6.5 KiB
Restoring programs
General instructions
Only a conservative list of programs is restored by default:
vi vim nvim emacs man less more tail top htop irssi mutt
.
This can be configured with @resurrect-processes
option in .tmux.conf
. It
contains space-separated list of additional programs to restore.
-
Example restoring additional programs:
set -g @resurrect-processes 'ssh psql mysql sqlite3'
-
Programs with arguments should be double quoted:
set -g @resurrect-processes 'some_program "git log"'
-
Start with tilde to restore a program whose process contains target name:
set -g @resurrect-processes 'irb pry "~rails server" "~rails console"'
-
Use
->
to specify a command to be used when restoring a program (useful if the default restore command fails ):set -g @resurrect-processes 'some_program "grunt->grunt development"'
-
Don't restore any programs:
set -g @resurrect-processes 'false'
-
Restore all programs (be careful with this!):
set -g @resurrect-processes ':all:'
Clarifications
I don't understand tilde
~
, what is it and why is it used when restoring programs?
Let's say you use rails server
command often. You want tmux-resurrect
to
save and restore it automatically. You might try adding rails server
to the
list of programs that will be restored:
set -g @resurrect-processes '"rails server"' # will NOT work
Upon save, rails server
command will actually be saved as this command:
/Users/user/.rbenv/versions/2.0.0-p481/bin/ruby script/rails server
(if you wanna see how is any command saved, check it yourself in
~/.tmux/resurrect/last
file).
When programs are restored, the rails server
command will NOT be restored
because it does not strictly match the long
/Users/user/.rbenv/versions/2.0.0-p481/bin/ruby script/rails server
string.
The tilde ~
at the start of the string relaxes process name matching.
set -g @resurrect-processes '"~rails server"' # OK
The above option says: "restore full process if rails server
string is found
ANYWHERE in the process name".
If you check long process string, there is in fact a rails server
string at
the end, so now the process will be successfully restored.
What is arrow
->
and why is is used?
(Please read the above clarification about tilde ~
).
Continuing with our rails server
example, when the process is finally restored
correctly it might not look pretty as you'll see the whole
/Users/user/.rbenv/versions/2.0.0-p481/bin/ruby script/rails server
string in
the command line.
Naturally, you'd rather want to see just rails server
(what you initially
typed), but that information is now unfortunately lost.
To aid this, you can use arrow ->
: (note: there is no space before and after ->
)
set -g @resurrect-processes '"~rails server->rails server"' # OK
This option says: "when this process is restored use rails server
as the
command name".
Full (long) process name is now ignored and you'll see just rails server
in
the command line when the program is restored.
Now I understand the tilde and the arrow, but things still don't work for me
Here's the general workflow for figuring this out:
- Set up your whole tmux environment manually.
In our example case, we'd typerails server
in a pane where we want it to run. - Save tmux env (it will get saved to
~/.tmux/resurrect/last
). - Open
~/.tmux/resurrect/last
file and try to find full process string for your program.
Unfortunately this is a little vague but it should be easy. A smart thing to do for our example is to search for stringrails
in thelast
file. - Now that you know the full and the desired process string use tilde
~
and arrow->
in.tmux.conf
to make things work.
Working with NodeJS
If you are working with NodeJS, you may get some troubles with configuring restoring programs.
Particularly, some programs like gulp
, grunt
or npm
are not saved with parameters so tmux-resurrect cannot restore it. This is actually not tmux-resurrect's issue but more likely, those programs' issues. For example if you run gulp watch
or npm start
and then try to look at ps
or pgrep
, you will only see gulp
or npm
.
To deal with these issues, one solution is to use yarn which a package manager for NodeJS and an alternative for npm
. It's nearly identical to npm
and very easy to use. Therefore you don't have to do any migration, you can simply use it immediately. For example:
npm test
is equivalent toyarn test
,npm run watch:dev
is equivalent toyarn watch:dev
- more interestingly,
gulp watch:dev
is equivalent toyarn gulp watch:dev
Before continuing, please ensure that you understand the clarifications section about ~
and ->
yarn
It's fairly straight forward if you have been using yarn
already.
set -g @resurrect-processes '"~yarn watch"'
set -g @resurrect-processes '"~yarn watch->yarn watch"'
npm
Instead of
set -g @resurrect-processes '"~npm run watch"' # will NOT work
we use
set -g @resurrect-processes '"~yarn watch"' # OK
gulp
Instead of
set -g @resurrect-processes '"~gulp test"' # will NOT work
we use
set -g @resurrect-processes '"~yarn gulp test"' # OK
nvm
If you use nvm
in your project, here is how you could config tmux-resurrect:
set -g @resurrect-processes '"~yarn gulp test->nvm use && gulp test"'
Another problem
Let take a look at this example
set -g @resurrect-processes '\
"~yarn gulp test->gulp test" \
"~yarn gulp test-it->gulp test-it" \
'
This will not work properly, only gulp test
is run, although you can see the command node /path/to/yarn gulp test-it
is added correctly in .tmux/resurrect/last
file.
The reason is when restoring program, the command part after the dash -
is ignored so instead of command gulp test-it
, the command gulp test
which will be run.
A work around, for this problem until it's fixed, is:
-
the config should be like this:
set -g @resurrect-processes '\ "~yarn gulp test->gulp test" \ "~yarn gulp \"test-it\"->gulp test-it" \
-
and in
.tmux/resurrect/last
, we should add quote totest-it
word... node:node /path/to/yarn gulp "test-it"