tmux - Man Page

terminal multiplexer

Examples (TL;DR)

Synopsis

tmux[-2CDlNuVv] [-c shell-command] [-f file] [-L socket-name] [-S socket-path] [-T features] [command [flags]]

Description

tmux is a terminal multiplexer: it enables a number of terminals to be created, accessed, and controlled from a single screen. tmux may be detached from a screen and continue running in the background, then later reattached.

When tmux is started, it creates a new session with a single window and displays it on screen. A status line at the bottom of the screen shows information on the current session and is used to enter interactive commands.

A session is a single collection of pseudo terminals under the management of tmux. Each session has one or more windows linked to it. A window occupies the entire screen and may be split into rectangular panes, each of which is a separate pseudo terminal (the pty(4) manual page documents the technical details of pseudo terminals). Any number of tmux instances may connect to the same session, and any number of windows may be present in the same session. Once all sessions are killed, tmux exits.

Each session is persistent and will survive accidental disconnection (such as ssh(1) connection timeout) or intentional detaching (with the ‘C-b d’ key strokes). tmux may be reattached using:

$ tmux attach

In tmux, a session is displayed on screen by a client and all sessions are managed by a single server. The server and each client are separate processes which communicate through a socket in /tmp.

The options are as follows:

-2

Force tmux to assume the terminal supports 256 colours. This is equivalent to -T 256.

-C

Start in control mode (see the Control Mode section). Given twice (-CC) disables echo.

-c shell-command

Execute shell-command using the default shell. If necessary, the tmux server will be started to retrieve the default-shell option. This option is for compatibility with sh(1) when tmux is used as a login shell.

-D

Do not start the tmux server as a daemon. This also turns the exit-empty option off. With -D, command may not be specified.

-f file

Specify an alternative configuration file. By default, tmux loads the system configuration file from /etc/tmux.conf, if present, then looks for a user configuration file at ~/.tmux.conf or $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/tmux/tmux.conf.

The configuration file is a set of tmux commands which are executed in sequence when the server is first started. tmux loads configuration files once when the server process has started. The source-file command may be used to load a file later.

tmux shows any error messages from commands in configuration files in the first session created, and continues to process the rest of the configuration file.

-L socket-name

tmux stores the server socket in a directory under TMUX_TMPDIR or /tmp if it is unset. The default socket is named default. This option allows a different socket name to be specified, allowing several independent tmux servers to be run. Unlike -S a full path is not necessary: the sockets are all created in a directory tmux-UID under the directory given by TMUX_TMPDIR or in /tmp. The tmux-UID directory is created by tmux and must not be world readable, writable or executable.

If the socket is accidentally removed, the SIGUSR1 signal may be sent to the tmux server process to recreate it (note that this will fail if any parent directories are missing).

-l

Behave as a login shell. This flag currently has no effect and is for compatibility with other shells when using tmux as a login shell.

-N

Do not start the server even if the command would normally do so (for example new-session or start-server).

-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.

-T features

Set terminal features for the client. This is a comma-separated list of features. See the terminal-features option.

-u

Write UTF-8 output to the terminal even if the first environment variable of LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE, or LANG that is set does not contain "UTF-8" or "UTF8".

-V

Report the tmux version.

-v

Request verbose logging. Log messages will be saved into tmux-client-PID.log and tmux-server-PID.log files in the current directory, where PID is the PID of the server or client process. If -v is specified twice, an additional tmux-out-PID.log file is generated with a copy of everything tmux writes to the terminal.

The SIGUSR2 signal may be sent to the tmux server process to toggle logging between on (as if -v was given) and off.

command [flags]

This specifies one of a set of commands used to control tmux, as described in the following sections. If no commands are specified, the new-session command is assumed.

Default Key Bindings

tmux may be controlled from an attached client by using a key combination of a prefix key, ‘C-b’ (Ctrl-b) by default, followed by a command key.

The default command key bindings are:

C-b

Send the prefix key (C-b) through to the application.

C-o

Rotate the panes in the current window forwards.

C-z

Suspend the tmux client.

!

Break the current pane out of the window.

"

Split the current pane into two, top and bottom.

#

List all paste buffers.

$

Rename the current session.

%

Split the current pane into two, left and right.

&

Kill the current window.

'

Prompt for a window index to select.

(

Switch the attached client to the previous session.

)

Switch the attached client to the next session.

,

Rename the current window.

-

Delete the most recently copied buffer of text.

.

Prompt for an index to move the current window.

0 to 9

Select windows 0 to 9.

:

Enter the tmux command prompt.

;

Move to the previously active pane.

=

Choose which buffer to paste interactively from a list.

?

List all key bindings.

D

Choose a client to detach.

L

Switch the attached client back to the last session.

[

Enter copy mode to copy text or view the history.

]

Paste the most recently copied buffer of text.

c

Create a new window.

d

Detach the current client.

f

Prompt to search for text in open windows.

i

Display some information about the current window.

l

Move to the previously selected window.

m

Mark the current pane (see select-pane -m).

M

Clear the marked pane.

n

Change to the next window.

o

Select the next pane in the current window.

p

Change to the previous window.

q

Briefly display pane indexes.

r

Force redraw of the attached client.

s

Select a new session for the attached client interactively.

t

Show the time.

w

Choose the current window interactively.

x

Kill the current pane.

z

Toggle zoom state of the current pane.

{

Swap the current pane with the previous pane.

}

Swap the current pane with the next pane.

~

Show previous messages from tmux, if any.

Page Up

Enter copy mode and scroll one page up.

Up, Down
Left, Right

Change to the pane above, below, to the left, or to the right of the current pane.

M-1 to M-5

Arrange panes in one of the seven preset layouts: even-horizontal, even-vertical, main-horizontal, main-horizontal-mirrored, main-vertical, main-vertical, or tiled.

Space

Arrange the current window in the next preset layout.

M-n

Move to the next window with a bell or activity marker.

M-o

Rotate the panes in the current window backwards.

M-p

Move to the previous window with a bell or activity marker.

C-Up, C-Down
C-Left, C-Right

Resize the current pane in steps of one cell.

M-Up, M-Down
M-Left, M-Right

Resize the current pane in steps of five cells.

Key bindings may be changed with the bind-key and unbind-key commands.

Command Parsing and Execution

tmux supports a large number of commands which can be used to control its behaviour. Each command is named and can accept zero or more flags and arguments. They may be bound to a key with the bind-key command or run from the shell prompt, a shell script, a configuration file or the command prompt. For example, the same set-option command run from the shell prompt, from ~/.tmux.conf and bound to a key may look like:

$ tmux set-option -g status-style bg=cyan

set-option -g status-style bg=cyan

bind-key C set-option -g status-style bg=cyan

Here, the command name is ‘set-option’, ‘-g’ is a flag and ‘status-style’ and ‘bg=cyan’ are arguments.

tmux distinguishes between command parsing and execution. In order to execute a command, tmux needs it to be split up into its name and arguments. This is command parsing. If a command is run from the shell, the shell parses it; from inside tmux or from a configuration file, tmux does. Examples of when tmux parses commands are:

To execute commands, each client has a ‘command queue’. A global command queue not attached to any client is used on startup for configuration files like ~/.tmux.conf. Parsed commands added to the queue are executed in order. Some commands, like if-shell and confirm-before, parse their argument to create a new command which is inserted immediately after themselves. This means that arguments can be parsed twice or more - once when the parent command (such as if-shell) is parsed and again when it parses and executes its command. Commands like if-shell, run-shell and display-panes stop execution of subsequent commands on the queue until something happens - if-shell and run-shell until a shell command finishes and display-panes until a key is pressed. For example, the following commands:

new-session; new-window
if-shell "true" "split-window"
kill-session

Will execute new-session, new-window, if-shell, the shell command true(1), split-window and kill-session in that order.

The Commands section lists the tmux commands and their arguments.

Parsing Syntax

This section describes the syntax of commands parsed by tmux, for example in a configuration file or at the command prompt. Note that when commands are entered into the shell, they are parsed by the shell - see for example ksh(1) or csh(1).

Each command is terminated by a newline or a semicolon (;). Commands separated by semicolons together form a ‘command sequence’ - if a command in the sequence encounters an error, no subsequent commands are executed.

It is recommended that a semicolon used as a command separator should be written as an individual token, for example from sh(1):

$ tmux neww \; splitw

Or:

$ tmux neww ';' splitw

Or from the tmux command prompt:

neww ; splitw

However, a trailing semicolon is also interpreted as a command separator, for example in these sh(1) commands:

$ tmux neww\; splitw

Or:

$ tmux 'neww;' splitw

As in these examples, when running tmux from the shell extra care must be taken to properly quote semicolons:

  1. Semicolons that should be interpreted as a command separator should be escaped according to the shell conventions. For sh(1) this typically means quoted (such as ‘neww ';' splitw’) or escaped (such as ‘neww \\\\; splitw’).

  2. Individual semicolons or trailing semicolons that should be interpreted as arguments should be escaped twice: once according to the shell conventions and a second time for tmux; for example:

    $ tmux neww 'foo\\;' bar
    $ tmux neww foo\\\\; bar
        
  3. Semicolons that are not individual tokens or trailing another token should only be escaped once according to shell conventions; for example:

    $ tmux neww 'foo-;-bar'
    $ tmux neww foo-\\;-bar
        

Comments are marked by the unquoted # character - any remaining text after a comment is ignored until the end of the line.

If the last character of a line is \, the line is joined with the following line (the \ and the newline are completely removed). This is called line continuation and applies both inside and outside quoted strings and in comments, but not inside braces.

Command arguments may be specified as strings surrounded by single (') quotes, double quotes (") or braces ({}). This is required when the argument contains any special character. Single and double quoted strings cannot span multiple lines except with line continuation. Braces can span multiple lines.

Outside of quotes and inside double quotes, these replacements are performed:

Braces are parsed as a configuration file (so conditions such as ‘%if’ are processed) and then converted into a string. They are designed to avoid the need for additional escaping when passing a group of tmux commands as an argument (for example to if-shell). These two examples produce an identical command - note that no escaping is needed when using {}:

if-shell true {
    display -p 'brace-dollar-foo: }$foo'
}

if-shell true "display -p 'brace-dollar-foo: }\$foo'"

Braces may be enclosed inside braces, for example:

bind x if-shell "true" {
    if-shell "true" {
        display "true!"
    }
}

Environment variables may be set by using the syntax ‘name=value’, for example ‘HOME=/home/user’. Variables set during parsing are added to the global environment. A hidden variable may be set with ‘%hidden’, for example:

%hidden MYVAR=42

Hidden variables are not passed to the environment of processes created by tmux. See the Global and Session Environment section.

Commands may be parsed conditionally by surrounding them with ‘%if’, ‘%elif’, ‘%else’ and ‘%endif’. The argument to ‘%if’ and ‘%elif’ is expanded as a format (see Formats) and if it evaluates to false (zero or empty), subsequent text is ignored until the closing ‘%elif’, ‘%else’ or ‘%endif’. For example:

%if "#{==:#{host},myhost}"
set -g status-style bg=red
%elif "#{==:#{host},myotherhost}"
set -g status-style bg=green
%else
set -g status-style bg=blue
%endif

Will change the status line to red if running on ‘myhost’, green if running on ‘myotherhost’, or blue if running on another host. Conditionals may be given on one line, for example:

%if #{==:#{host},myhost} set -g status-style bg=red %endif

Commands

This section describes the commands supported by tmux. Most commands accept the optional -t (and sometimes -s) argument with one of target-client, target-session, target-window, or target-pane. These specify the client, session, window or pane which a command should affect.

target-client should be the name of the client, typically the pty(4) file to which the client is connected, for example either of /dev/ttyp1 or ttyp1 for the client attached to /dev/ttyp1. If no client is specified, tmux attempts to work out the client currently in use; if that fails, an error is reported. Clients may be listed with the list-clients command.

target-session is tried as, in order:

  1. A session ID prefixed with a $.

  2. An exact name of a session (as listed by the list-sessions command).

  3. The start of a session name, for example ‘mysess’ would match a session named ‘mysession’.

  4. An fnmatch(3) pattern which is matched against the session name.

If the session name is prefixed with an ‘=’, only an exact match is accepted (so ‘=mysess’ will only match exactly ‘mysess’, not ‘mysession’).

If a single session is found, it is used as the target session; multiple matches produce an error. If a session is omitted, the current session is used if available; if no current session is available, the most recently used is chosen.

target-window (or src-window or dst-window) specifies a window in the form session:window. session follows the same rules as for target-session, and window is looked for in order as:

  1. A special token, listed below.

  2. A window index, for example ‘mysession:1’ is window 1 in session ‘mysession’.

  3. A window ID, such as @1.

  4. An exact window name, such as ‘mysession:mywindow’.

  5. The start of a window name, such as ‘mysession:mywin’.

  6. As an fnmatch(3) pattern matched against the window name.

Like sessions, a ‘=’ prefix will do an exact match only. An empty window name specifies the next unused index if appropriate (for example the new-window and link-window commands) otherwise the current window in session is chosen.

The following special tokens are available to indicate particular windows. Each has a single-character alternative form.

TokenMeaning
{start}^The lowest-numbered window
{end}$The highest-numbered window
{last}!The last (previously current) window
{next}+The next window by number
{previous}-The previous window by number

target-pane (or src-pane or dst-pane) may be a pane ID or takes a similar form to target-window but with the optional addition of a period followed by a pane index or pane ID, for example: ‘mysession:mywindow.1’. If the pane index is omitted, the currently active pane in the specified window is used. The following special tokens are available for the pane index:

TokenMeaning
{last}!The last (previously active) pane
{next}+The next pane by number
{previous}-The previous pane by number
{top}The top pane
{bottom}The bottom pane
{left}The leftmost pane
{right}The rightmost pane
{top-left}The top-left pane
{top-right}The top-right pane
{bottom-left}The bottom-left pane
{bottom-right}The bottom-right pane
{up-of}The pane above the active pane
{down-of}The pane below the active pane
{left-of}The pane to the left of the active pane
{right-of}The pane to the right of the active pane

The tokens ‘+’ and ‘-’ may be followed by an offset, for example:

select-window -t:+2

In addition, target-session, target-window or target-pane may consist entirely of the token ‘{mouse}’ (alternative form ‘=’) to specify the session, window or pane where the most recent mouse event occurred (see the Mouse Support section) or ‘{marked}’ (alternative form ‘~’) to specify the marked pane (see select-pane -m).

Sessions, window and panes are each numbered with a unique ID; session IDs are prefixed with a ‘$’, windows with a ‘@’, and panes with a ‘%’. These are unique and are unchanged for the life of the session, window or pane in the tmux server. The pane ID is passed to the child process of the pane in the TMUX_PANE environment variable. IDs may be displayed using the ‘session_id’, ‘window_id’, or ‘pane_id’ formats (see the Formats section) and the display-message, list-sessions, list-windows or list-panes commands.

shell-command arguments are sh(1) commands. This may be a single argument passed to the shell, for example:

new-window 'vi ~/.tmux.conf'

Will run:

/bin/sh -c 'vi ~/.tmux.conf'

Additionally, the new-window, new-session, split-window, respawn-window and respawn-pane commands allow shell-command to be given as multiple arguments and executed directly (without ‘sh -c’). This can avoid issues with shell quoting. For example:

$ tmux new-window vi ~/.tmux.conf

Will run vi(1) directly without invoking the shell.

command [argument ...] refers to a tmux command, either passed with the command and arguments separately, for example:

bind-key F1 set-option status off

Or passed as a single string argument in .tmux.conf, for example:

bind-key F1 { set-option status off }

Example tmux commands include:

refresh-client -t/dev/ttyp2

rename-session -tfirst newname

set-option -wt:0 monitor-activity on

new-window ; split-window -d

bind-key R source-file ~/.tmux.conf \; \
	display-message "source-file done"

Or from sh(1):

$ tmux kill-window -t :1

$ tmux new-window \; split-window -d

$ tmux new-session -d 'vi ~/.tmux.conf' \; split-window -d \; attach

Clients and Sessions

The tmux server manages clients, sessions, windows and panes. Clients are attached to sessions to interact with them, either when they are created with the new-session command, or later with the attach-session command. Each session has one or more windows linked into it. Windows may be linked to multiple sessions and are made up of one or more panes, each of which contains a pseudo terminal. Commands for creating, linking and otherwise manipulating windows are covered in the Windows and Panes section.

