I am using tmux 1.8 and did not find a built-in solution. These workarounds fit at least for my common use cases:
- Capture the full pane content and search for the last ssh command in it (I use the knowledge about the ending of my prompt to detect the command more or less reliably)
- If this fails I check the command the pane might have been created with by using the
shell-command
option of tmux new-window
or split-window
commands
My reconnect.sh
script looks like this. The most dirty thing about it is the way to get the last ssh command from the buffer. Up to now "> ssh " was enough for my situations to reliably detect a line containing a ssh connection request but any better solution would be appreciated.
#!/bin/bash
# @TODO: change this according to your own prompt
# This is used to find lines connect ssh command in the pane buffer
PROMPT_SEPARATOR="> "
# get current pane buffer size and dimensions
HISTORY_LIMIT=`tmux display-message -p "#{history_limit}"`
VISIBLE_LINES=`tmux display-message -p "#{pane_height}"`
# search last ssh command in pane content
LINE=`tmux capture-pane -p -J -S -$HISTORY_LIMIT -E $VISIBLE_LINES | grep "${PROMPT_SEPARATOR}ssh " | tail -1`
if [ -n "$LINE" ]; then
echo $LINE | sed "s/.*$PROMPT_SEPARATOR//;"
else
# fall back to the command that might have been used to create the pane
# (not necessarily ssh but helpful anyway)
tmux list-panes -F "#{pane_active} #{pane_start_command}" | grep "^1 " | tail -1 | cut -d ' ' -f2-
fi
I saved this script in my ~/.tmux directory and changed key bindings for various split-window
and new-window
shortcuts in my .tmux.conf
similar to this:
# try to reconnect to remote host when creating new window
bind c run-shell 'CMD=`~/.tmux/reconnect.sh`; tmux new-window "$CMD"'