Awesome
Tmux Logging
Features:
- Logging of all output in the current pane<br/> After you start logging, everything that's typed and all the output will be saved to a file. Convenient for keeping track of your work.
- Current pane "Screen Capture"<br/> All the text visible in the current pane is saved to a file. Like a screenshot, but textual.
- Save a complete history of current pane<br/> Everything that has been typed and all the output since the creation of the current pane can be saved to a file.
- Clear pane history with
prefix + alt + c
Tested and working on Linux, OSX and Cygwin.
1. Logging
Toggle (start/stop) logging in the current pane.
- Key binding:
prefix + shift + p
- File name format:
tmux-#{session_name}-#{window_index}-#{pane_index}-%Y%m%dT%H%M%S.log
- File path:
$HOME
(user home dir)- Example file:
~/tmux-my-session-0-1-20140527T165614.log
- Example file:
2. "Screen Capture"
Save visible text, in the current pane. Equivalent of a "textual screenshot".
- Key binding:
prefix + alt + p
- File name format:
tmux-screen-capture-#{session_name}-#{window_index}-#{pane_index}-%Y%m%dT%H%M%S.log
- File path:
$HOME
(user home dir)- Example file:
tmux-screen-capture-my-session-0-1-20140527T165614.log
- Example file:
3. Save complete history
Save complete pane history to a file. Convenient if you retroactively remember you need to log/save all the work.
- Key binding:
prefix + alt + shift + p
- File name format:
tmux-history-#{session_name}-#{window_index}-#{pane_index}-%Y%m%dT%H%M%S.log
- File path:
$HOME
(user home dir)- Example file:
tmux-history-my-session-0-1-20140527T165614.log
- Example file:
NOTE: this functionality depends on the value of history-limit
- the number
of lines Tmux keeps in the scrollback buffer. Only what Tmux kept will also be saved,
to a file.
Use set -g history-limit 50000
in .tmux.conf, with modern computers
it is ok to set this option to a high number.
4. Clear pane history
Key binding: prefix + alt + c
This is just a convenience key binding.
Installation with Tmux Plugin Manager (recommended)
Add plugin to the list of TPM plugins in .tmux.conf
:
set -g @plugin 'tmux-plugins/tmux-logging'
Hit prefix + I
to fetch the plugin and source it.
You should now have all tmux-logging
key bindings defined.
Manual Installation
Clone the repo:
$ git clone https://github.com/tmux-plugins/tmux-logging ~/clone/path
Add this line to the bottom of .tmux.conf
:
run-shell ~/clone/path/logging.tmux
Reload TMUX environment:
# type this in terminal
$ tmux source-file ~/.tmux.conf
You should now have all tmux-logging
key bindings defined.
Installing ansifilter
(recommended for OSX users)
If you're on OSX, it is recommended to install ansifilter
:
$ brew install ansifilter
ansifilter is a program specialized for removing (or working with) ANSI codes.
It helps with removing ANSI codes from the log. If ansifilter
is not present,
ANSI codes are removed with sed
.
This feature improves the default pipe-pane
logging mechanism by stripping
ANSI codes. This is how the plain pipe-pane
log output looks like if you're
using terminal with coloring:
Garbled characters are called ANSI codes. They enable colors in terminal, but are just making 'noise' in the textual log output.
A user will probably want to filter ANSI codes out of the log. Here's the same log as above when this plugin is used:
Configuration Docs
Other plugins
You might also find these useful:
- resurrect - restore tmux environment after system restart
- pain control - useful standard bindings for controlling panes
- sessionist - lightweight tmux utils for switching and creating sessions