The following commands are available to manage clients and sessions:

attach-session [-dErx] [-c working-directory] [-f flags] [-t target-session]

(alias: attach)

If run from outside tmux, attach to target-session in the current terminal. target-session must already exist - to create a new session, see the new-session command (with -A to create or attach). If used from inside, switch the currently attached session to target-session. If -d is specified, any other clients attached to the session are detached. If -x is given, send SIGHUP to the parent process of the client as well as detaching the client, typically causing it to exit. -f sets a comma-separated list of client flags. The flags are:

active-pane

the client has an independent active pane

ignore-size

the client does not affect the size of other clients

no-output

the client does not receive pane output in control mode

pause-after=seconds

output is paused once the pane is seconds behind in control mode

read-only

the client is read-only

wait-exit

wait for an empty line input before exiting in control mode

A leading ‘!’ turns a flag off if the client is already attached. -r is an alias for -f read-only,ignore-size. When a client is read-only, only keys bound to the detach-client or switch-client commands have any effect. A client with the active-pane flag allows the active pane to be selected independently of the window's active pane used by clients without the flag. This only affects the cursor position and commands issued from the client; other features such as hooks and styles continue to use the window's active pane.

If no server is started, attach-session will attempt to start it; this will fail unless sessions are created in the configuration file.

The target-session rules for attach-session are slightly adjusted: if tmux needs to select the most recently used session, it will prefer the most recently used unattached session.

-c will set the session working directory (used for new windows) to working-directory.

If -E is used, the update-environment option will not be applied.

detach-client [-aP] [-E shell-command] [-s target-session] [-t target-client]

(alias: detach)

Detach the current client if bound to a key, the client specified with -t, or all clients currently attached to the session specified by -s. The -a option kills all but the client given with -t. If -P is given, send SIGHUP to the parent process of the client, typically causing it to exit. With -E, run shell-command to replace the client.

has-session [-t target-session]

(alias: has)

Report an error and exit with 1 if the specified session does not exist. If it does exist, exit with 0.

kill-server

Kill the tmux server and clients and destroy all sessions.

kill-session [-aC] [-t target-session]

Destroy the given session, closing any windows linked to it and no other sessions, and detaching all clients attached to it. If -a is given, all sessions but the specified one is killed. The -C flag clears alerts (bell, activity, or silence) in all windows linked to the session.

list-clients [-F format] [-f filter] [-t target-session]

(alias: lsc)

List all clients attached to the server. -F specifies the format of each line and -f a filter. Only clients for which the filter is true are shown. See the Formats section. If target-session is specified, list only clients connected to that session.

list-commands [-F format] [command]

(alias: lscm)

List the syntax of command or - if omitted - of all commands supported by tmux.

list-sessions [-F format] [-f filter]

(alias: ls)

List all sessions managed by the server. -F specifies the format of each line and -f a filter. Only sessions for which the filter is true are shown. See the Formats section.

lock-client [-t target-client]

(alias: lockc)

Lock target-client, see the lock-server command.

lock-session [-t target-session]

(alias: locks)

Lock all clients attached to target-session.

new-session [-AdDEPX] [-c start-directory] [-e environment] [-f flags] [-F format] [-n window-name] [-s session-name] [-t group-name] [-x width] [-y height] [shell-command]

(alias: new)

Create a new session with name session-name.

The new session is attached to the current terminal unless -d is given. window-name and shell-command are the name of and shell command to execute in the initial window. With -d, the initial size comes from the global default-size option; -x and -y can be used to specify a different size. ‘-’ uses the size of the current client if any. If -x or -y is given, the default-size option is set for the session. -f sets a comma-separated list of client flags (see attach-session).

If run from a terminal, any termios(4) special characters are saved and used for new windows in the new session.

The -A flag makes new-session behave like attach-session if session-name already exists; if -A is given, -D behaves like -d to attach-session, and -X behaves like -x to attach-session.

If -t is given, it specifies a session group. Sessions in the same group share the same set of windows - new windows are linked to all sessions in the group and any windows closed removed from all sessions. The current and previous window and any session options remain independent and any session in a group may be killed without affecting the others. The group-name argument may be:

  1. the name of an existing group, in which case the new session is added to that group;

  2. the name of an existing session - the new session is added to the same group as that session, creating a new group if necessary;

  3. the name for a new group containing only the new session.

-n and shell-command are invalid if -t is used.

The -P option prints information about the new session after it has been created. By default, it uses the format ‘#{session_name}:’ but a different format may be specified with -F.

If -E is used, the update-environment option will not be applied. -e takes the form ‘VARIABLE=value’ and sets an environment variable for the newly created session; it may be specified multiple times.

refresh-client [-cDLRSU] [-A pane:state] [-B name:what:format] [-C size] [-f flags] [-l [target-pane]] [-r pane:report] [-t target-client] [adjustment]

(alias: refresh)

Refresh the current client if bound to a key, or a single client if one is given with -t. If -S is specified, only update the client's status line.

The -U, -D, -L -R, and -c flags allow the visible portion of a window which is larger than the client to be changed. -U moves the visible part up by adjustment rows and -D down, -L left by adjustment columns and -R right. -c returns to tracking the cursor automatically. If adjustment is omitted, 1 is used. Note that the visible position is a property of the client not of the window, changing the current window in the attached session will reset it.

-C sets the width and height of a control mode client or of a window for a control mode client, size must be one of ‘widthxheight’ or ‘window ID:widthxheight’, for example ‘80x24’ or ‘@0:80x24’. -A allows a control mode client to trigger actions on a pane. The argument is a pane ID (with leading ‘%’), a colon, then one of ‘on’, ‘off’, ‘continue’ or ‘pause’. If ‘off’, tmux will not send output from the pane to the client and if all clients have turned the pane off, will stop reading from the pane. If ‘continue’, tmux will return to sending output to the pane if it was paused (manually or with the pause-after flag). If ‘pause’, tmux will pause the pane. -A may be given multiple times for different panes.

-B sets a subscription to a format for a control mode client. The argument is split into three items by colons: name is a name for the subscription; what is a type of item to subscribe to; format is the format. After a subscription is added, changes to the format are reported with the %subscription-changed notification, at most once a second. If only the name is given, the subscription is removed. what may be empty to check the format only for the attached session, or one of: a pane ID such as ‘%0’; ‘%*’ for all panes in the attached session; a window ID such as ‘@0’; or ‘@*’ for all windows in the attached session.

-f sets a comma-separated list of client flags, see attach-session. -r allows a control mode client to provide information about a pane via a report (such as the response to OSC 10). The argument is a pane ID (with a leading ‘%’), a colon, then a report escape sequence.

-l requests the clipboard from the client using the xterm(1) escape sequence. If target-pane is given, the clipboard is sent (in encoded form), otherwise it is stored in a new paste buffer.

-L, -R, -U and -D move the visible portion of the window left, right, up or down by adjustment, if the window is larger than the client. -c resets so that the position follows the cursor. See the window-size option.

rename-session [-t target-session] new-name

(alias: rename)

Rename the session to new-name.

server-access [-adlrw] [user]

Change the access or read/write permission of user. The user running the tmux server (its owner) and the root user cannot be changed and are always permitted access.

-a and -d are used to give or revoke access for the specified user. If the user is already attached, the -d flag causes their clients to be detached.

-r and -w change the permissions for user: -r makes their clients read-only and -w writable. -l lists current access permissions.

By default, the access list is empty and tmux creates sockets with file system permissions preventing access by any user other than the owner (and root). These permissions must be changed manually. Great care should be taken not to allow access to untrusted users even read-only.

show-messages [-JT] [-t target-client]

(alias: showmsgs)

Show server messages or information. Messages are stored, up to a maximum of the limit set by the message-limit server option. -J and -T show debugging information about jobs and terminals.

source-file [-Fnqv] [-t target-pane] path ...

(alias: source)

Execute commands from one or more files specified by path (which may be glob(7) patterns). If -F is present, then path is expanded as a format. If -q is given, no error will be returned if path does not exist. With -n, the file is parsed but no commands are executed. -v shows the parsed commands and line numbers if possible.

start-server

(alias: start)

Start the tmux server, if not already running, without creating any sessions.

Note that as by default the tmux server will exit with no sessions, this is only useful if a session is created in ~/.tmux.conf, exit-empty is turned off, or another command is run as part of the same command sequence. For example:

$ tmux start \; show -g
    
suspend-client [-t target-client]

(alias: suspendc)

Suspend a client by sending SIGTSTP (tty stop).

switch-client [-ElnprZ] [-c target-client] [-t target-session] [-T key-table]

(alias: switchc)

Switch the current session for client target-client to target-session. As a special case, -t may refer to a pane (a target that contains ‘:’, ‘.’ or ‘%’), to change session, window and pane. In that case, -Z keeps the window zoomed if it was zoomed. If -l, -n or -p is used, the client is moved to the last, next or previous session respectively. -r toggles the client read-only and ignore-size flags (see the attach-session command).

If -E is used, update-environment option will not be applied.

-T sets the client's key table; the next key from the client will be interpreted from key-table. This may be used to configure multiple prefix keys, or to bind commands to sequences of keys. For example, to make typing ‘abc’ run the list-keys command:

bind-key -Ttable2 c list-keys
bind-key -Ttable1 b switch-client -Ttable2
bind-key -Troot   a switch-client -Ttable1
    

Windows and Panes

Each window displayed by tmux may be split into one or more panes; each pane takes up a certain area of the display and is a separate terminal. A window may be split into panes using the split-window command. Windows may be split horizontally (with the -h flag) or vertically. Panes may be resized with the resize-pane command (bound to ‘C-Up’, ‘C-Down’ ‘C-Left’ and ‘C-Right’ by default), the current pane may be changed with the select-pane command and the rotate-window and swap-pane commands may be used to swap panes without changing their position. Panes are numbered beginning from zero in the order they are created.

By default, a tmux pane permits direct access to the terminal contained in the pane. A pane may also be put into one of several modes:

In copy mode an indicator is displayed in the top-right corner of the pane with the current position and the number of lines in the history.

Commands are sent to copy mode using the -X flag to the send-keys command. When a key is pressed, copy mode automatically uses one of two key tables, depending on the mode-keys option: copy-mode for emacs, or copy-mode-vi for vi. Key tables may be viewed with the list-keys command.

The following commands are supported in copy mode:

append-selection

Append the selection to the top paste buffer.

append-selection-and-cancel (vi: A)

Append the selection to the top paste buffer and exit copy mode.

back-to-indentation (vi: ^) (emacs: M-m)

Move the cursor back to the indentation.

begin-selection (vi: Space) (emacs: C-Space)

Begin selection.

bottom-line (vi: L)

Move to the bottom line.

cancel (vi: q) (emacs: Escape)

Exit copy mode.

clear-selection (vi: Escape) (emacs: C-g)

Clear the current selection.

copy-end-of-line [prefix]

Copy from the cursor position to the end of the line. prefix is used to name the new paste buffer.

copy-end-of-line-and-cancel [prefix]

Copy from the cursor position and exit copy mode.

copy-pipe-end-of-line [command] [prefix]

Copy from the cursor position to the end of the line and pipe the text to command. prefix is used to name the new paste buffer.

copy-pipe-end-of-line-and-cancel [command] [prefix]

Same as copy-pipe-end-of-line but also exit copy mode.

copy-line [prefix]

Copy the entire line.

copy-line-and-cancel [prefix]

Copy the entire line and exit copy mode.

copy-pipe-line [command] [prefix]

Copy the entire line and pipe the text to command. prefix is used to name the new paste buffer.

copy-pipe-line-and-cancel [command] [prefix]

Same as copy-pipe-line but also exit copy mode.

copy-pipe [command] [prefix]

Copy the selection, clear it and pipe its text to command. prefix is used to name the new paste buffer.

copy-pipe-no-clear [command] [prefix]

Same as copy-pipe but do not clear the selection.

copy-pipe-and-cancel [command] [prefix]

Same as copy-pipe but also exit copy mode.

copy-selection [prefix]

Copies the current selection.

copy-selection-no-clear [prefix]

Same as copy-selection but do not clear the selection.

copy-selection-and-cancel [prefix] (vi: Enter) (emacs: M-w)

Copy the current selection and exit copy mode.

cursor-down (vi: j) (emacs: Down)

Move the cursor down.

cursor-down-and-cancel

Same as cursor-down but also exit copy mode if reaching the bottom.

cursor-left (vi: h) (emacs: Left)

Move the cursor left.

cursor-right (vi: l) (emacs: Right)

Move the cursor right.

cursor-up (vi: k) (emacs: Up)

Move the cursor up.

end-of-line (vi: $) (emacs: C-e)

Move the cursor to the end of the line.

goto-line line (vi: :) (emacs: g)

Move the cursor to a specific line.

halfpage-down (vi: C-d) (emacs: M-Down)

Scroll down by half a page.

halfpage-down-and-cancel

Same as halfpage-down but also exit copy mode if reaching the bottom.

halfpage-up (vi: C-u) (emacs: M-Up)

Scroll up by half a page.

history-bottom (vi: G) (emacs: M->)

Scroll to the bottom of the history.

history-top (vi: g) (emacs: M-<)

Scroll to the top of the history.

jump-again (vi: ;) (emacs: ;)

Repeat the last jump.

jump-backward to (vi: F) (emacs: F)

Jump backwards to the specified text.

jump-forward to (vi: f) (emacs: f)

Jump forward to the specified text.

jump-reverse (vi: ,) (emacs: ,)

Repeat the last jump in the reverse direction (forward becomes backward and backward becomes forward).

jump-to-backward to (vi: T)

Jump backwards, but one character less, placing the cursor on the character after the target.

jump-to-forward to (vi: t)

Jump forward, but one character less, placing the cursor on the character before the target.

jump-to-mark (vi: M-x) (emacs: M-x)

Jump to the last mark.

middle-line (vi: M) (emacs: M-r)

Move to the middle line.

next-matching-bracket (vi: %) (emacs: M-C-f)

Move to the next matching bracket.

next-paragraph (vi: }) (emacs: M-})

Move to the next paragraph.

next-prompt [-o]

Move to the next prompt.

next-word (vi: w)

Move to the next word.

next-word-end (vi: e) (emacs: M-f)

Move to the end of the next word.

next-space (vi: W)

Same as next-word but use a space alone as the word separator.

next-space-end (vi: E)

Same as next-word-end but use a space alone as the word separator.

other-end (vi: o)

Switch at which end of the selection the cursor sits.

page-down (vi: C-f) (emacs: PageDown)

Scroll down by one page.

page-down-and-cancel

Same as page-down but also exit copy mode if reaching the bottom.

page-up (vi: C-b) (emacs: PageUp)

Scroll up by one page.

pipe [command]

Pipe the selected text to command and clear the selection.

pipe-no-clear [command]

Same as pipe but do not clear the selection.

pipe-and-cancel [command] [prefix]

Same as pipe but also exit copy mode.

previous-matching-bracket (emacs: M-C-b)

Move to the previous matching bracket.

previous-paragraph (vi: {) (emacs: M-{)

Move to the previous paragraph.

previous-prompt [-o]

Move to the previous prompt.

previous-word (vi: b) (emacs: M-b)

Move to the previous word.

previous-space (vi: B)

Same as previous-word but use a space alone as the word separator.

rectangle-on

Turn on rectangle selection mode.

rectangle-off

Turn off rectangle selection mode.

rectangle-toggle (vi: v) (emacs: R)

Toggle rectangle selection mode.

refresh-from-pane (vi: r) (emacs: r)

Refresh the content from the pane.

scroll-bottom

Scroll up until the current line is at the bottom while keeping the cursor on that line.

scroll-down (vi: C-e) (emacs: C-Down)

Scroll down.

scroll-down-and-cancel

Same as scroll-down but also exit copy mode if the cursor reaches the bottom.

scroll-middle (vi: z)

Scroll so that the current line becomes the middle one while keeping the cursor on that line.

scroll-top

Scroll down until the current line is at the top while keeping the cursor on that line.

scroll-up (vi: C-y) (emacs: C-Up)

Scroll up.

search-again (vi: n) (emacs: n)

Repeat the last search.

search-backward text (vi: ?)

