I want to clear all scrollback history in a particular tmux pane.
16 Answers
This same question has been plaguing me for quite some time. Here's the best I've come up with. Put this into your .tmux.conf file:
bind -n C-k clear-history
This binds ctrl-k to the tmux clear-history command. The -n after bind makes it so you don't have to issue the tmux command prefix (ctrl-b by default). I use bash, so ctrl-l already does the equivalent of typing "clear" at the command line. With these two keys I get a nice ctrl-l, ctrl-k combo, which moves all the scroll buffer off the screen (the "clear") and then deletes all that history (the tmux "clear-history" command).
It's not quite as nice as Terminal's, iTerm's, or Konsole's 1-key combos for clearing it out, but it's a world better than typing in clear-history all the time.
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18Nice. I've been doing
bind k send-keys "clear"\; send-keys "Enter"
for the clearing part, but using the built-inctrl+l
is simpler, andclear-history
to get rid of the scrollback history is a good addition.– Henrik NJul 15, 2012 at 10:33 -
1this binding screws my panes up, removing all text from all panes and removes the borders around them! Any ideas on whats up with that? May 13, 2013 at 12:15
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Yikes. What shell program do you use? Does it by chance already have some behavior defined for ctrl+k?– juanpacoMay 13, 2013 at 12:17
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iTerm2. Just seen that ctrl+k already does this without the tmux binding set, so it must be an iTerm2 mapping. May 13, 2013 at 12:21
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2Of course you don't need to set up a key binding for this. You can just do
C-b :clear-history
Jun 9, 2016 at 13:25
Every answer on here talks about adding new key bindings.
If you just want to do it occasionally you don't need a mapping at all...
Prefix defaults to <Ctrl-b>
Just type <prefix>
+ :
in the relevant pane and then type clear-history
and press enter.
If you are on the command line, you can run tmux clear-history
in the pane in question for the same effect.
One of the cool things about tmux is that you can just run any of the commands like that... or run them in a shell/script them like tmux command
... or make a keyboard shortcut for them.
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9It is possible to type the first three characters
cle
, and then autocomplete with<tab>
at the first time, then at the second time use<up arrow>
to access the previous entry. This way it is quite fast.– bctAug 27, 2018 at 2:42 -
1This does not work for me because when I start typing after hitting
<Ctrl-b> the
c` key is set to create a new window.– fraxtureApr 1, 2020 at 17:44 -
1@fraxture I think you misunderstand - after you press <Ctrl-b> then press
:
it gives you an interactive prompt - that's where you'd type 'c'– JonnyRaaMay 4, 2020 at 17:00 -
2I think it's worth adding to this answer (explicitly) that you can run
tmux clear-history
for the same effect. The key binding answers really make this a lot more complicated (and error-prone for a rare operation) than it has to be. Aug 25, 2020 at 15:43 -
As @juanpaco correctly stated, clear-history
is the command to clear the scrollback buffer.
I'll add that I like to also clear what's on the screen in the same command.
Issuing a send-keys -R
resets (clears) the screen, so I use the following in my .tmux.conf
bind-key b send-keys -R \; clear-history
This clears the screen AND the scrollback buffer.
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27The drawback of using -R is that your current input-line becames hidden, differently from when you clear your terminal with Ctrl+l. What I did is
bind -n C-l send-keys C-l \; clear-history
– volpatoMar 26, 2014 at 16:44 -
8For those of you who don't know (like I didn't), to arrive at the state to enter the
clear-history
command, pressCtrl+B
, and then start the command with a colon (:
).– palswimMay 19, 2014 at 23:11 -
3@volpato I like your approach,but I find it still leaves one 'screen' of the buffer in the scroll back. No idea why. -R blanks out the prompt, but I 'resolved' it by adding an extra C-m at the end (but then that puts it on the second line).– GdoggFeb 5, 2015 at 20:02
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4old thread, but I fixed the prompt-issue by adding a
send-keys C-l
afterclear-history
. I.e.bind -n C-l send-keys -R \; clear-history \; send-keys C-l
. This worked out to be the fastest for me.– fnurlJun 30, 2017 at 9:31 -
6
If you want to combine CTRL-L
plus clear-history, add this to your ~/.tmux.conf
:
bind u send-keys C-l \; run-shell "sleep .3s" \; clear-history
This even works if you're in a MySQL shell for instance.
