164

A typical situation may be:

$ tmux
  [0] $ ssh example.com
      $ tmux attach
        [0] $ 

I open a tmux session, then ssh in to a server and attach to an existing tmux session. At this point I have one tmux session inside another. How do I send commands to the inner tmux session?

Note: Both tmux sessions have the same key bindings.

2
  • 6
    not a programming question. Please try superuser.com. Good luck.
    – shellter
    Dec 15, 2011 at 13:41
  • 1
    I'm happy to ask for the question to be moved, however for context I use vim inside tmux to code and of course often have to ssh in to other servers which is where this problem occurs.
    – Kris
    Dec 15, 2011 at 23:31

3 Answers 3

251

The send-prefix command can be used to send your prefix keystroke to (the process running in) the active pane. By default, the prefix is C-b and C-b is bound to send-prefix (so that hitting it twice sends a single C-b to the active pane). This is just what we need to access the bindings of the inner tmux instance.

The first C-b is captured by the “outer” tmux instance as its prefix key. The second one is captured by the “outer” tmux instance and triggers its C-b binding (send-prefix). This sends a C-b to the outer instance’s active pane. The process running in this pane is (ultimately, through an ssh instance) the “inner” tmux instance. It captures the C-b as its prefix key. Now your next keystroke will be passed through the outer tmux instance and captured by the inner one to trigger a binding.

To trigger the c binding (new-window) in a second-level instance of tmux, you would type C-b C-b c. For a third-level instance of tmux you would type C-b C-b C-b C-b c.

This doubling for each level can be annoying if you are commonly dealing with multiple layers of tmux. If you can spare some other key, you could make a non-prefixed binding to make things (possibly) easier to type:

bind-key -n C-\ send-prefix
bind-key -n C-^ send-prefix \; send-prefix

Create new window in second-level tmux: C-\ c
Create new window in third-level tmux: C-^ c (or C-\ C-\ c)


If you have a limited number of tmux commands that you want to (easily) send to the lower-level tmux instances, you might instead use send-keys to create some specific bindings (possibly just in your top-level tmux instance):

bind-key C-c  send-keys C-b c
bind-key C    send-keys C-b C-b c

Create new window in second-level tmux: C-b C-c
Create new window in third-level tmux: C-b C

3
  • Additionally I had to comment out my existing last-window binding as it was called when doing C-a C-a, as such: #bind-key C-a last-window. Note my prefix is a, not the default b.
    – Kris
    Dec 16, 2011 at 15:59
  • 1
    bind-key -n C-\ send-prefix does not work. My tmux is not recognising the \. When I use a letter, it works.
    – darksky
    Jan 24, 2013 at 21:16
  • @Darksky: What version of tmux are you using? It works for me with 1.7, 1.6, and 1.5. You will definitely need to add an extra level of quoting if you are making the binding from a shell command (i.e. tmux bind-key -n 'C-\' send-prefix); if you are having problems getting it to work from ~/.tmux.conf (or a Prefix : command line), then you might try similar quoting (i.e. bind-key -n 'C-\' send-prefix). Jan 25, 2013 at 2:29
74

To access the inner, hold control and hit B twice.

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9

EDIT:

I do NOT recommend use C-q as a bind-key, as it is a default control-key command for

un-freezes the screen and lets screen display continue

A situation happens here, and @Paschalis provides a solution:

if it happens to be twice unlucky (a remote tmux session with C-q as prefix): Type Cltr-q, then :, and enter in tmux: send-keys C-q

Below it is the answer:


To make it simple, add the below line in your ~/.tmux.conf

bind-key -n C-q send-prefix

Then you can directly use C-q as bind-key for your remote tmux.

2
  • if someone has changed the default binder key in the outer tmux, then has to use the same default binder key in the inner tmux, for the above snippet to work!
    – Paschalis
    Jan 26, 2016 at 0:02
  • i am modifying the prefix of my local tmux (to Ctrl+] in my case) so all the "inner" tmux-es on the servers have default binding for prefix
    – actionless
    Jul 17, 2017 at 19:31

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