Search backwards for the specified text.

search-backward-incremental text (emacs: C-r)

Search backwards incrementally for the specified text. Is expected to be used with the -i flag to the command-prompt command.

search-backward-text text

Search backwards for the specified plain text.

search-forward text (vi: /)

Search forward for the specified text.

search-forward-incremental text (emacs: C-s)

Search forward incrementally for the specified text. Is expected to be used with the -i flag to the command-prompt command.

search-forward-text text

Search forward for the specified plain text.

search-reverse (vi: N) (emacs: N)

Repeat the last search in the reverse direction (forward becomes backward and backward becomes forward).

select-line (vi: V)

Select the current line.

select-word

Select the current word.

set-mark (vi: X) (emacs: X)

Mark the current line.

start-of-line (vi: 0) (emacs: C-a)

Move the cursor to the start of the line.

stop-selection

Stop selecting without clearing the current selection.

toggle-position (vi: P) (emacs: P)

Toggle the visibility of the position indicator in the top right.

top-line (vi: H) (emacs: M-R)

Move to the top line.

The search commands come in several varieties: ‘search-forward’ and ‘search-backward’ search for a regular expression; the ‘-text’ variants search for a plain text string rather than a regular expression; ‘-incremental’ perform an incremental search and expect to be used with the -i flag to the command-prompt command. ‘search-again’ repeats the last search and ‘search-reverse’ does the same but reverses the direction (forward becomes backward and backward becomes forward).

The ‘next-prompt’ and ‘previous-prompt’ move between shell prompts, but require the shell to emit an escape sequence (\033]133;A\033\\) to tell tmux where the prompts are located; if the shell does not do this, these commands will do nothing. The -o flag jumps to the beginning of the command output instead of the shell prompt.

Copy commands may take an optional buffer prefix argument which is used to generate the buffer name (the default is ‘buffer’ so buffers are named ‘buffer0’, ‘buffer1’ and so on). Pipe commands take a command argument which is the command to which the selected text is piped. ‘copy-pipe’ variants also copy the selection. The ‘-and-cancel’ variants of some commands exit copy mode after they have completed (for copy commands) or when the cursor reaches the bottom (for scrolling commands). ‘-no-clear’ variants do not clear the selection.

The next and previous word keys skip over whitespace and treat consecutive runs of either word separators or other letters as words. Word separators can be customized with the word-separators session option. Next word moves to the start of the next word, next word end to the end of the next word and previous word to the start of the previous word. The three next and previous space keys work similarly but use a space alone as the word separator. Setting word-separators to the empty string makes next/previous word equivalent to next/previous space.

The jump commands enable quick movement within a line. For instance, typing ‘f’ followed by ‘/’ will move the cursor to the next ‘/’ character on the current line. A ‘;’ will then jump to the next occurrence.

Commands in copy mode may be prefaced by an optional repeat count. With vi key bindings, a prefix is entered using the number keys; with emacs, the Alt (meta) key and a number begins prefix entry.

The synopsis for the copy-mode command is:

copy-mode [-deHMqu] [-s src-pane] [-t target-pane]

Enter copy mode. -u also scrolls one page up after entering and -d one page down if already in copy mode. -M begins a mouse drag (only valid if bound to a mouse key binding, see Mouse Support). -H hides the position indicator in the top right. -q cancels copy mode and any other modes. -s copies from src-pane instead of target-pane.

-e specifies that scrolling to the bottom of the history (to the visible screen) should exit copy mode. While in copy mode, pressing a key other than those used for scrolling will disable this behaviour. This is intended to allow fast scrolling through a pane's history, for example with:

bind PageUp copy-mode -eu
bind PageDown copy-mode -ed
    

A number of preset arrangements of panes are available, these are called layouts. These may be selected with the select-layout command or cycled with next-layout (bound to ‘Space’ by default); once a layout is chosen, panes within it may be moved and resized as normal.

The following layouts are supported:

even-horizontal

Panes are spread out evenly from left to right across the window.

even-vertical

Panes are spread evenly from top to bottom.

main-horizontal

A large (main) pane is shown at the top of the window and the remaining panes are spread from left to right in the leftover space at the bottom. Use the main-pane-height window option to specify the height of the top pane.

main-horizontal-mirrored

The same as main-horizontal but mirrored so the main pane is at the bottom of the window.

main-vertical

A large (main) pane is shown on the left of the window and the remaining panes are spread from top to bottom in the leftover space on the right. Use the main-pane-width window option to specify the width of the left pane.

main-vertical-mirrored

The same as main-vertical but mirrored so the main pane is on the right of the window.

tiled

Panes are spread out as evenly as possible over the window in both rows and columns.

In addition, select-layout may be used to apply a previously used layout - the list-windows command displays the layout of each window in a form suitable for use with select-layout. For example:

$ tmux list-windows
0: ksh [159x48]
    layout: bb62,159x48,0,0{79x48,0,0,79x48,80,0}
$ tmux select-layout 'bb62,159x48,0,0{79x48,0,0,79x48,80,0}'

tmux automatically adjusts the size of the layout for the current window size. Note that a layout cannot be applied to a window with more panes than that from which the layout was originally defined.

Commands related to windows and panes are as follows:

break-pane [-abdP] [-F format] [-n window-name] [-s src-pane] [-t dst-window]

(alias: breakp)

Break src-pane off from its containing window to make it the only pane in dst-window. With -a or -b, the window is moved to the next index after or before (existing windows are moved if necessary). If -d is given, the new window does not become the current window. The -P option prints information about the new window after it has been created. By default, it uses the format ‘#{session_name}:#{window_index}.#{pane_index}’ but a different format may be specified with -F.

capture-pane [-aAepPqCJN] [-b buffer-name] [-E end-line] [-S start-line] [-t target-pane]

(alias: capturep)

Capture the contents of a pane. If -p is given, the output goes to stdout, otherwise to the buffer specified with -b or a new buffer if omitted. If -a is given, the alternate screen is used, and the history is not accessible. If no alternate screen exists, an error will be returned unless -q is given. If -e is given, the output includes escape sequences for text and background attributes. -C also escapes non-printable characters as octal \xxx. -T ignores trailing positions that do not contain a character. -N preserves trailing spaces at each line's end and -J preserves trailing spaces and joins any wrapped lines; -J implies -T. -P captures only any output that the pane has received that is the beginning of an as-yet incomplete escape sequence.

-S and -E specify the starting and ending line numbers, zero is the first line of the visible pane and negative numbers are lines in the history. ‘-’ to -S is the start of the history and to -E the end of the visible pane. The default is to capture only the visible contents of the pane.

choose-client [-NrZ] [-F format] [-f filter] [-K key-format] [-O sort-order] [-t target-pane] [template]

Put a pane into client mode, allowing a client to be selected interactively from a list. Each client is shown on one line. A shortcut key is shown on the left in brackets allowing for immediate choice, or the list may be navigated and an item chosen or otherwise manipulated using the keys below. -Z zooms the pane. The following keys may be used in client mode:

KeyFunction
EnterChoose selected client
UpSelect previous client
DownSelect next client
C-sSearch by name
nRepeat last search forwards
NRepeat last search backwards
tToggle if client is tagged
TTag no clients
C-tTag all clients
dDetach selected client
DDetach tagged clients
xDetach and HUP selected client
XDetach and HUP tagged clients
zSuspend selected client
ZSuspend tagged clients
fEnter a format to filter items
OChange sort field
rReverse sort order
vToggle preview
qExit mode

After a client is chosen, ‘%%’ is replaced by the client name in template and the result executed as a command. If template is not given, "detach-client -t '%%'" is used.

-O specifies the initial sort field: one of ‘name’, ‘size’, ‘creation’ (time), or ‘activity’ (time). -r reverses the sort order. -f specifies an initial filter: the filter is a format - if it evaluates to zero, the item in the list is not shown, otherwise it is shown. If a filter would lead to an empty list, it is ignored. -F specifies the format for each item in the list and -K a format for each shortcut key; both are evaluated once for each line. -N starts without the preview. This command works only if at least one client is attached.

choose-tree [-GNrswZ] [-F format] [-f filter] [-K key-format] [-O sort-order] [-t target-pane] [template]

Put a pane into tree mode, where a session, window or pane may be chosen interactively from a tree. Each session, window or pane is shown on one line. A shortcut key is shown on the left in brackets allowing for immediate choice, or the tree may be navigated and an item chosen or otherwise manipulated using the keys below. -s starts with sessions collapsed and -w with windows collapsed. -Z zooms the pane. The following keys may be used in tree mode:

KeyFunction
EnterChoose selected item
UpSelect previous item
DownSelect next item
+Expand selected item
-Collapse selected item
M-+Expand all items
M--Collapse all items
xKill selected item
XKill tagged items
<Scroll list of previews left
>Scroll list of previews right
C-sSearch by name
mSet the marked pane
MClear the marked pane
nRepeat last search forwards
NRepeat last search backwards
tToggle if item is tagged
TTag no items
C-tTag all items
:Run a command for each tagged item
fEnter a format to filter items
HJump to the starting pane
OChange sort field
rReverse sort order
vToggle preview
qExit mode

After a session, window or pane is chosen, the first instance of ‘%%’ and all instances of ‘%1’ are replaced by the target in template and the result executed as a command. If template is not given, "switch-client -t '%%'" is used.

-O specifies the initial sort field: one of ‘index’, ‘name’, or ‘time’ (activity). -r reverses the sort order. -f specifies an initial filter: the filter is a format - if it evaluates to zero, the item in the list is not shown, otherwise it is shown. If a filter would lead to an empty list, it is ignored. -F specifies the format for each item in the tree and -K a format for each shortcut key; both are evaluated once for each line. -N starts without the preview. -G includes all sessions in any session groups in the tree rather than only the first. This command works only if at least one client is attached.

customize-mode [-NZ] [-F format] [-f filter] [-t target-pane] [template]

Put a pane into customize mode, where options and key bindings may be browsed and modified from a list. Option values in the list are shown for the active pane in the current window. -Z zooms the pane. The following keys may be used in customize mode:

KeyFunction
EnterSet pane, window, session or global option value
UpSelect previous item
DownSelect next item
+Expand selected item
-Collapse selected item
M-+Expand all items
M--Collapse all items
sSet option value or key attribute
SSet global option value
wSet window option value, if option is for pane and window
dSet an option or key to the default
DSet tagged options and tagged keys to the default
uUnset an option (set to default value if global) or unbind a key
UUnset tagged options and unbind tagged keys
C-sSearch by name
nRepeat last search forwards
NRepeat last search backwards
tToggle if item is tagged
TTag no items
C-tTag all items
fEnter a format to filter items
vToggle option information
qExit mode

-f specifies an initial filter: the filter is a format - if it evaluates to zero, the item in the list is not shown, otherwise it is shown. If a filter would lead to an empty list, it is ignored. -F specifies the format for each item in the tree. -N starts without the option information. This command works only if at least one client is attached.

display-panes [-bN] [-d duration] [-t target-client] [template]

(alias: displayp)

Display a visible indicator of each pane shown by target-client. See the display-panes-colour and display-panes-active-colour session options. The indicator is closed when a key is pressed (unless -N is given) or duration milliseconds have passed. If -d is not given, display-panes-time is used. A duration of zero means the indicator stays until a key is pressed. While the indicator is on screen, a pane may be chosen with the ‘0’ to ‘9’ keys, which will cause template to be executed as a command with ‘%%’ substituted by the pane ID. The default template is "select-pane -t '%%'". With -b, other commands are not blocked from running until the indicator is closed.

find-window [-iCNrTZ] [-t target-pane] match-string

(alias: findw)

Search for a fnmatch(3) pattern or, with -r, regular expression match-string in window names, titles, and visible content (but not history). The flags control matching behavior: -C matches only visible window contents, -N matches only the window name and -T matches only the window title. -i makes the search ignore case. The default is -CNT. -Z zooms the pane.

This command works only if at least one client is attached.

join-pane [-bdfhv] [-l size] [-s src-pane] [-t dst-pane]

(alias: joinp)

Like split-window, but instead of splitting dst-pane and creating a new pane, split it and move src-pane into the space. This can be used to reverse break-pane. The -b option causes src-pane to be joined to left of or above dst-pane.

If -s is omitted and a marked pane is present (see select-pane -m), the marked pane is used rather than the current pane.

kill-pane [-a] [-t target-pane]

(alias: killp)

Destroy the given pane. If no panes remain in the containing window, it is also destroyed. The -a option kills all but the pane given with -t.

kill-window [-a] [-t target-window]

(alias: killw)

Kill the current window or the window at target-window, removing it from any sessions to which it is linked. The -a option kills all but the window given with -t.

last-pane [-deZ] [-t target-window]

(alias: lastp)

Select the last (previously selected) pane. -Z keeps the window zoomed if it was zoomed. -e enables or -d disables input to the pane.

last-window [-t target-session]

(alias: last)

Select the last (previously selected) window. If no target-session is specified, select the last window of the current session.

link-window [-abdk] [-s src-window] [-t dst-window]

(alias: linkw)

Link the window at src-window to the specified dst-window. If dst-window is specified and no such window exists, the src-window is linked there. With -a or -b the window is moved to the next index after or before dst-window (existing windows are moved if necessary). If -k is given and dst-window exists, it is killed, otherwise an error is generated. If -d is given, the newly linked window is not selected.

list-panes [-as] [-F format] [-f filter] [-t target]

(alias: lsp)

If -a is given, target is ignored and all panes on the server are listed. If -s is given, target is a session (or the current session). If neither is given, target is a window (or the current window). -F specifies the format of each line and -f a filter. Only panes for which the filter is true are shown. See the Formats section.

list-windows [-a] [-F format] [-f filter] [-t target-session]

(alias: lsw)

If -a is given, list all windows on the server. Otherwise, list windows in the current session or in target-session. -F specifies the format of each line and -f a filter. Only windows for which the filter is true are shown. See the Formats section.

move-pane [-bdfhv] [-l size] [-s src-pane] [-t dst-pane]

(alias: movep)

Does the same as join-pane.

move-window [-abrdk] [-s src-window] [-t dst-window]

(alias: movew)

This is similar to link-window, except the window at src-window is moved to dst-window. With -r, all windows in the session are renumbered in sequential order, respecting the base-index option.

new-window [-abdkPS] [-c start-directory] [-e environment] [-F format] [-n window-name] [-t target-window] [shell-command]

(alias: neww)

Create a new window. With -a or -b, the new window is inserted at the next index after or before the specified target-window, moving windows up if necessary; otherwise target-window is the new window location.

If -d is given, the session does not make the new window the current window. target-window represents the window to be created; if the target already exists an error is shown, unless the -k flag is used, in which case it is destroyed. If -S is given and a window named window-name already exists, it is selected (unless -d is also given in which case the command does nothing).

shell-command is the command to execute. If shell-command is not specified, the value of the default-command option is used. -c specifies the working directory in which the new window is created.

When the shell command completes, the window closes. See the remain-on-exit option to change this behaviour.

-e takes the form ‘VARIABLE=value’ and sets an environment variable for the newly created window; it may be specified multiple times.

