Remove a couple of FAQ bits that are out of date and not frequent.

This commit is contained in:
Nicholas Marriott 2013-02-22 14:53:00 +00:00
parent e43fc6f08a
commit 1c82cf7660
1 changed files with 0 additions and 45 deletions

45
FAQ
View File

@ -326,51 +326,6 @@ lock(1) or vlock(1)) by using the following:
bind x set lock-command '/usr/bin/vlock' \; lock-client \; set lock-command 'tput civis && read -s -n1' bind x set lock-command '/usr/bin/vlock' \; lock-client \; set lock-command 'tput civis && read -s -n1'
* How can I open a new window in the same directory as the current window?
One option is to just run "TMUX= tmux" in the window. However, this only works if no
command is running, so that you can input the command.
A workaround is to let tmux know about the current path through an environment
variable. To do so, use the following command:
[ -n "$TMUX" ] && tmux setenv TMUXPWD_$(tmux display -p "#I") $PWD
Which sets TMUXPWD_i (where i is the number of the current window) to the path
of the current directory. This command can be added to PS1, for example:
PS1='$([ -n "$TMUX" ] && tmux setenv TMUXPWD_$(tmux display -p "#I") $PWD)\h$ '
When a new window is created, the shell should be asked to change
directory. You can define a new binding (for example, if using GNU bash):
bind-key C-c run-shell 'tmux neww "cd $(tmux display -p "\$TMUXPWD_#I"); exec bash"'
This solution will work even if a command is currently running in the terminal,
but it will not work from a window that has just been swapped with another
because TMUXPWD_i will not be updated after a swap. However, once a new prompt
is displayed, TMUXPWD_i is updated properly.
* tmux doesn't start with "daemon failed"
tmux shows something similar to this when started:
fatal: server_start: daemon failed: No such file or directory
fatal: main_dispatch: imsg_read failed
A possible reason is that /dev/null is not a character device or is otherwise
inaccessible.
Check with:
file /dev/null
ls -l /dev/null
If it is not a character device or has incorrect permissions, it can typically
be recreated with:
cd /dev && rm null && ./MAKEDEV null
* vim displays reverse video instead of italics, while less displays italics * vim displays reverse video instead of italics, while less displays italics
(or just regular text) instead of reverse. What's wrong? (or just regular text) instead of reverse. What's wrong?