t tmp
unbind Down
bind Down last-window \; swap-pane -s tmp.1 \; kill-window -t tmp