The TERM environment variable must be set to ‘screen’ or ‘tmux’ for all programs running inside tmux. New windows will automatically have ‘TERM=screen’ added to their environment, but care must be taken not to reset this in shell start-up files or by the -e option.

The -P option prints information about the new window after it has been created. By default, it uses the format ‘#{session_name}:#{window_index}’ but a different format may be specified with -F.

next-layout [-t target-window]

(alias: nextl)

Move a window to the next layout and rearrange the panes to fit.

next-window [-a] [-t target-session]

(alias: next)

Move to the next window in the session. If -a is used, move to the next window with an alert.

pipe-pane [-IOo] [-t target-pane] [shell-command]

(alias: pipep)

Pipe output sent by the program in target-pane to a shell command or vice versa. A pane may only be connected to one command at a time, any existing pipe is closed before shell-command is executed. The shell-command string may contain the special character sequences supported by the status-left option. If no shell-command is given, the current pipe (if any) is closed.

-I and -O specify which of the shell-command output streams are connected to the pane: with -I stdout is connected (so anything shell-command prints is written to the pane as if it were typed); with -O stdin is connected (so any output in the pane is piped to shell-command). Both may be used together and if neither are specified, -O is used.

The -o option only opens a new pipe if no previous pipe exists, allowing a pipe to be toggled with a single key, for example:

bind-key C-p pipe-pane -o 'cat >>~/output.#I-#P'
    
previous-layout [-t target-window]

(alias: prevl)

Move to the previous layout in the session.

previous-window [-a] [-t target-session]

(alias: prev)

Move to the previous window in the session. With -a, move to the previous window with an alert.

rename-window [-t target-window] new-name

(alias: renamew)

Rename the current window, or the window at target-window if specified, to new-name.

resize-pane [-DLMRTUZ] [-t target-pane] [-x width] [-y height] [adjustment]

(alias: resizep)

Resize a pane, up, down, left or right by adjustment with -U, -D, -L or -R, or to an absolute size with -x or -y. The adjustment is given in lines or columns (the default is 1); -x and -y may be a given as a number of lines or columns or followed by ‘%’ for a percentage of the window size (for example ‘-x 10%’). With -Z, the active pane is toggled between zoomed (occupying the whole of the window) and unzoomed (its normal position in the layout).

-M begins mouse resizing (only valid if bound to a mouse key binding, see Mouse Support).

-T trims all lines below the current cursor position and moves lines out of the history to replace them.

resize-window [-aADLRU] [-t target-window] [-x width] [-y height] [adjustment]

(alias: resizew)

Resize a window, up, down, left or right by adjustment with -U, -D, -L or -R, or to an absolute size with -x or -y. The adjustment is given in lines or cells (the default is 1). -A sets the size of the largest session containing the window; -a the size of the smallest. This command will automatically set window-size to manual in the window options.

respawn-pane [-k] [-c start-directory] [-e environment] [-t target-pane] [shell-command]

(alias: respawnp)

Reactivate a pane in which the command has exited (see the remain-on-exit window option). If shell-command is not given, the command used when the pane was created or last respawned is executed. The pane must be already inactive, unless -k is given, in which case any existing command is killed. -c specifies a new working directory for the pane. The -e option has the same meaning as for the new-window command.

respawn-window [-k] [-c start-directory] [-e environment] [-t target-window] [shell-command]

(alias: respawnw)

Reactivate a window in which the command has exited (see the remain-on-exit window option). If shell-command is not given, the command used when the window was created or last respawned is executed. The window must be already inactive, unless -k is given, in which case any existing command is killed. -c specifies a new working directory for the window. The -e option has the same meaning as for the new-window command.

rotate-window [-DUZ] [-t target-window]

(alias: rotatew)

Rotate the positions of the panes within a window, either upward (numerically lower) with -U or downward (numerically higher). -Z keeps the window zoomed if it was zoomed.

select-layout [-Enop] [-t target-pane] [layout-name]

(alias: selectl)

Choose a specific layout for a window. If layout-name is not given, the last preset layout used (if any) is reapplied. -n and -p are equivalent to the next-layout and previous-layout commands. -o applies the last set layout if possible (undoes the most recent layout change). -E spreads the current pane and any panes next to it out evenly.

select-pane [-DdeLlMmRUZ] [-T title] [-t target-pane]

(alias: selectp)

Make pane target-pane the active pane in its window. If one of -D, -L, -R, or -U is used, respectively the pane below, to the left, to the right, or above the target pane is used. -Z keeps the window zoomed if it was zoomed. -l is the same as using the last-pane command. -e enables or -d disables input to the pane. -T sets the pane title.

-m and -M are used to set and clear the marked pane. There is one marked pane at a time, setting a new marked pane clears the last. The marked pane is the default target for -s to join-pane, move-pane, swap-pane and swap-window.

select-window [-lnpT] [-t target-window]

(alias: selectw)

Select the window at target-window. -l, -n and -p are equivalent to the last-window, next-window and previous-window commands. If -T is given and the selected window is already the current window, the command behaves like last-window.

split-window [-bdfhIvPZ] [-c start-directory] [-e environment] [-l size] [-t target-pane] [shell-command] [-F format]

(alias: splitw)

Create a new pane by splitting target-pane: -h does a horizontal split and -v a vertical split; if neither is specified, -v is assumed. The -l option specifies the size of the new pane in lines (for vertical split) or in columns (for horizontal split); size may be followed by ‘%’ to specify a percentage of the available space. The -b option causes the new pane to be created to the left of or above target-pane. The -f option creates a new pane spanning the full window height (with -h) or full window width (with -v), instead of splitting the active pane. -Z zooms if the window is not zoomed, or keeps it zoomed if already zoomed.

An empty shell-command ('') will create a pane with no command running in it. Output can be sent to such a pane with the display-message command. The -I flag (if shell-command is not specified or empty) will create an empty pane and forward any output from stdin to it. For example:

$ make 2>&1|tmux splitw -dI &
    

All other options have the same meaning as for the new-window command.

swap-pane [-dDUZ] [-s src-pane] [-t dst-pane]

(alias: swapp)

Swap two panes. If -U is used and no source pane is specified with -s, dst-pane is swapped with the previous pane (before it numerically); -D swaps with the next pane (after it numerically). -d instructs tmux not to change the active pane and -Z keeps the window zoomed if it was zoomed.

If -s is omitted and a marked pane is present (see select-pane -m), the marked pane is used rather than the current pane.

swap-window [-d] [-s src-window] [-t dst-window]

(alias: swapw)

This is similar to link-window, except the source and destination windows are swapped. It is an error if no window exists at src-window. If -d is given, the new window does not become the current window.

If -s is omitted and a marked pane is present (see select-pane -m), the window containing the marked pane is used rather than the current window.

unlink-window [-k] [-t target-window]

(alias: unlinkw)

Unlink target-window. Unless -k is given, a window may be unlinked only if it is linked to multiple sessions - windows may not be linked to no sessions; if -k is specified and the window is linked to only one session, it is unlinked and destroyed.

Key Bindings

tmux allows a command to be bound to most keys, with or without a prefix key. When specifying keys, most represent themselves (for example ‘A’ to ‘Z’). Ctrl keys may be prefixed with ‘C-’ or ‘^’, Shift keys with ‘S-’ and Alt (meta) with ‘M-’. In addition, the following special key names are accepted: Up, Down, Left, Right, BSpace, BTab, DC (Delete), End, Enter, Escape, F1 to F12, Home, IC (Insert), NPage/PageDown/PgDn, PPage/PageUp/PgUp, Space, and Tab. Note that to bind the ‘"’ or ‘'’ keys, quotation marks are necessary, for example:

bind-key '"' split-window
bind-key "'" new-window

A command bound to the Any key will execute for all keys which do not have a more specific binding.

Commands related to key bindings are as follows:

bind-key [-nr] [-N note] [-T key-table] key command [argument ...]

(alias: bind)

Bind key key to command. Keys are bound in a key table. By default (without -T), the key is bound in the prefix key table. This table is used for keys pressed after the prefix key (for example, by default ‘c’ is bound to new-window in the prefix table, so ‘C-b c’ creates a new window). The root table is used for keys pressed without the prefix key: binding ‘c’ to new-window in the root table (not recommended) means a plain ‘c’ will create a new window. -n is an alias for -T root. Keys may also be bound in custom key tables and the switch-client -T command used to switch to them from a key binding. The -r flag indicates this key may repeat, see the repeat-time option. -N attaches a note to the key (shown with list-keys -N).

To view the default bindings and possible commands, see the list-keys command.

list-keys [-1aN] [-P prefix-string -T key-table] [key]

(alias: lsk)

List key bindings. There are two forms: the default lists keys as bind-key commands; -N lists only keys with attached notes and shows only the key and note for each key.

With the default form, all key tables are listed by default. -T lists only keys in key-table.

With the -N form, only keys in the root and prefix key tables are listed by default; -T also lists only keys in key-table. -P specifies a prefix to print before each key and -1 lists only the first matching key. -a lists the command for keys that do not have a note rather than skipping them.

send-keys [-FHKlMRX] [-c target-client] [-N repeat-count] [-t target-pane] key ...

(alias: send)

Send a key or keys to a window or client. Each argument key is the name of the key (such as ‘C-a’ or ‘NPage’) to send; if the string is not recognised as a key, it is sent as a series of characters. If -K is given, keys are sent to target-client, so they are looked up in the client's key table, rather than to target-pane. All arguments are sent sequentially from first to last. If no keys are given and the command is bound to a key, then that key is used.

The -l flag disables key name lookup and processes the keys as literal UTF-8 characters. The -H flag expects each key to be a hexadecimal number for an ASCII character.

The -R flag causes the terminal state to be reset.

-M passes through a mouse event (only valid if bound to a mouse key binding, see Mouse Support).

-X is used to send a command into copy mode - see the Windows and Panes section. -N specifies a repeat count and -F expands formats in arguments where appropriate.

send-prefix [-2] [-t target-pane]

Send the prefix key, or with -2 the secondary prefix key, to a window as if it was pressed.

unbind-key [-anq] [-T key-table] key

(alias: unbind)

Unbind the command bound to key. -n and -T are the same as for bind-key. If -a is present, all key bindings are removed. The -q option prevents errors being returned.

Options

The appearance and behaviour of tmux may be modified by changing the value of various options. There are four types of option: server options, session options, window options, and pane options.

The tmux server has a set of global server options which do not apply to any particular window or session or pane. These are altered with the set-option -s command, or displayed with the show-options -s command.

In addition, each individual session may have a set of session options, and there is a separate set of global session options. Sessions which do not have a particular option configured inherit the value from the global session options. Session options are set or unset with the set-option command and may be listed with the show-options command. The available server and session options are listed under the set-option command.

Similarly, a set of window options is attached to each window and a set of pane options to each pane. Pane options inherit from window options. This means any pane option may be set as a window option to apply the option to all panes in the window without the option set, for example these commands will set the background colour to red for all panes except pane 0:

set -w window-style bg=red
set -pt:.0 window-style bg=blue

There is also a set of global window options from which any unset window or pane options are inherited. Window and pane options are altered with set-option -w and -p commands and displayed with show-option -w and -p.

tmux also supports user options which are prefixed with a ‘@’. User options may have any name, so long as they are prefixed with ‘@’, and be set to any string. For example:

$ tmux set -wq @foo "abc123"
$ tmux show -wv @foo
abc123

Commands which set options are as follows:

set-option [-aFgopqsuUw] [-t target-pane] option value

(alias: set)

Set a pane option with -p, a window option with -w, a server option with -s, otherwise a session option. If the option is not a user option, -w or -s may be unnecessary - tmux will infer the type from the option name, assuming -w for pane options. If -g is given, the global session or window option is set.

-F expands formats in the option value. The -u flag unsets an option, so a session inherits the option from the global options (or with -g, restores a global option to the default). -U unsets an option (like -u) but if the option is a pane option also unsets the option on any panes in the window. value depends on the option and may be a number, a string, or a flag (on, off, or omitted to toggle).

The -o flag prevents setting an option that is already set and the -q flag suppresses errors about unknown or ambiguous options.

With -a, and if the option expects a string or a style, value is appended to the existing setting. For example:

set -g status-left "foo"
set -ag status-left "bar"
    

Will result in ‘foobar’. And:

set -g status-style "bg=red"
set -ag status-style "fg=blue"
    

Will result in a red background and blue foreground. Without -a, the result would be the default background and a blue foreground.

show-options [-AgHpqsvw] [-t target-pane] [option]

(alias: show)

Show the pane options (or a single option if option is provided) with -p, the window options with -w, the server options with -s, otherwise the session options. If the option is not a user option, -w or -s may be unnecessary - tmux will infer the type from the option name, assuming -w for pane options. Global session or window options are listed if -g is used. -v shows only the option value, not the name. If -q is set, no error will be returned if option is unset. -H includes hooks (omitted by default). -A includes options inherited from a parent set of options, such options are marked with an asterisk.

Available server options are:

backspace key

Set the key sent by tmux for backspace.

buffer-limit number

Set the number of buffers; as new buffers are added to the top of the stack, old ones are removed from the bottom if necessary to maintain this maximum length.

command-alias[] name=value

This is an array of custom aliases for commands. If an unknown command matches name, it is replaced with value. For example, after:

set -s command-alias[100] zoom='resize-pane -Z'

Using:

zoom -t:.1

Is equivalent to:

resize-pane -Z -t:.1

Note that aliases are expanded when a command is parsed rather than when it is executed, so binding an alias with bind-key will bind the expanded form.

copy-command shell-command

Give the command to pipe to if the copy-pipe copy mode command is used without arguments.

default-terminal terminal

Set the default terminal for new windows created in this session - the default value of the TERM environment variable. For tmux to work correctly, this must be set to ‘screen’, ‘tmux’ or a derivative of them.

escape-time time

Set the time in milliseconds for which tmux waits after an escape is input to determine if it is part of a function or meta key sequences.

editor shell-command

Set the command used when tmux runs an editor.

exit-empty [on | off]

If enabled (the default), the server will exit when there are no active sessions.

exit-unattached [on | off]

If enabled, the server will exit when there are no attached clients.

extended-keys [on | off | always]

Controls how modified keys (keys pressed together with Control, Meta, or Shift) are reported. This is the equivalent of the modifyOtherKeys xterm(1) resource.

When set to on, the program inside the pane can request one of two modes: mode 1 which changes the sequence for only keys which lack an existing well-known representation; or mode 2 which changes the sequence for all keys. When set to always, modes 1 and 2 can still be requested by applications, but mode 1 will be forced instead of the standard mode. When set to off, this feature is disabled and only standard keys are reported.

tmux will always request extended keys itself if the terminal supports them. See also the extkeys feature for the terminal-features option, the extended-keys-format option and the pane_key_mode variable.

extended-keys-format [csi-u | xterm]

Selects one of the two possible formats for reporting modified keys to applications. This is the equivalent of the formatOtherKeys xterm(1) resource. For example, C-S-a will be reported as ‘^[[27;6;65~’ when set to xterm, and as ‘^[[65;6u’ when set to csi-u.

focus-events [on | off]

When enabled, focus events are requested from the terminal if supported and passed through to applications running in tmux. Attached clients should be detached and attached again after changing this option.

history-file path

If not empty, a file to which tmux will write command prompt history on exit and load it from on start.

message-limit number

Set the number of error or information messages to save in the message log for each client.

prompt-history-limit number

Set the number of history items to save in the history file for each type of command prompt.

set-clipboard [on | external | off]

Attempt to set the terminal clipboard content using the xterm(1) escape sequence, if there is an Ms entry in the terminfo(5) description (see the Terminfo Extensions section).

If set to on, tmux will both accept the escape sequence to create a buffer and attempt to set the terminal clipboard. If set to external, tmux will attempt to set the terminal clipboard but ignore attempts by applications to set tmux buffers. If off, tmux will neither accept the clipboard escape sequence nor attempt to set the clipboard.

