vote up 0 vote down star

I'm in a class that uses an implementation of Emacs on a school server. I'm on a mac running snow leopard, and I have my own implementation of Emacs on it. To access the server-Emacs, I ssh into the server and launch Emacs from its location there.

I'm relativly new to emacs, and I have a particular problem whenever I try to access the server-emacs from my local-emacs' shell-mode, having ssh'd into the server. It gives me the error that "Screen size -1x80 is too small", and doesn't launch the server-emacs.

I've the separate issue that when I try to do this in Apple's terminal, it does launch the server-emacs, but I really, really dislike the interface when emacs is launched within a terminal.

I've tried a couple of times to launch the server-emacs within a new window, in both scenarios, but apparently I'm not doing it right.

flag
1  
Might be a better candidate for SuperUser than StackOverflow. – Avdi Oct 26 at 19:48
second transfer to SuperUser. – Brian Postow Oct 26 at 19:49
Heh, true about SuperUser, but the superuser community for Emacs is much smaller, and it just splits the Emacs community. – Trey Jackson Oct 26 at 20:00
Huh. I'll try there first next time. – KLR Oct 27 at 15:05

3 Answers

vote up 1 vote down

I think it'd be useful to understand what you're trying to do.

Do you just want to edit files on the server? If that's the case, read the documentation for tramp, and try:

C-x C-f //user@server:/path/to/file

If you really want to use the emacs running on the server, try creating a frame on your

(if so, look up tramp) If you want to actually use the emacs from the server, but have the window display on your mac:

ssh server
setenv DISPLAY mymac:0
emacsclient file &

This does assume you're running X11, and know how to resolve the display for your Mac. You can get X11 for the Mac here.

link|flag
Doesn't this only work 1) if you are running XWindows and 2) if you know the name of your home display? Both of which are do-able, but should be mentioned. – Brian Postow Oct 26 at 19:45
Good points, I thought about them, but am not positive. My wife's Mac is on the table across from me, but no Emacs on it... I opened a shell, but no DISPLAY variable. – Trey Jackson Oct 26 at 19:53
Unfortunately, I do need to use the server version, as my professor has it customized just as he likes it, and I don't want to implement some of his customizations on my local emacs. I tried the DISPLAY bit, briefly, but it errored out on the setenv section. I do have X11, so I don't know. I'll go hunt up some documentation and take a longer look at it after class today. – KLR Oct 27 at 15:00
1  
If it's just a matter of using those customizations, you can have a different .emacs file and start emacs like: emacs -q -l .professor.emacs... – Trey Jackson Oct 27 at 19:45
Yes, Trey is correct. Just use the profs .emacs (or .elisp folder or whatever) when you run it on your mac. You can also do a M-x load-file which will load in an arbitrary .el file once you've run emacs... – Brian Postow Oct 27 at 20:07
vote up 0 vote down

I think that Trey Jackson's suggestion of tramp (or the more old-fashioned 'ange-ftp) is probably your best bet.

In general, running emacs inside an emacs is never a good idea. You either want to run emacs on the server (in -nw mode inside the terminal, or via some $DISPLAY magic) or run it on your mac (via tramp). There isn't really a good way to do both.

link|flag
Out of curiosity, why is it bad? – KLR Oct 27 at 15:05
Well, first there's really no reason to do it. But mainly that you then have to figure out who gets what modifiers... Does control go to the local emacs? or the server emacs? what is the Meta key for each? Mouse clicks will only go to the local emacs... And in any case' you're going to end up using the SSH version of the UI anyway... – Brian Postow Oct 27 at 15:46
Makes sense. Thanks. – KLR Oct 27 at 19:03
vote up 1 vote down

It's a bit hard to tell what you are doing, but you probably want to ssh to the server with an X tunnel, then run emacs there which will pop up the window on your mac.

First, don't use Terminal.

On your mac, start up X11 (google for XQuartz if you don't already have it). Start up an XTerm (it should do this by default). From that XTerm, ssh to your server with the -Y option:

ssh -Y me@server.something

This should get you a remote shell and setup the DISPLAY environment to tunnel right back to your Mac's X server. Test it by running an xterm from there. If that works, you can instead run emacs. If that works, you can combine it with the ssh invocation:

ssh -Y me@server.something /usr/bin/emacs # or whatever path you need

You should set up ssh to not require a password but that's more than you asked for.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.