Tmux: Difference between revisions

From Gangplank
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{DISPLAYTITLE:tmux}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:tmux}}
'''tmux''' <ref>[[wikipedia:Tmux]]</ref> is a terminal multiplexer <ref>[[wikipedia:Terminal_multiplexer]]</ref> for Unix-like operating systems (e.g. Linux, Mac OSX, Rasperry Pi OS). If tmux is installed on a remote device it enables you to create persistent login sessions. Programms that you invoke during a session won't get automatically terminated if you log out or if the connection is interrupted. tmux also allows you to invoke multiple terminal windows, enabling you to do work in parallel without the need to connect multiple times to the remote device.
'''tmux''' <ref>[[wikipedia:Tmux]]</ref> is a terminal multiplexer <ref>[[wikipedia:Terminal_multiplexer]]</ref> for Unix-like operating systems (e.g. Linux, Mac OS X, Rasperry Pi OS).

== Background ==
If tmux is installed on a remote device it enables you to create persistent login sessions. Programms that you invoke during a session won't get automatically terminated if you log out or if the connection is interrupted. tmux also allows you to invoke multiple terminal windows, enabling you to do work in parallel without the need to connect multiple times to the remote device.


== References ==
== References ==

Latest revision as of 11:07, 16 April 2021

tmux [1] is a terminal multiplexer [2] for Unix-like operating systems (e.g. Linux, Mac OS X, Rasperry Pi OS).

Background

If tmux is installed on a remote device it enables you to create persistent login sessions. Programms that you invoke during a session won't get automatically terminated if you log out or if the connection is interrupted. tmux also allows you to invoke multiple terminal windows, enabling you to do work in parallel without the need to connect multiple times to the remote device.

References

External links

https://tmux.github.io/