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2This doesn't seem to work during, say,
tail -f some.log
, right? Is there a way to combinectrl-Z
with this? Can seem to get it right. Jun 22, 2015 at 21:37
Found this works best in TMUX 2.6, clearing the screen, scrollback, but keeping the prompt displayed after.
Uses Ctrl-L
bind-key -n C-l send-keys C-l \; send-keys -R \; clear-history
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2Thanks, this is the best, most straight-forward solution. It works perfectly. :chefs-kiss: Feb 17, 2022 at 0:34
I found using send-keys -R
to be a little slow - here is another way to clear screen and history with a single command
bind-key C send-keys "clear && tmux clear-history" \; send-keys "Enter"
A nested tmux call is used as the more obvious
bind-key C send-keys "clear" \; send-keys "Enter" \; clear-history
fails to clear the screen's current text from the history - the clear-history command appears to run in a separate thread to send-keys.
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6there's one caveat with this approach and it's that it only works on local shells, because it sends the tmux clear-history as string to be written to the active pane. I've adapted it to:
bind-key E send-keys "C-k" \; send-keys "C-u" \; send-keys "clear" \; send-keys "Enter" \; run-shell "sleep .3s; tmux clear-history"
– Santi P.Oct 23, 2013 at 19:09
Way simpler than most, I just created a shell script called cls
, and run it whenever I want to clear my screen and scrollback buffer.
All it is is this:
cls
clear;
tmux clear-history;
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3But what if you don't have access to the command line. Such as when a server is running and you're watching the logs.– zudduzOct 27, 2016 at 18:23
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where would you be watching the logs from? Over a webserver? If so, then I don't get why tmux is involved? Oct 27, 2016 at 18:32
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1It's nice to be able to watch server logs and your vim editor simultaneously.– zudduzOct 28, 2016 at 15:11
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Do you use tmux splits? If not, just split your window into 2, and view your logs in one, and use vim in the other by just running `tmux split" inside your tmux session... But maybe I'm not getting what you're doing? Oct 28, 2016 at 16:05
if you clear your screen with clear
, you can check whether TMUX
is set, and create an alias accordingly.
put this in your .bashrc:
if [[ $TMUX ]]; then
alias clear='clear && tmux clear-history'
fi
Ctrl-L is used in console applications to redraw the screen. I found that when bound to send-keys -R
it would cause the arrow keys to no longer function correctly in some applications (eg vim, mc).
To retain the redraw functionality in console applications, I used:
bind-key -n C-l if-shell -F '#{alternate_on}' 'send-keys C-l' 'send-keys -R C-l; clear-history'
This requires the tmux option alternate-screen
to be on (which it is by default).
For a quick fix to clear individual tmux panes you could set up an alias...
# Tmux Clear pane
alias tc='clear; tmux clear-history; clear'
I've used some of the above plus other sources to come up with:
bind k send-keys C-u \; send-keys C-k \; send-keys " clear && tmux clear-history" \; send-keys "Enter" \; run-shell "sleep .3s" \; send-keys "Up" \; send-keys C-u
The leading space in " clear && tmux clear-history" prevents the command from being written to the history file (providing you have your shell setup to treat leading spaces this way; google "hist ignore space" + the name of your shell for more info). I like to have this command not show up in my history since this is more inline with ctrl-k in the Terminal.
The first send-keys C-u and send-keys C-k will clear whatever is currently typed at the prompt to ensure that the " clear && tmux clear-history" is successful (e.g., if you've typed "ABCDEFG" at the prompt and have your cursor between the D and the E, this ensures that "ABCD clear && tmux clear-historyEFG" is not sent to the shell, which would fail).
The send-keys "Up" and last send-keys C-u clears out the last items from your shells internal history. Even with the trailing space mentioned above the internal history of the shell will include the " clear ..." line. Sending up and Ctrl-u gets rid of this.