Note that this feature needs to be enabled in xterm(1) by setting the resource:

disallowedWindowOps: 20,21,SetXprop
    

Or changing this property from the xterm(1) interactive menu when required.

terminal-features[] string

Set terminal features for terminal types read from terminfo(5). tmux has a set of named terminal features. Each will apply appropriate changes to the terminfo(5) entry in use.

tmux can detect features for a few common terminals; this option can be used to easily tell tmux about features supported by terminals it cannot detect. The terminal-overrides option allows individual terminfo(5) capabilities to be set instead, terminal-features is intended for classes of functionality supported in a standard way but not reported by terminfo(5). Care must be taken to configure this only with features the terminal actually supports.

This is an array option where each entry is a colon-separated string made up of a terminal type pattern (matched using fnmatch(3)) followed by a list of terminal features. The available features are:

256

Supports 256 colours with the SGR escape sequences.

clipboard

Allows setting the system clipboard.

ccolour

Allows setting the cursor colour.

cstyle

Allows setting the cursor style.

extkeys

Supports extended keys.

focus

Supports focus reporting.

hyperlinks

Supports OSC 8 hyperlinks.

ignorefkeys

Ignore function keys from terminfo(5) and use the tmux internal set only.

margins

Supports DECSLRM margins.

mouse

Supports xterm(1) mouse sequences.

osc7

Supports the OSC 7 working directory extension.

overline

Supports the overline SGR attribute.

rectfill

Supports the DECFRA rectangle fill escape sequence.

RGB

Supports RGB colour with the SGR escape sequences.

sixel

Supports SIXEL graphics.

strikethrough

Supports the strikethrough SGR escape sequence.

sync

Supports synchronized updates.

title

Supports xterm(1) title setting.

usstyle

Allows underscore style and colour to be set.

terminal-overrides[] string

Allow terminal descriptions read using terminfo(5) to be overridden. Each entry is a colon-separated string made up of a terminal type pattern (matched using fnmatch(3)) and a set of name=value entries.

For example, to set the ‘clearterminfo(5) entry to ‘\e[H\e[2J’ for all terminal types matching ‘rxvt*’:

rxvt*:clear=\e[H\e[2J

The terminal entry value is passed through strunvis(3) before interpretation.

user-keys[] key

Set list of user-defined key escape sequences. Each item is associated with a key named ‘User0’, ‘User1’, and so on.

For example:

set -s user-keys[0] "\e[5;30012~"
bind User0 resize-pane -L 3
    

Available session options are:

activity-action [any | none | current | other]

Set action on window activity when monitor-activity is on. any means activity in any window linked to a session causes a bell or message (depending on visual-activity) in the current window of that session, none means all activity is ignored (equivalent to monitor-activity being off), current means only activity in windows other than the current window are ignored and other means activity in the current window is ignored but not those in other windows.

assume-paste-time milliseconds

If keys are entered faster than one in milliseconds, they are assumed to have been pasted rather than typed and tmux key bindings are not processed. The default is one millisecond and zero disables.

base-index index

Set the base index from which an unused index should be searched when a new window is created. The default is zero.

bell-action [any | none | current | other]

Set action on a bell in a window when monitor-bell is on. The values are the same as those for activity-action.

default-command shell-command

Set the command used for new windows (if not specified when the window is created) to shell-command, which may be any sh(1) command. The default is an empty string, which instructs tmux to create a login shell using the value of the default-shell option.

default-shell path

Specify the default shell. This is used as the login shell for new windows when the default-command option is set to empty, and must be the full path of the executable. When started tmux tries to set a default value from the first suitable of the SHELL environment variable, the shell returned by getpwuid(3), or /bin/sh. This option should be configured when tmux is used as a login shell.

default-size XxY

Set the default size of new windows when the window-size option is set to manual or when a session is created with new-session -d. The value is the width and height separated by an ‘x’ character. The default is 80x24.

destroy-unattached [off | on | keep-last | keep-group]

If on, destroy the session after the last client has detached. If off (the default), leave the session orphaned. If keep-last, destroy the session only if it is in a group and has other sessions in that group. If keep-group, destroy the session unless it is in a group and is the only session in that group.

detach-on-destroy [off | on | no-detached | previous | next]

If on (the default), the client is detached when the session it is attached to is destroyed. If off, the client is switched to the most recently active of the remaining sessions. If no-detached, the client is detached only if there are no detached sessions; if detached sessions exist, the client is switched to the most recently active. If previous or next, the client is switched to the previous or next session in alphabetical order.

display-panes-active-colour colour

Set the colour used by the display-panes command to show the indicator for the active pane.

display-panes-colour colour

Set the colour used by the display-panes command to show the indicators for inactive panes.

display-panes-time time

Set the time in milliseconds for which the indicators shown by the display-panes command appear.

display-time time

Set the amount of time for which status line messages and other on-screen indicators are displayed. If set to 0, messages and indicators are displayed until a key is pressed. time is in milliseconds.

history-limit lines

Set the maximum number of lines held in window history. This setting applies only to new windows - existing window histories are not resized and retain the limit at the point they were created.

key-table key-table

Set the default key table to key-table instead of root.

lock-after-time number

Lock the session (like the lock-session command) after number seconds of inactivity. The default is not to lock (set to 0).

lock-command shell-command

Command to run when locking each client. The default is to run lock(1) with -np.

menu-style style

Set the menu style. See the Styles section on how to specify style. Attributes are ignored.

menu-selected-style style

Set the selected menu item style. See the Styles section on how to specify style. Attributes are ignored.

menu-border-style style

Set the menu border style. See the Styles section on how to specify style. Attributes are ignored.

menu-border-lines type

Set the type of characters used for drawing menu borders. See popup-border-lines for possible values for border-lines.

message-command-style style

Set status line message command style. This is used for the command prompt with vi(1) keys when in command mode. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

message-line [0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4]

Set line on which status line messages and the command prompt are shown.

message-style style

Set status line message style. This is used for messages and for the command prompt. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

mouse [on | off]

If on, tmux captures the mouse and allows mouse events to be bound as key bindings. See the Mouse Support section for details.

prefix key

Set the key accepted as a prefix key. In addition to the standard keys described under Key Bindings, prefix can be set to the special key ‘None’ to set no prefix.

prefix2 key

Set a secondary key accepted as a prefix key. Like prefix, prefix2 can be set to ‘None’.

prefix-timeout time

Set the time in milliseconds for which tmux waits after prefix is input before dismissing it. Can be set to zero to disable any timeout.

renumber-windows [on | off]

If on, when a window is closed in a session, automatically renumber the other windows in numerical order. This respects the base-index option if it has been set. If off, do not renumber the windows.

repeat-time time

Allow multiple commands to be entered without pressing the prefix-key again in the specified time milliseconds (the default is 500). Whether a key repeats may be set when it is bound using the -r flag to bind-key. Repeat is enabled for the default keys bound to the resize-pane command.

set-titles [on | off]

Attempt to set the client terminal title using the tsl and fsl terminfo(5) entries if they exist. tmux automatically sets these to the \e]0;...\007 sequence if the terminal appears to be xterm(1). This option is off by default.

set-titles-string string

String used to set the client terminal title if set-titles is on. Formats are expanded, see the Formats section.

silence-action [any | none | current | other]

Set action on window silence when monitor-silence is on. The values are the same as those for activity-action.

status [off | on | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5]

Show or hide the status line or specify its size. Using on gives a status line one row in height; 2, 3, 4 or 5 more rows.

status-format[] format

Specify the format to be used for each line of the status line. The default builds the top status line from the various individual status options below.

status-interval interval

Update the status line every interval seconds. By default, updates will occur every 15 seconds. A setting of zero disables redrawing at interval.

status-justify [left | centre | right | absolute-centre]

Set the position of the window list in the status line: left, centre or right. centre puts the window list in the relative centre of the available free space; absolute-centre uses the centre of the entire horizontal space.

status-keys [vi | emacs]

Use vi or emacs-style key bindings in the status line, for example at the command prompt. The default is emacs, unless the VISUAL or EDITOR environment variables are set and contain the string ‘vi’.

status-left string

Display string (by default the session name) to the left of the status line. string will be passed through strftime(3). Also see the Formats and Styles sections.

For details on how the names and titles can be set see the Names and Titles section.

Examples are:

#(sysctl vm.loadavg)
#[fg=yellow,bold]#(apm -l)%%#[default] [#S]
    

The default is ‘[#S] ’.

status-left-length length

Set the maximum length of the left component of the status line. The default is 10.

status-left-style style

Set the style of the left part of the status line. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

status-position [top | bottom]

Set the position of the status line.

status-right string

Display string to the right of the status line. By default, the current pane title in double quotes, the date and the time are shown. As with status-left, string will be passed to strftime(3) and character pairs are replaced.

status-right-length length

Set the maximum length of the right component of the status line. The default is 40.

status-right-style style

Set the style of the right part of the status line. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

status-style style

Set status line style. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

update-environment[] variable

Set list of environment variables to be copied into the session environment when a new session is created or an existing session is attached. Any variables that do not exist in the source environment are set to be removed from the session environment (as if -r was given to the set-environment command).

visual-activity [on | off | both]

If on, display a message instead of sending a bell when activity occurs in a window for which the monitor-activity window option is enabled. If set to both, a bell and a message are produced.

visual-bell [on | off | both]

If on, a message is shown on a bell in a window for which the monitor-bell window option is enabled instead of it being passed through to the terminal (which normally makes a sound). If set to both, a bell and a message are produced. Also see the bell-action option.

visual-silence [on | off | both]

If monitor-silence is enabled, prints a message after the interval has expired on a given window instead of sending a bell. If set to both, a bell and a message are produced.

word-separators string

Sets the session's conception of what characters are considered word separators, for the purposes of the next and previous word commands in copy mode.

Available window options are:

aggressive-resize [on | off]

Aggressively resize the chosen window. This means that tmux will resize the window to the size of the smallest or largest session (see the window-size option) for which it is the current window, rather than the session to which it is attached. The window may resize when the current window is changed on another session; this option is good for full-screen programs which support SIGWINCH and poor for interactive programs such as shells.

automatic-rename [on | off]

Control automatic window renaming. When this setting is enabled, tmux will rename the window automatically using the format specified by automatic-rename-format. This flag is automatically disabled for an individual window when a name is specified at creation with new-window or new-session, or later with rename-window, or with a terminal escape sequence. It may be switched off globally with:

set-option -wg automatic-rename off
    
automatic-rename-format format

The format (see Formats) used when the automatic-rename option is enabled.

clock-mode-colour colour

Set clock colour.

clock-mode-style [12 | 24]

Set clock hour format.

fill-character character

Set the character used to fill areas of the terminal unused by a window.

main-pane-height height
main-pane-width width

Set the width or height of the main (left or top) pane in the main-horizontal, main-horizontal-mirrored, main-vertical, or main-vertical-mirrored layouts. If suffixed by ‘%’, this is a percentage of the window size.

copy-mode-match-style style

Set the style of search matches in copy mode. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

copy-mode-mark-style style

Set the style of the line containing the mark in copy mode. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

copy-mode-current-match-style style

Set the style of the current search match in copy mode. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

mode-keys [vi | emacs]

Use vi or emacs-style key bindings in copy mode. The default is emacs, unless VISUAL or EDITOR contains ‘vi’.

mode-style style

Set window modes style. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

monitor-activity [on | off]

Monitor for activity in the window. Windows with activity are highlighted in the status line.

monitor-bell [on | off]

Monitor for a bell in the window. Windows with a bell are highlighted in the status line.

monitor-silence [interval]

Monitor for silence (no activity) in the window within interval seconds. Windows that have been silent for the interval are highlighted in the status line. An interval of zero disables the monitoring.

other-pane-height height

Set the height of the other panes (not the main pane) in the main-horizontal and main-horizontal-mirrored layouts. If this option is set to 0 (the default), it will have no effect. If both the main-pane-height and other-pane-height options are set, the main pane will grow taller to make the other panes the specified height, but will never shrink to do so. If suffixed by ‘%’, this is a percentage of the window size.

other-pane-width width

Like other-pane-height, but set the width of other panes in the main-vertical and main-vertical-mirrored layouts.

pane-active-border-style style

Set the pane border style for the currently active pane. For how to specify style, see the Styles section. Attributes are ignored.

pane-base-index index

Like base-index, but set the starting index for pane numbers.

pane-border-format format

Set the text shown in pane border status lines.

pane-border-indicators [off | colour | arrows | both]

Indicate active pane by colouring only half of the border in windows with exactly two panes, by displaying arrow markers, by drawing both or neither.

pane-border-lines type

Set the type of characters used for drawing pane borders. type may be one of:

single

single lines using ACS or UTF-8 characters

double

double lines using UTF-8 characters

heavy

heavy lines using UTF-8 characters

simple

simple ASCII characters

number

the pane number

double’ and ‘heavy’ will fall back to standard ACS line drawing when UTF-8 is not supported.

pane-border-status [off | top | bottom]

Turn pane border status lines off or set their position.

pane-border-style style

Set the pane border style for panes aside from the active pane. For how to specify style, see the Styles section. Attributes are ignored.

popup-style style

Set the popup style. See the Styles section on how to specify style. Attributes are ignored.

popup-border-style style

Set the popup border style. See the Styles section on how to specify style. Attributes are ignored.

popup-border-lines type

Set the type of characters used for drawing popup borders. type may be one of:

single

single lines using ACS or UTF-8 characters (default)

rounded

variation of single with rounded corners using UTF-8 characters

double

double lines using UTF-8 characters

heavy

heavy lines using UTF-8 characters

simple

simple ASCII characters

padded

simple ASCII space character

none

no border

double’ and ‘heavy’ will fall back to standard ACS line drawing when UTF-8 is not supported.

window-status-activity-style style

Set status line style for windows with an activity alert. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

window-status-bell-style style

Set status line style for windows with a bell alert. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

window-status-current-format string

Like window-status-format, but is the format used when the window is the current window.

window-status-current-style style

Set status line style for the currently active window. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

window-status-format string

Set the format in which the window is displayed in the status line window list. See the Formats and Styles sections.

window-status-last-style style

Set status line style for the last active window. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

window-status-separator string

Sets the separator drawn between windows in the status line. The default is a single space character.

window-status-style style

Set status line style for a single window. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

window-size largest | smallest | manual | latest

Configure how tmux determines the window size. If set to largest, the size of the largest attached session is used; if smallest, the size of the smallest. If manual, the size of a new window is set from the default-size option and windows are resized automatically. With latest, tmux uses the size of the client that had the most recent activity. See also the resize-window command and the aggressive-resize option.

wrap-search [on | off]

If this option is set, searches will wrap around the end of the pane contents. The default is on.

Available pane options are:

allow-passthrough [on | off | all]

Allow programs in the pane to bypass tmux using a terminal escape sequence (\ePtmux;...\e\\). If set to on, passthrough sequences will be allowed only if the pane is visible. If set to all, they will be allowed even if the pane is invisible.

allow-rename [on | off]

Allow programs in the pane to change the window name using a terminal escape sequence (\ek...\e\\).

allow-set-title [on | off]

Allow programs in the pane to change the title using the terminal escape sequences (\e]2;...\e\\ or \e]0;...\e\\).

alternate-screen [on | off]

This option configures whether programs running inside the pane may use the terminal alternate screen feature, which allows the smcup and rmcup terminfo(5) capabilities. The alternate screen feature preserves the contents of the window when an interactive application starts and restores it on exit, so that any output visible before the application starts reappears unchanged after it exits.

cursor-colour colour

Set the colour of the cursor.

pane-colours[] colour

The default colour palette. Each entry in the array defines the colour tmux uses when the colour with that index is requested. The index may be from zero to 255.

cursor-style style

Set the style of the cursor. Available styles are: default, blinking-block, block, blinking-underline, underline, blinking-bar, bar.

remain-on-exit [on | off | failed]

A pane with this flag set is not destroyed when the program running in it exits. If set to failed, then only when the program exit status is not zero. The pane may be reactivated with the respawn-pane command.

remain-on-exit-format string

Set the text shown at the bottom of exited panes when remain-on-exit is enabled.

scroll-on-clear [on | off]

When the entire screen is cleared and this option is on, scroll the contents of the screen into history before clearing it.

synchronize-panes [on | off]

Duplicate input to all other panes in the same window where this option is also on (only for panes that are not in any mode).

window-active-style style

Set the pane style when it is the active pane. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

window-style style

Set the pane style. For how to specify style, see the Styles section.

