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I have a command I want to execute in .bashrc only when the current terminal window is managed by GNU screen. How do I do this? Is there an environment variable for it? I used to have

if [ -n "$WINDOW" ]; then
    command
fi

But from what I can tell, $WINDOW may or may not be defined across all screen managed sessions.

1

5 Answers 5

19

Check for the environment variable $STY (contains info about the screen) or for $TERM being 'screen' (probably less reliable).

2
  • I've been using cargo cult scripts that used $TERM until now. Thanks for this! Just to make it even worse, some of the boxes the scripts run on have so old versions of bash that conditionals are limited (e.g. no partial matching)
    – Jan
    May 11, 2013 at 18:08
  • $STY method doesn't work in a sudo script run inside a screen
    – ceztko
    Nov 7, 2021 at 14:16
5

signine is correct

See the doc

http://www.gnu.org/software/screen/manual/html_node/Environment.html

STY

Alternate socket name. If screen is invoked, and the environment variable STY is set, then it creates only a window in the running screen session rather than starting a new session.

4

check $TERM, it is set to 'screen' in screen session.. (but not 100% guaranteed)

UPDATE

alternatively, you can utilize the fact that in screen, $TERMCAP contains screen substring:

[[ $TERMCAP =~ screen ]] && echo "in screen"

also not 100% guaranteed

UPDATE2

if neither approach works, you can find some inspiration in screen manual

3
  • Screen seems to inherit $TERM value from the terminal session launching it. So in my case it is xterm-256color and it depends on the environment. What I want is the general solution that can work under all environment.
    – OTZ
    Aug 12, 2010 at 21:49
  • The $TERMCAP approach applies to more cases, but misses cases where you SSH to other host under the same screen window, in which case $TERMCAP won't contain 'screen' substring. So, the applicability is exactly the same as $WINDOW, as it also loses its value once you ssh to other host. But all things equal, $WINDOW predicate works faster.
    – OTZ
    Aug 12, 2010 at 22:07
  • Right. That's what I meant by "applicability is exactly the same". I've been looking at the source code of GNU screen, and it looks like there is no solution to it. One could write a function to do ssh and then set a special environment variable, but that's not really elegant.
    – OTZ
    Aug 12, 2010 at 22:24
2

I would like to suggest an alternative solution that is always visible and does not require checking to know you are inside a screen session.

Just add/edit a file ~/.screenrc in your $HOME folder and add caption command:

caption always "%{= kc}Screen session on %H (system load: %l)%-28=%{= .m} %Y-%m-%d %0c"

and you will get at the very bottom one line that is always visible and colored.

Screen session on host (system load: 1.50 1.40 1.30)        2017-04-23 14:06

Please note:

When you are inside screen on host1 and open another SSH session to host2 and open screen there which also has .screenrc you will get two lines at the bottom stacked from bottom up (like a wrapper).

This is VERY useful in that case!

Screen session on host2 (system load: 0.01 0.03 0.05) 2017-04-23 14:14 Screen session on host1 (system load: 0.00 0.00 0.00) 2017-04-23 14:14


Additional info:

https://www.gnu.org/software/screen/manual/html_node/Caption.html

Command: caption always|splitonly [string]

https://www.gnu.org/software/screen/manual/html_node/String-Escapes.html#String-Escapes


I found this hit here on SO.

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Check variable $TERM

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