Lastly, in iTerm I set ctrl-k to map to ctrl-a k (I have my tmux prefix set to ctrl-a), so I can type ctrl-k which is what my hands want to do from so many years of doing so. I do this, by going to iTerm > Preferences > Profiles > Keys and adding a shortcut to send the hex code "0x01 0x6B". There's a great article here which gives more info on using hex codes with tmux and iTerm: http://tangledhelix.com/blog/2012/04/28/iterm2-keymaps-for-tmux/
That pretty much gives me ctrl-k with tmux. The only thing that still kinda nags at me is that the real ctrl-k without tmux doesn't have problems if you currently have something typed at the prompt and will preserve what you've typed while clearing the screen. As mentioned, this approach needs to clear what's typed so the " clear ..." command doesn't fail. But it's pretty damn close!
So, I've been using plu's approach from above for a while, but I got fed-up with the limitations thereof (basically, the ⌃L
passed through is meaningless unless piped to a program that understands it.)
So I've improved upon the various approaches in different answers to this thread; although complex, this approach works with both shells and other commands:
# ⌃K: Clears the current pane (from <https://stackoverflow.com/a/34162098>)
bind-key -n C-k \
if-shell "test \"$(printf '#{pane_current_command}' | tail -c 2)\" = sh" \
"send-keys C-l ; run-shell 'sleep .3s' ; clear-history" \
"split-window -vp 100 ; clear-history -t ! ; kill-pane"
Try it with tail -f /private/var/log/system.log
or something!
Caveats:
There's one important note here: this is invisibly resizing the pane being cleared, if it's not a shell. This can trigger resizing behaviour in some command-line applications listening for SIGWINCH
es; but my reasoning is that this isn't a big problem, because those are programs you're very likely not going to be trying to ‘clear’ anyway.
In addition, the shell-quoting situation is already a mess, and can easily become more of one when embedding #{pane_current_command}
, so be careful, you may have to modify this based on your default-command
setting.
The same applies to my testing of the end of that command matching "sh"
; if you have a default-command
of something like /bin/bash --login
or something complicated involving exec
, the actual command may not end with "sh"
; use ⌃B :
to execute display-message '#{pane_current_command}'
if you want to see what is being tested against.
After a lot of research and spending time. I have found the best way for me on zsh and terminal.app
I am using prefix-c
to clear the screen and prefix-C
to clear the history and the scroll buffer and leaving no lines above because I find it annoying.
Without Vim
# clear screen
bind c send-keys 'C-l'
# clear screen and history
bind C send-keys -R \; send-keys C-l \; clear-history \; send-keys
With Vim
# check if the pane is running vim
is_vim="ps -o state= -o comm= -t '#{pane_tty}' \ | grep -iqE '^[^TXZ ]+ +(\\S+\\/)?g?(view|n?vim?x?)(diff)?$'"
# clear screen
bind c if-shell "$is_vim" "send-keys c" "send-keys 'C-l'"
# clear screen and history
bind C send-keys -R \; send-keys C-l \; clear-history \; send-keys
why not? bind -n C-l send-keys C-l
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I would like to know to me too if there's a reason to no recommend this. Aug 31, 2015 at 22:10
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4First of all, that's not necessary:
-n C-l
basically says ‘catch this’, and then you're immediately passing that same thing through. (i.e. this is a no-op.) … Second, your intent is off, because⌃L
clears the screen, not the scroll back: if you hit⌃B [
and then scroll up, you'll see that all of the scrollback is still recorded; the goal of this question is to clear that (tmux's) scrollback, not the visible terminal. Dec 8, 2015 at 16:13
If you want a complete pane clearing, another option is to temporarily resize the pane to one line, clear the history, then resize it back. This should work possibly flicker-free with one tmux chain of commands. The advantage is that it works regardless of what program is running in the pane. Of course this makes the shell script logic a bit more complicated.
bind-key -n F11 run "
if [[ #{window_panes} == "1" ]] ; then
tmux send-keys C-l; sleep 0.1 ; tmux clear-history ;
else
restored_height=$((#{pane_height} + #{pane_at_bottom}));
tmux resize-pane -y 1 \\; clear-history \\; resize-pane -y \${restored_height} ;
fi
"