Hooks

tmux allows commands to run on various triggers, called hooks. Most tmux commands have an after hook and there are a number of hooks not associated with commands.

Hooks are stored as array options, members of the array are executed in order when the hook is triggered. Like options different hooks may be global or belong to a session, window or pane. Hooks may be configured with the set-hook or set-option commands and displayed with show-hooks or show-options -H. The following two commands are equivalent:

set-hook -g pane-mode-changed[42] 'set -g status-left-style bg=red'
set-option -g pane-mode-changed[42] 'set -g status-left-style bg=red'

Setting a hook without specifying an array index clears the hook and sets the first member of the array.

A command's after hook is run after it completes, except when the command is run as part of a hook itself. They are named with an ‘after-’ prefix. For example, the following command adds a hook to select the even-vertical layout after every split-window:

set-hook -g after-split-window "selectl even-vertical"

If a command fails, the ‘command-error’ hook will be fired. For example, this could be used to write to a log file:

set-hook -g command-error "run-shell \"echo 'a tmux command failed' >>/tmp/log\""

All the notifications listed in the Control Mode section are hooks (without any arguments), except %exit. The following additional hooks are available:

alert-activity

Run when a window has activity. See monitor-activity.

alert-bell

Run when a window has received a bell. See monitor-bell.

alert-silence

Run when a window has been silent. See monitor-silence.

client-active

Run when a client becomes the latest active client of its session.

client-attached

Run when a client is attached.

client-detached

Run when a client is detached

client-focus-in

Run when focus enters a client

client-focus-out

Run when focus exits a client

client-resized

Run when a client is resized.

client-session-changed

Run when a client's attached session is changed.

command-error

Run when a command fails.

pane-died

Run when the program running in a pane exits, but remain-on-exit is on so the pane has not closed.

pane-exited

Run when the program running in a pane exits.

pane-focus-in

Run when the focus enters a pane, if the focus-events option is on.

pane-focus-out

Run when the focus exits a pane, if the focus-events option is on.

pane-set-clipboard

Run when the terminal clipboard is set using the xterm(1) escape sequence.

session-created

Run when a new session created.

session-closed

Run when a session closed.

session-renamed

Run when a session is renamed.

window-linked

Run when a window is linked into a session.

window-renamed

Run when a window is renamed.

window-resized

Run when a window is resized. This may be after the client-resized hook is run.

window-unlinked

Run when a window is unlinked from a session.

Hooks are managed with these commands:

set-hook [-agpRuw] [-t target-pane] hook-name command

Without -R, sets (or with -u unsets) hook hook-name to command. The flags are the same as for set-option.

With -R, run hook-name immediately.

show-hooks [-gpw] [-t target-pane]

Shows hooks. The flags are the same as for show-options.

Mouse Support

If the mouse option is on (the default is off), tmux allows mouse events to be bound as keys. The name of each key is made up of a mouse event (such as ‘MouseUp1’) and a location suffix, one of the following:

Panethe contents of a pane
Bordera pane border
Statusthe status line window list
StatusLeftthe left part of the status line
StatusRightthe right part of the status line
StatusDefaultany other part of the status line

The following mouse events are available:

WheelUpWheelDown
MouseDown1MouseUp1MouseDrag1MouseDragEnd1
MouseDown2MouseUp2MouseDrag2MouseDragEnd2
MouseDown3MouseUp3MouseDrag3MouseDragEnd3
SecondClick1SecondClick2SecondClick3
DoubleClick1DoubleClick2DoubleClick3
TripleClick1TripleClick2TripleClick3

The ‘SecondClick’ events are fired for the second click of a double click, even if there may be a third click which will fire ‘TripleClick’ instead of ‘DoubleClick’.

Each should be suffixed with a location, for example ‘MouseDown1Status’.

The special token ‘{mouse}’ or ‘=’ may be used as target-window or target-pane in commands bound to mouse key bindings. It resolves to the window or pane over which the mouse event took place (for example, the window in the status line over which button 1 was released for a ‘MouseUp1Status’ binding, or the pane over which the wheel was scrolled for a ‘WheelDownPane’ binding).

The send-keys -M flag may be used to forward a mouse event to a pane.

The default key bindings allow the mouse to be used to select and resize panes, to copy text and to change window using the status line. These take effect if the mouse option is turned on.

Formats

Certain commands accept the -F flag with a format argument. This is a string which controls the output format of the command. Format variables are enclosed in ‘#{’ and ‘}’, for example ‘#{session_name}’. The possible variables are listed in the table below, or the name of a tmux option may be used for an option's value. Some variables have a shorter alias such as ‘#S’; ‘##’ is replaced by a single ‘#’, ‘#,’ by a ‘,’ and ‘#}’ by a ‘}’.

Conditionals are available by prefixing with ‘?’ and separating two alternatives with a comma; if the specified variable exists and is not zero, the first alternative is chosen, otherwise the second is used. For example ‘#{?session_attached,attached,not attached}’ will include the string ‘attached’ if the session is attached and the string ‘not attached’ if it is unattached, or ‘#{?automatic-rename,yes,no}’ will include ‘yes’ if automatic-rename is enabled, or ‘no’ if not. Conditionals can be nested arbitrarily. Inside a conditional, ‘,’ and ‘}’ must be escaped as ‘#,’ and ‘#}’, unless they are part of a ‘#{...}’ replacement. For example:

#{?pane_in_mode,#[fg=white#,bg=red],#[fg=red#,bg=white]}#W .

String comparisons may be expressed by prefixing two comma-separated alternatives by ‘==’, ‘!=’, ‘<’, ‘>’, ‘<=’ or ‘>=’ and a colon. For example ‘#{==:#{host},myhost}’ will be replaced by ‘1’ if running on ‘myhost’, otherwise by ‘0’. ‘||’ and ‘&&’ evaluate to true if either or both of two comma-separated alternatives are true, for example ‘#{||:#{pane_in_mode},#{alternate_on}}’.

An ‘m’ specifies an fnmatch(3) or regular expression comparison. The first argument is the pattern and the second the string to compare. An optional argument specifies flags: ‘r’ means the pattern is a regular expression instead of the default fnmatch(3) pattern, and ‘i’ means to ignore case. For example: ‘#{m:*foo*,#{host}}’ or ‘#{m/ri:^A,MYVAR}’. A ‘C’ performs a search for an fnmatch(3) pattern or regular expression in the pane content and evaluates to zero if not found, or a line number if found. Like ‘m’, an ‘r’ flag means search for a regular expression and ‘i’ ignores case. For example: ‘#{C/r:^Start}

Numeric operators may be performed by prefixing two comma-separated alternatives with an ‘e’ and an operator. An optional ‘f’ flag may be given after the operator to use floating point numbers, otherwise integers are used. This may be followed by a number giving the number of decimal places to use for the result. The available operators are: addition ‘+’, subtraction ‘-’, multiplication ‘*’, division ‘/’, modulus ‘m’ or ‘%’ (note that ‘%’ must be escaped as ‘%%’ in formats which are also expanded by strftime(3)) and numeric comparison operators ‘==’, ‘!=’, ‘<’, ‘<=’, ‘>’ and ‘>=’. For example, ‘#{e|*|f|4:5.5,3}’ multiplies 5.5 by 3 for a result with four decimal places and ‘#{e|%%:7,3}’ returns the modulus of 7 and 3. ‘a’ replaces a numeric argument by its ASCII equivalent, so ‘#{a:98}’ results in ‘b’. ‘c’ replaces a tmux colour by its six-digit hexadecimal RGB value.

A limit may be placed on the length of the resultant string by prefixing it by an ‘=’, a number and a colon. Positive numbers count from the start of the string and negative from the end, so ‘#{=5:pane_title}’ will include at most the first five characters of the pane title, or ‘#{=-5:pane_title}’ the last five characters. A suffix or prefix may be given as a second argument - if provided then it is appended or prepended to the string if the length has been trimmed, for example ‘#{=/5/...:pane_title}’ will append ‘...’ if the pane title is more than five characters. Similarly, ‘p’ pads the string to a given width, for example ‘#{p10:pane_title}’ will result in a width of at least 10 characters. A positive width pads on the left, a negative on the right. ‘n’ expands to the length of the variable and ‘w’ to its width when displayed, for example ‘#{n:window_name}’.

Prefixing a time variable with ‘t:’ will convert it to a string, so if ‘#{window_activity}’ gives ‘1445765102’, ‘#{t:window_activity}’ gives ‘Sun Oct 25 09:25:02 2015’. Adding ‘p (’ ‘`t/p`’) will use shorter but less accurate time format for times in the past. A custom format may be given using an ‘f’ suffix (note that ‘%’ must be escaped as ‘%%’ if the format is separately being passed through strftime(3), for example in the status-left option): ‘#{t/f/%%H#:%%M:window_activity}’, see strftime(3).

The ‘b:’ and ‘d:’ prefixes are basename(3) and dirname(3) of the variable respectively. ‘q:’ will escape sh(1) special characters or with a ‘h’ suffix, escape hash characters (so ‘#’ becomes ‘##’). ‘E:’ will expand the format twice, for example ‘#{E:status-left}’ is the result of expanding the content of the status-left option rather than the option itself. ‘T:’ is like ‘E:’ but also expands strftime(3) specifiers. ‘S:’, ‘W:’, ‘P:’ or ‘L:’ will loop over each session, window, pane or client and insert the format once for each. For windows and panes, two comma-separated formats may be given: the second is used for the current window or active pane. For example, to get a list of windows formatted like the status line:

#{W:#{E:window-status-format} ,#{E:window-status-current-format} }

N:’ checks if a window (without any suffix or with the ‘w’ suffix) or a session (with the ‘s’ suffix) name exists, for example ‘`N/w:foo`’ is replaced with 1 if a window named ‘foo’ exists.

A prefix of the form ‘s/foo/bar/:’ will substitute ‘foo’ with ‘bar’ throughout. The first argument may be an extended regular expression and a final argument may be ‘i’ to ignore case, for example ‘s/a(.)/\1x/i:’ would change ‘abABab’ into ‘bxBxbx’. A different delimiter character may also be used, to avoid collisions with literal slashes in the pattern. For example, ‘s|foo/|bar/|:’ will substitute ‘foo/’ with ‘bar/’ throughout.

In addition, the last line of a shell command's output may be inserted using ‘#()’. For example, ‘#(uptime)’ will insert the system's uptime. When constructing formats, tmux does not wait for ‘#()’ commands to finish; instead, the previous result from running the same command is used, or a placeholder if the command has not been run before. If the command hasn't exited, the most recent line of output will be used, but the status line will not be updated more than once a second. Commands are executed using /bin/sh and with the tmux global environment set (see the Global and Session Environment section).

An ‘l’ specifies that a string should be interpreted literally and not expanded. For example ‘#{l:#{?pane_in_mode,yes,no}}’ will be replaced by ‘#{?pane_in_mode,yes,no}’.

The following variables are available, where appropriate:

Variable nameAliasReplaced with
active_window_indexIndex of active window in session
alternate_on1 if pane is in alternate screen
alternate_saved_xSaved cursor X in alternate screen
alternate_saved_ySaved cursor Y in alternate screen
buffer_createdTime buffer created
buffer_nameName of buffer
buffer_sampleSample of start of buffer
buffer_sizeSize of the specified buffer in bytes
client_activityTime client last had activity
client_cell_heightHeight of each client cell in pixels
client_cell_widthWidth of each client cell in pixels
client_control_mode1 if client is in control mode
client_createdTime client created
client_discardedBytes discarded when client behind
client_flagsList of client flags
client_heightHeight of client
client_key_tableCurrent key table
client_last_sessionName of the client's last session
client_nameName of client
client_pidPID of client process
client_prefix1 if prefix key has been pressed
client_readonly1 if client is read-only
client_sessionName of the client's session
client_termfeaturesTerminal features of client, if any
client_termnameTerminal name of client
client_termtypeTerminal type of client, if available
client_ttyPseudo terminal of client
client_uidUID of client process
client_userUser of client process
client_utf81 if client supports UTF-8
client_widthWidth of client
client_writtenBytes written to client
commandName of command in use, if any
command_list_aliasCommand alias if listing commands
command_list_nameCommand name if listing commands
command_list_usageCommand usage if listing commands
config_filesList of configuration files loaded
copy_cursor_hyperlinkHyperlink under cursor in copy mode
copy_cursor_lineLine the cursor is on in copy mode
copy_cursor_wordWord under cursor in copy mode
copy_cursor_xCursor X position in copy mode
copy_cursor_yCursor Y position in copy mode
current_fileCurrent configuration file
cursor_characterCharacter at cursor in pane
cursor_flagPane cursor flag
cursor_xCursor X position in pane
cursor_yCursor Y position in pane
history_bytesNumber of bytes in window history
history_limitMaximum window history lines
history_sizeSize of history in lines
hookName of running hook, if any
hook_clientName of client where hook was run, if any
hook_paneID of pane where hook was run, if any
hook_sessionID of session where hook was run, if any
hook_session_nameName of session where hook was run, if any
hook_windowID of window where hook was run, if any
hook_window_nameName of window where hook was run, if any
host#HHostname of local host
host_short#hHostname of local host (no domain name)
insert_flagPane insert flag
keypad_cursor_flagPane keypad cursor flag
keypad_flagPane keypad flag
last_window_indexIndex of last window in session
lineLine number in the list
mouse_all_flagPane mouse all flag
mouse_any_flagPane mouse any flag
mouse_button_flagPane mouse button flag
mouse_hyperlinkHyperlink under mouse, if any
mouse_lineLine under mouse, if any
mouse_sgr_flagPane mouse SGR flag
mouse_standard_flagPane mouse standard flag
mouse_status_lineStatus line on which mouse event took place
mouse_status_rangeRange type or argument of mouse event on status line
mouse_utf8_flagPane mouse UTF-8 flag
mouse_wordWord under mouse, if any
mouse_xMouse X position, if any
mouse_yMouse Y position, if any
next_session_idUnique session ID for next new session
origin_flagPane origin flag
pane_active1 if active pane
pane_at_bottom1 if pane is at the bottom of window
pane_at_left1 if pane is at the left of window
pane_at_right1 if pane is at the right of window
pane_at_top1 if pane is at the top of window
pane_bgPane background colour
pane_bottomBottom of pane
pane_current_commandCurrent command if available
pane_current_pathCurrent path if available
pane_dead1 if pane is dead
pane_dead_signalExit signal of process in dead pane
pane_dead_statusExit status of process in dead pane
pane_dead_timeExit time of process in dead pane
pane_fgPane foreground colour
pane_format1 if format is for a pane
pane_heightHeight of pane
pane_id#DUnique pane ID
pane_in_mode1 if pane is in a mode
pane_index#PIndex of pane
pane_input_off1 if input to pane is disabled
pane_key_modeExtended key reporting mode in this pane
pane_last1 if last pane
pane_leftLeft of pane
pane_marked1 if this is the marked pane
pane_marked_set1 if a marked pane is set
pane_modeName of pane mode, if any
pane_pathPath of pane (can be set by application)
pane_pidPID of first process in pane
pane_pipe1 if pane is being piped
pane_rightRight of pane
pane_search_stringLast search string in copy mode
pane_start_commandCommand pane started with
pane_start_pathPath pane started with
pane_synchronized1 if pane is synchronized
pane_tabsPane tab positions
pane_title#TTitle of pane (can be set by application)
pane_topTop of pane
pane_ttyPseudo terminal of pane
pane_unseen_changes1 if there were changes in pane while in mode
pane_widthWidth of pane
pidServer PID
rectangle_toggle1 if rectangle selection is activated
scroll_positionScroll position in copy mode
scroll_region_lowerBottom of scroll region in pane
scroll_region_upperTop of scroll region in pane
search_countCount of search results
search_count_partial1 if search count is partial count
search_matchSearch match if any
search_present1 if search started in copy mode
selection_active1 if selection started and changes with the cursor in copy mode
selection_end_xX position of the end of the selection
selection_end_yY position of the end of the selection
selection_present1 if selection started in copy mode
selection_start_xX position of the start of the selection
selection_start_yY position of the start of the selection
server_sessionsNumber of sessions
session_activityTime of session last activity
session_alertsList of window indexes with alerts
session_attachedNumber of clients session is attached to
session_attached_listList of clients session is attached to
session_createdTime session created
session_format1 if format is for a session
session_groupName of session group
session_group_attachedNumber of clients sessions in group are attached to
session_group_attached_listList of clients sessions in group are attached to
session_group_listList of sessions in group
session_group_many_attached1 if multiple clients attached to sessions in group
session_group_sizeSize of session group
session_grouped1 if session in a group
session_idUnique session ID
session_last_attachedTime session last attached
session_many_attached1 if multiple clients attached
session_marked1 if this session contains the marked pane
session_name#SName of session
session_pathWorking directory of session
session_stackWindow indexes in most recent order
session_windowsNumber of windows in session
socket_pathServer socket path
start_timeServer start time
uidServer UID
userServer user
versionServer version
window_active1 if window active
window_active_clientsNumber of clients viewing this window
window_active_clients_listList of clients viewing this window
window_active_sessionsNumber of sessions on which this window is active
window_active_sessions_listList of sessions on which this window is active
window_activityTime of window last activity
window_activity_flag1 if window has activity
window_bell_flag1 if window has bell
window_bigger1 if window is larger than client
window_cell_heightHeight of each cell in pixels
window_cell_widthWidth of each cell in pixels
window_end_flag1 if window has the highest index
window_flags#FWindow flags with # escaped as ##
window_format1 if format is for a window
window_heightHeight of window
window_idUnique window ID
window_index#IIndex of window
window_last_flag1 if window is the last used
window_layoutWindow layout description, ignoring zoomed window panes
window_linked1 if window is linked across sessions
window_linked_sessionsNumber of sessions this window is linked to
window_linked_sessions_listList of sessions this window is linked to
window_marked_flag1 if window contains the marked pane
window_name#WName of window
window_offset_xX offset into window if larger than client
window_offset_yY offset into window if larger than client
window_panesNumber of panes in window
window_raw_flagsWindow flags with nothing escaped
window_silence_flag1 if window has silence alert
window_stack_indexIndex in session most recent stack
window_start_flag1 if window has the lowest index
window_visible_layoutWindow layout description, respecting zoomed window panes
window_widthWidth of window
window_zoomed_flag1 if window is zoomed
wrap_flagPane wrap flag

