7

In tmux command mode, the following creates new window and opens vim inside:

:new-window vim

When you quit vim, the window is also closed. Is there a way to make it stay?

6 Answers 6

21

tmux has an option for this: remain-on-exit:

tmux set remain-on-exit on
3
  • 6
    This makes that window dead. Do you know how to make it go back to shell?
    – Amjith
    Apr 22, 2011 at 15:48
  • 6
    @Amjith: :new-window "/bin/sh -c 'vim; exec bash'"
    – Jo So
    Aug 23, 2012 at 11:40
  • Shell it be setw remain-on-exit on ? Nov 8, 2014 at 21:06
4

I realise this is a long dead question. But I'm a recent user of tmux and I had this same question. It turns out that you might want to do this:

tmux new-session bash -l 

That gets you a bash window (login shell). Then, run whatever commands you want. When they're done, they return to a command prompt, like you expect. I think a lot of people are looking for an interactive 'screen'-like behaviour. This is an easy way to do that.

2

I use send-keys so that it "types" the command into the shell. Here's my get.all script, which fires up many commands, some of which I may need to interact with after they're done (and the ones I don't, have exit):

#!/bin/sh
tmux att -t get ||
tmux \
  new -s get -n emacs \; \
  send-keys 'get.emacs' C-m \; \
  neww -n git \; \
  send-keys 'get.git' C-m \; \
  neww -n mini \; \
  send-keys 'get.mini' C-m \; \
  neww -n port \; \
  send-keys 'get.port' C-m \; \
  neww -n rakudo \; \
  send-keys 'get.rakudo' C-m \; \
  neww -n neil \; \
  send-keys 'get.neil && get.neil2 && exit' C-m \; \
  neww -n red \; \
  send-keys 'get.red && exit' C-m \; \
  neww -n cpan \; \
  send-keys 'get.cpan && exit' C-m \; \
  selectw -t emacs
1

Moving good comment of @Jo So to a separate answer.

This command drops to shell once the first ls -la finishes: tmux new-window "/bin/sh -c 'ls -la; exec bash'"

1

If you intend to quit the process in the new window normally (as in, proper exit), then tmux new-window "vim ; exec bash" would mostly be fine.

However, if you would intend to quit the new process via system interrupt (SIGINT for example). You will have to use trap.

tmux new-window "bash -c 'trap \"bash\" INT; tail -f foo'"

0

If you're just looking to create a new window and run a command in it, this might work better

new-window \; send-keys 'vim' Enter ;\ last-window

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