Styles

tmux offers various options to specify the colour and attributes of aspects of the interface, for example status-style for the status line. In addition, embedded styles may be specified in format options, such as status-left, by enclosing them in ‘#[’ and ‘]’.

A style may be the single term ‘default’ to specify the default style (which may come from an option, for example status-style in the status line) or a space or comma separated list of the following:

fg=colour

Set the foreground colour. The colour is one of: black, red, green, yellow, blue, magenta, cyan, white; if supported the bright variants brightred, brightgreen, brightyellow; colour0 to colour255 from the 256-colour set; default for the default colour; terminal for the terminal default colour; or a hexadecimal RGB string such as ‘#ffffff’.

bg=colour

Set the background colour.

us=colour

Set the underscore colour.

none

Set no attributes (turn off any active attributes).

acs, bright (or bold), dim, underscore, blink, reverse, hidden, italics, overline, strikethrough, double-underscore, curly-underscore, dotted-underscore, dashed-underscore

Set an attribute. Any of the attributes may be prefixed with ‘no’ to unset. acs is the terminal alternate character set.

align=left (or noalign), align=centre, align=right

Align text to the left, centre or right of the available space if appropriate.

fill=colour

Fill the available space with a background colour if appropriate.

list=on, list=focus, list=left-marker, list=right-marker, nolist

Mark the position of the various window list components in the status-format option: list=on marks the start of the list; list=focus is the part of the list that should be kept in focus if the entire list won't fit in the available space (typically the current window); list=left-marker and list=right-marker mark the text to be used to mark that text has been trimmed from the left or right of the list if there is not enough space.

push-default, pop-default

Store the current colours and attributes as the default or reset to the previous default. A push-default affects any subsequent use of the default term until a pop-default. Only one default may be pushed (each push-default replaces the previous saved default).

range=left, range=right, range=session|X, range=window|X, range=pane|X, range=user|X, norange

Mark a range for mouse events in the status-format option. When a mouse event occurs in the range=left or range=right range, the ‘StatusLeft’ and ‘StatusRight’ key bindings are triggered.

range=session|X, range=window|X and range=pane|X are ranges for a session, window or pane. These trigger the ‘Status’ mouse key with the target session, window or pane given by the ‘X’ argument. ‘X’ is a session ID, window index in the current session or a pane ID. For these, the mouse_status_range format variable will be set to ‘session’, ‘window’ or ‘pane’.

range=user|X is a user-defined range; it triggers the ‘Status’ mouse key. The argument ‘X’ will be available in the mouse_status_range format variable. ‘X’ must be at most 15 bytes in length.

Examples are:

fg=yellow bold underscore blink
bg=black,fg=default,noreverse

Names and Titles

tmux distinguishes between names and titles. Windows and sessions have names, which may be used to specify them in targets and are displayed in the status line and various lists: the name is the tmux identifier for a window or session. Only panes have titles. A pane's title is typically set by the program running inside the pane using an escape sequence (like it would set the xterm(1) window title in X(7)). Windows themselves do not have titles - a window's title is the title of its active pane. tmux itself may set the title of the terminal in which the client is running, see the set-titles option.

A session's name is set with the new-session and rename-session commands. A window's name is set with one of:

  1. A command argument (such as -n for new-window or new-session).

  2. An escape sequence (if the allow-rename option is turned on):

    $ printf '\033kWINDOW_NAME\033\\'
        
  3. Automatic renaming, which sets the name to the active command in the window's active pane. See the automatic-rename option.

When a pane is first created, its title is the hostname. A pane's title can be set via the title setting escape sequence, for example:

$ printf '\033]2;My Title\033\\'

It can also be modified with the select-pane -T command.

Global and Session Environment

When the server is started, tmux copies the environment into the global environment; in addition, each session has a session environment. When a window is created, the session and global environments are merged. If a variable exists in both, the value from the session environment is used. The result is the initial environment passed to the new process.

The update-environment session option may be used to update the session environment from the client when a new session is created or an old reattached. tmux also initialises the TMUX variable with some internal information to allow commands to be executed from inside, and the TERM variable with the correct terminal setting of ‘screen’.

Variables in both session and global environments may be marked as hidden. Hidden variables are not passed into the environment of new processes and instead can only be used by tmux itself (for example in formats, see the Formats section).

Commands to alter and view the environment are:

set-environment [-Fhgru] [-t target-session] name [value]

(alias: setenv)

Set or unset an environment variable. If -g is used, the change is made in the global environment; otherwise, it is applied to the session environment for target-session. If -F is present, then value is expanded as a format. The -u flag unsets a variable. -r indicates the variable is to be removed from the environment before starting a new process. -h marks the variable as hidden.

show-environment [-hgs] [-t target-session] [variable]

(alias: showenv)

Display the environment for target-session or the global environment with -g. If variable is omitted, all variables are shown. Variables removed from the environment are prefixed with ‘-’. If -s is used, the output is formatted as a set of Bourne shell commands. -h shows hidden variables (omitted by default).

Status Line

tmux includes an optional status line which is displayed in the bottom line of each terminal.

By default, the status line is enabled and one line in height (it may be disabled or made multiple lines with the status session option) and contains, from left-to-right: the name of the current session in square brackets; the window list; the title of the active pane in double quotes; and the time and date.

Each line of the status line is configured with the status-format option. The default is made of three parts: configurable left and right sections (which may contain dynamic content such as the time or output from a shell command, see the status-left, status-left-length, status-right, and status-right-length options below), and a central window list. By default, the window list shows the index, name and (if any) flag of the windows present in the current session in ascending numerical order. It may be customised with the window-status-format and window-status-current-format options. The flag is one of the following symbols appended to the window name:

SymbolMeaning
*Denotes the current window.
-Marks the last window (previously selected).
#Window activity is monitored and activity has been detected.
!Window bells are monitored and a bell has occurred in the window.
~The window has been silent for the monitor-silence interval.
MThe window contains the marked pane.
ZThe window's active pane is zoomed.

The # symbol relates to the monitor-activity window option. The window name is printed in inverted colours if an alert (bell, activity or silence) is present.

The colour and attributes of the status line may be configured, the entire status line using the status-style session option and individual windows using the window-status-style window option.

The status line is automatically refreshed at interval if it has changed, the interval may be controlled with the status-interval session option.

Commands related to the status line are as follows:

clear-prompt-history [-T prompt-type]

(alias: clearphist)

Clear status prompt history for prompt type prompt-type. If -T is omitted, then clear history for all types. See command-prompt for possible values for prompt-type.

command-prompt [-1bFikN] [-I inputs] [-p prompts] [-t target-client] [-T prompt-type] [template]

Open the command prompt in a client. This may be used from inside tmux to execute commands interactively.

If template is specified, it is used as the command. With -F, template is expanded as a format.

If present, -I is a comma-separated list of the initial text for each prompt. If -p is given, prompts is a comma-separated list of prompts which are displayed in order; otherwise a single prompt is displayed, constructed from template if it is present, or ‘:’ if not.

Before the command is executed, the first occurrence of the string ‘%%’ and all occurrences of ‘%1’ are replaced by the response to the first prompt, all ‘%2’ are replaced with the response to the second prompt, and so on for further prompts. Up to nine prompt responses may be replaced (‘%1’ to ‘%9’). ‘%%%’ is like ‘%%’ but any quotation marks are escaped.

-1 makes the prompt only accept one key press, in this case the resulting input is a single character. -k is like -1 but the key press is translated to a key name. -N makes the prompt only accept numeric key presses. -i executes the command every time the prompt input changes instead of when the user exits the command prompt.

-T tells tmux the prompt type. This affects what completions are offered when Tab is pressed. Available types are: ‘command’, ‘search’, ‘target’ and ‘window-target’.

The following keys have a special meaning in the command prompt, depending on the value of the status-keys option:

Functionviemacs
Cancel command promptqEscape
Delete from cursor to start of wordC-w
Delete entire commanddC-u
Delete from cursor to endDC-k
Execute commandEnterEnter
Get next command from historyDown
Get previous command from historyUp
Insert top paste bufferpC-y
Look for completionsTabTab
Move cursor lefthLeft
Move cursor rightlRight
Move cursor to end$C-e
Move cursor to next wordwM-f
Move cursor to previous wordbM-b
Move cursor to start0C-a
Transpose charactersC-t

With -b, the prompt is shown in the background and the invoking client does not exit until it is dismissed.

confirm-before [-by] [-c confirm-key] [-p prompt] [-t target-client] command

(alias: confirm)

Ask for confirmation before executing command. If -p is given, prompt is the prompt to display; otherwise a prompt is constructed from command. It may contain the special character sequences supported by the status-left option. With -b, the prompt is shown in the background and the invoking client does not exit until it is dismissed. -y changes the default behaviour (if Enter alone is pressed) of the prompt to run the command. -c changes the confirmation key to confirm-key; the default is ‘y’.

display-menu [-OM] [-b border-lines] [-c target-client] [-C starting-choice] [-H selected-style] [-s style] [-S border-style] [-t target-pane] [-T title] [-x position] [-y position] name key command [argument ...]

(alias: menu)

Display a menu on target-client. target-pane gives the target for any commands run from the menu.

A menu is passed as a series of arguments: first the menu item name, second the key shortcut (or empty for none) and third the command to run when the menu item is chosen. The name and command are formats, see the Formats and Styles sections. If the name begins with a hyphen (-), then the item is disabled (shown dim) and may not be chosen. The name may be empty for a separator line, in which case both the key and command should be omitted.

-b sets the type of characters used for drawing menu borders. See popup-border-lines for possible values for border-lines.

-H sets the style for the selected menu item (see Styles).

-s sets the style for the menu and -S sets the style for the menu border (see Styles).

-T is a format for the menu title (see Formats).

-C sets the menu item selected by default, if the menu is not bound to a mouse key binding.

-x and -y give the position of the menu. Both may be a row or column number, or one of the following special values:

ValueFlagMeaning
CBothThe centre of the terminal
R-xThe right side of the terminal
PBothThe bottom left of the pane
MBothThe mouse position
WBothThe window position on the status line
S-yThe line above or below the status line

Or a format, which is expanded including the following additional variables:

Variable nameReplaced with
popup_centre_xCentered in the client
popup_centre_yCentered in the client
popup_heightHeight of menu or popup
popup_mouse_bottomBottom of at the mouse
popup_mouse_centre_xHorizontal centre at the mouse
popup_mouse_centre_yVertical centre at the mouse
popup_mouse_topTop at the mouse
popup_mouse_xMouse X position
popup_mouse_yMouse Y position
popup_pane_bottomBottom of the pane
popup_pane_leftLeft of the pane
popup_pane_rightRight of the pane
popup_pane_topTop of the pane
popup_status_line_yAbove or below the status line
popup_widthWidth of menu or popup
popup_window_status_line_xAt the window position in status line
popup_window_status_line_yAt the status line showing the window

Each menu consists of items followed by a key shortcut shown in brackets. If the menu is too large to fit on the terminal, it is not displayed. Pressing the key shortcut chooses the corresponding item. If the mouse is enabled and the menu is opened from a mouse key binding, releasing the mouse button with an item selected chooses that item and releasing the mouse button without an item selected closes the menu. -O changes this behaviour so that the menu does not close when the mouse button is released without an item selected the menu is not closed and a mouse button must be clicked to choose an item.

-M tells tmux the menu should handle mouse events; by default only menus opened from mouse key bindings do so.

The following keys are available in menus:

KeyFunction
EnterChoose selected item
UpSelect previous item
DownSelect next item
qExit menu
display-message [-aIlNpv] [-c target-client] [-d delay] [-t target-pane] [message]

(alias: display)

Display a message. If -p is given, the output is printed to stdout, otherwise it is displayed in the target-client status line for up to delay milliseconds. If delay is not given, the display-time option is used; a delay of zero waits for a key press. ‘N’ ignores key presses and closes only after the delay expires. If -l is given, message is printed unchanged. Otherwise, the format of message is described in the Formats section; information is taken from target-pane if -t is given, otherwise the active pane.

-v prints verbose logging as the format is parsed and -a lists the format variables and their values.

-I forwards any input read from stdin to the empty pane given by target-pane.

display-popup [-BCE] [-b border-lines] [-c target-client] [-d start-directory] [-e environment] [-h height] [-s border-style] [-S style] [-t target-pane] [-T title] [-w width] [-x position] [-y position] [shell-command]

(alias: popup)

Display a popup running shell-command on target-client. A popup is a rectangular box drawn over the top of any panes. Panes are not updated while a popup is present.

-E closes the popup automatically when shell-command exits. Two -E closes the popup only if shell-command exited with success.

-x and -y give the position of the popup, they have the same meaning as for the display-menu command. -w and -h give the width and height - both may be a percentage (followed by ‘%’). If omitted, half of the terminal size is used.

-B does not surround the popup by a border.

-b sets the type of characters used for drawing popup borders. When -B is specified, the -b option is ignored. See popup-border-lines for possible values for border-lines.

-s sets the style for the popup and -S sets the style for the popup border (see Styles).

-e takes the form ‘VARIABLE=value’ and sets an environment variable for the popup; it may be specified multiple times.

-T is a format for the popup title (see Formats).

The -C flag closes any popup on the client.

show-prompt-history [-T prompt-type]

(alias: showphist)

Display status prompt history for prompt type prompt-type. If -T is omitted, then show history for all types. See command-prompt for possible values for prompt-type.

Buffers

tmux maintains a set of named paste buffers. Each buffer may be either explicitly or automatically named. Explicitly named buffers are named when created with the set-buffer or load-buffer commands, or by renaming an automatically named buffer with set-buffer -n. Automatically named buffers are given a name such as ‘buffer0001’, ‘buffer0002’ and so on. When the buffer-limit option is reached, the oldest automatically named buffer is deleted. Explicitly named buffers are not subject to buffer-limit and may be deleted with the delete-buffer command.

Buffers may be added using copy-mode or the set-buffer and load-buffer commands, and pasted into a window using the paste-buffer command. If a buffer command is used and no buffer is specified, the most recently added automatically named buffer is assumed.

A configurable history buffer is also maintained for each window. By default, up to 2000 lines are kept; this can be altered with the history-limit option (see the set-option command above).

The buffer commands are as follows:

choose-buffer [-NZr] [-F format] [-f filter] [-K key-format] [-O sort-order] [-t target-pane] [template]

Put a pane into buffer mode, where a buffer may be chosen interactively from a list. Each buffer is shown on one line. A shortcut key is shown on the left in brackets allowing for immediate choice, or the list may be navigated and an item chosen or otherwise manipulated using the keys below. -Z zooms the pane. The following keys may be used in buffer mode:

KeyFunction
EnterPaste selected buffer
UpSelect previous buffer
DownSelect next buffer
C-sSearch by name or content
nRepeat last search forwards
NRepeat last search backwards
tToggle if buffer is tagged
TTag no buffers
C-tTag all buffers
pPaste selected buffer
PPaste tagged buffers
dDelete selected buffer
DDelete tagged buffers
eOpen the buffer in an editor
fEnter a format to filter items
OChange sort field
rReverse sort order
vToggle preview
qExit mode

After a buffer is chosen, ‘%%’ is replaced by the buffer name in template and the result executed as a command. If template is not given, "paste-buffer -p -b '%%'" is used.

-O specifies the initial sort field: one of ‘time’ (creation), ‘name’ or ‘size’. -r reverses the sort order. -f specifies an initial filter: the filter is a format - if it evaluates to zero, the item in the list is not shown, otherwise it is shown. If a filter would lead to an empty list, it is ignored. -F specifies the format for each item in the list and -K a format for each shortcut key; both are evaluated once for each line. -N starts without the preview. This command works only if at least one client is attached.

clear-history [-H] [-t target-pane]

(alias: clearhist)

Remove and free the history for the specified pane. -H also removes all hyperlinks.

delete-buffer [-b buffer-name]

(alias: deleteb)

Delete the buffer named buffer-name, or the most recently added automatically named buffer if not specified.

list-buffers [-F format] [-f filter]

(alias: lsb)

List the global buffers. -F specifies the format of each line and -f a filter. Only buffers for which the filter is true are shown. See the Formats section.

load-buffer [-w] [-b buffer-name] [-t target-client] path

(alias: loadb)

Load the contents of the specified paste buffer from path. If -w is given, the buffer is also sent to the clipboard for target-client using the xterm(1) escape sequence, if possible. If path is ‘-’, the contents are read from stdin.

paste-buffer [-dpr] [-b buffer-name] [-s separator] [-t target-pane]

(alias: pasteb)

Insert the contents of a paste buffer into the specified pane. If not specified, paste into the current one. With -d, also delete the paste buffer. When output, any linefeed (LF) characters in the paste buffer are replaced with a separator, by default carriage return (CR). A custom separator may be specified using the -s flag. The -r flag means to do no replacement (equivalent to a separator of LF). If -p is specified, paste bracket control codes are inserted around the buffer if the application has requested bracketed paste mode.

save-buffer [-a] [-b buffer-name] path

(alias: saveb)

Save the contents of the specified paste buffer to path. The -a option appends to rather than overwriting the file. If path is ‘-’, the contents are read from stdin.

set-buffer [-aw] [-b buffer-name] [-t target-client] [-n new-buffer-name] data

(alias: setb)

Set the contents of the specified buffer to data. If -w is given, the buffer is also sent to the clipboard for target-client using the xterm(1) escape sequence, if possible. The -a option appends to rather than overwriting the buffer. The -n option renames the buffer to new-buffer-name.

show-buffer [-b buffer-name]

(alias: showb)

Display the contents of the specified buffer.

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous commands are as follows:

clock-mode [-t target-pane]

Display a large clock.

if-shell [-bF] [-t target-pane] shell-command command [command]

(alias: if)

Execute the first command if shell-command (run with /bin/sh) returns success or the second command otherwise. Before being executed, shell-command is expanded using the rules specified in the Formats section, including those relevant to target-pane. With -b, shell-command is run in the background.

If -F is given, shell-command is not executed but considered success if neither empty nor zero (after formats are expanded).

lock-server

(alias: lock)

Lock each client individually by running the command specified by the lock-command option.

run-shell [-bC] [-c start-directory] [-d delay] [-t target-pane] [shell-command]

(alias: run)

Execute shell-command using /bin/sh or (with -C) a tmux command in the background without creating a window. Before being executed, shell-command is expanded using the rules specified in the Formats section. With -b, the command is run in the background. -d waits for delay seconds before starting the command. If -c is given, the current working directory is set to start-directory. If -C is not given, any output to stdout is displayed in view mode (in the pane specified by -t or the current pane if omitted) after the command finishes. If the command fails, the exit status is also displayed.

wait-for [-L | -S | -U] channel

(alias: wait)

When used without options, prevents the client from exiting until woken using wait-for -S with the same channel. When -L is used, the channel is locked and any clients that try to lock the same channel are made to wait until the channel is unlocked with wait-for -U.

Exit Messages

When a tmux client detaches, it prints a message. This may be one of:

detached (from session ...)

The client was detached normally.

detached and SIGHUP

The client was detached and its parent sent the SIGHUP signal (for example with detach-client -P).

lost tty

The client's tty(4) or pty(4) was unexpectedly destroyed.

terminated

The client was killed with SIGTERM.

too far behind

The client is in control mode and became unable to keep up with the data from tmux.

exited

The server exited when it had no sessions.

server exited

The server exited when it received SIGTERM.

server exited unexpectedly

The server crashed or otherwise exited without telling the client the reason.

Terminfo Extensions

tmux understands some unofficial extensions to terminfo(5). It is not normally necessary to set these manually, instead the terminal-features option should be used.

AX

An existing extension that tells tmux the terminal supports default colours.

Bidi

Tell tmux that the terminal supports the VTE bidirectional text extensions.

Cs, Cr

Set the cursor colour. The first takes a single string argument and is used to set the colour; the second takes no arguments and restores the default cursor colour. If set, a sequence such as this may be used to change the cursor colour from inside tmux:

$ printf '\033]12;red\033\\'
    

The colour is an X(7) colour, see XParseColor(3).

Cmg, Clmg, Dsmg, Enmg

Set, clear, disable or enable DECSLRM margins. These are set automatically if the terminal reports it is VT420 compatible.

Dsbp, Enbp

Disable and enable bracketed paste. These are set automatically if the XT capability is present.

Dseks, Eneks

Disable and enable extended keys.

Dsfcs, Enfcs

Disable and enable focus reporting. These are set automatically if the XT capability is present.

Hls

Set or clear a hyperlink annotation.

Nobr

Tell tmux that the terminal does not use bright colors for bold display.

Rect

Tell tmux that the terminal supports rectangle operations.

Smol

Enable the overline attribute.

Smulx

Set a styled underscore. The single parameter is one of: 0 for no underscore, 1 for normal underscore, 2 for double underscore, 3 for curly underscore, 4 for dotted underscore and 5 for dashed underscore.

Setulc, Setulc1, ol

Set the underscore colour or reset to the default. Setulc is for RGB colours and Setulc1 for ANSI or 256 colours. The Setulc argument is (red * 65536) + (green * 256) + blue where each is between 0 and 255.

Ss, Se

Set or reset the cursor style. If set, a sequence such as this may be used to change the cursor to an underline:

$ printf '\033[4 q'
    

If Se is not set, Ss with argument 0 will be used to reset the cursor style instead.

Swd

Set the opening sequence for the working directory notification. The sequence is terminated using the standard fsl capability.

Sxl

Indicates that the terminal supports SIXEL.

Sync

Start (parameter is 1) or end (parameter is 2) a synchronized update.

Tc

Indicate that the terminal supports the ‘direct colour’ RGB escape sequence (for example, \e[38;2;255;255;255m).

If supported, this is used for the initialize colour escape sequence (which may be enabled by adding the ‘initc’ and ‘ccc’ capabilities to the tmux terminfo(5) entry).

This is equivalent to the RGB terminfo(5) capability.

Ms

Store the current buffer in the host terminal's selection (clipboard). See the set-clipboard option above and the xterm(1) man page.

XT

This is an existing extension capability that tmux uses to mean that the terminal supports the xterm(1) title set sequences and to automatically set some of the capabilities above.

Control Mode

tmux offers a textual interface called control mode. This allows applications to communicate with tmux using a simple text-only protocol.

In control mode, a client sends tmux commands or command sequences terminated by newlines on standard input. Each command will produce one block of output on standard output. An output block consists of a %begin line followed by the output (which may be empty). The output block ends with a %end or %error. %begin and matching %end or %error have three arguments: an integer time (as seconds from epoch), command number and flags (currently not used). For example:

%begin 1363006971 2 1
0: ksh* (1 panes) [80x24] [layout b25f,80x24,0,0,2] @2 (active)
%end 1363006971 2 1

The refresh-client -C command may be used to set the size of a client in control mode.

In control mode, tmux outputs notifications. A notification will never occur inside an output block.

The following notifications are defined:

%client-detached client

The client has detached.

%client-session-changed client session-id name

The client is now attached to the session with ID session-id, which is named name.

%config-error error

An error has happened in a configuration file.

%continue pane-id

The pane has been continued after being paused (if the pause-after flag is set, see refresh-client -A).

%exit [reason]

The tmux client is exiting immediately, either because it is not attached to any session or an error occurred. If present, reason describes why the client exited.

%extended-output pane-id age ... : value

New form of %output sent when the pause-after flag is set. age is the time in milliseconds for which tmux had buffered the output before it was sent. Any subsequent arguments up until a single ‘:’ are for future use and should be ignored.

%layout-change window-id window-layout window-visible-layout window-flags

The layout of a window with ID window-id changed. The new layout is window-layout. The window's visible layout is window-visible-layout and the window flags are window-flags.

%message message

A message sent with the display-message command.

%output pane-id value

A window pane produced output. value escapes non-printable characters and backslash as octal \xxx.

%pane-mode-changed pane-id

The pane with ID pane-id has changed mode.

%paste-buffer-changed name

Paste buffer name has been changed.

%paste-buffer-deleted name

Paste buffer name has been deleted.

%pause pane-id

The pane has been paused (if the pause-after flag is set).

%session-changed session-id name

The client is now attached to the session with ID session-id, which is named name.

%session-renamed name

The current session was renamed to name.

%session-window-changed session-id window-id

The session with ID session-id changed its active window to the window with ID window-id.

%sessions-changed

A session was created or destroyed.

%subscription-changed name session-id window-id window-index pane-id ... : value

The value of the format associated with subscription name has changed to value. See refresh-client -B. Any arguments after pane-id up until a single ‘:’ are for future use and should be ignored.

%unlinked-window-add window-id

The window with ID window-id was created but is not linked to the current session.

%unlinked-window-close window-id

The window with ID window-id, which is not linked to the current session, was closed.

%unlinked-window-renamed window-id

The window with ID window-id, which is not linked to the current session, was renamed.

%window-add window-id

The window with ID window-id was linked to the current session.

%window-close window-id

The window with ID window-id closed.

%window-pane-changed window-id pane-id

The active pane in the window with ID window-id changed to the pane with ID pane-id.

%window-renamed window-id name

The window with ID window-id was renamed to name.

Environment

When tmux is started, it inspects the following environment variables:

EDITOR

If the command specified in this variable contains the string ‘vi’ and VISUAL is unset, use vi-style key bindings. Overridden by the mode-keys and status-keys options.

HOME

The user's login directory. If unset, the passwd(5) database is consulted.

LC_CTYPE

The character encoding locale(1). It is used for two separate purposes. For output to the terminal, UTF-8 is used if the -u option is given or if LC_CTYPE contains "UTF-8" or "UTF8". Otherwise, only ASCII characters are written and non-ASCII characters are replaced with underscores (‘_’). For input, tmux always runs with a UTF-8 locale. If en_US.UTF-8 is provided by the operating system, it is used and LC_CTYPE is ignored for input. Otherwise, LC_CTYPE tells tmux what the UTF-8 locale is called on the current system. If the locale specified by LC_CTYPE is not available or is not a UTF-8 locale, tmux exits with an error message.

LC_TIME

The date and time format locale(1). It is used for locale-dependent strftime(3) format specifiers.

PWD

The current working directory to be set in the global environment. This may be useful if it contains symbolic links. If the value of the variable does not match the current working directory, the variable is ignored and the result of getcwd(3) is used instead.

SHELL

The absolute path to the default shell for new windows. See the default-shell option for details.

TMUX_TMPDIR

The parent directory of the directory containing the server sockets. See the -L option for details.

VISUAL

If the command specified in this variable contains the string ‘vi’, use vi-style key bindings. Overridden by the mode-keys and status-keys options.

Files

~/.tmux.conf
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/tmux/tmux.conf
~/.config/tmux/tmux.conf

Default tmux configuration file.

/etc/tmux.conf

System-wide configuration file.

Examples

To create a new tmux session running vi(1):

$ tmux new-session vi

Most commands have a shorter form, known as an alias. For new-session, this is new:

$ tmux new vi

Alternatively, the shortest unambiguous form of a command is accepted. If there are several options, they are listed:

$ tmux n
ambiguous command: n, could be: new-session, new-window, next-window

Within an active session, a new window may be created by typing ‘C-b c’ (Ctrl followed by the ‘b’ key followed by the ‘c’ key).

Windows may be navigated with: ‘C-b 0’ (to select window 0), ‘C-b 1’ (to select window 1), and so on; ‘C-b n’ to select the next window; and ‘C-b p’ to select the previous window.

A session may be detached using ‘C-b d’ (or by an external event such as ssh(1) disconnection) and reattached with:

$ tmux attach-session

Typing ‘C-b ?’ lists the current key bindings in the current window; up and down may be used to navigate the list or ‘q’ to exit from it.

Commands to be run when the tmux server is started may be placed in the ~/.tmux.conf configuration file. Common examples include:

Changing the default prefix key:

set-option -g prefix C-a
unbind-key C-b
bind-key C-a send-prefix

Turning the status line off, or changing its colour:

set-option -g status off
set-option -g status-style bg=blue

Setting other options, such as the default command, or locking after 30 minutes of inactivity:

set-option -g default-command "exec /bin/ksh"
set-option -g lock-after-time 1800

Creating new key bindings:

bind-key b set-option status
bind-key / command-prompt "split-window 'exec man %%'"
bind-key S command-prompt "new-window -n %1 'ssh %1'"

See Also

pty(4)

Authors

Nicholas Marriott <nicholas.marriott@gmail.com>

Referenced By

abduco(1), byobu(1), byobu-keybindings(1), byobu-layout(1), byobu-select-backend(1), byobu-tmux(1), logind.conf(5), nqterm(1), pty(7), user_caps(5), xpanes(1).

The man page tmate(1) is an alias of tmux(1).