| name | tmux |
| description | Control interactive CLIs (python, gdb, etc.) via tmux sessions - send keystrokes and scrape output |
tmux Skill
Use tmux to control interactive terminal applications by sending keystrokes and capturing output.
When to Use
- Running interactive REPLs (python, node, psql)
- Debugging with gdb/lldb
- Any CLI that requires TTY interaction
- Remote execution where you need to observe output
Core Pattern
tmux new-session -d -s "$SESSION" -x 120 -y 40
tmux send-keys -t "$SESSION" "python3" Enter
tmux capture-pane -t "$SESSION" -p
for i in {1..30}; do
output=$(tmux capture-pane -t "$SESSION" -p)
if echo "$output" | grep -q ">>>"; then break; fi
sleep 0.5
done
tmux kill-session -t "$SESSION"
Remote Execution (Codespaces/SSH)
For mise-installed tools, wrap in zsh:
ssh host 'zsh -c "source ~/.zshrc; tmux new-session -d -s mysession; tmux send-keys -t mysession python Enter"'
ssh host -t 'zsh -ilc "tmux attach -t mysession"'
Critical: Use zsh -c "source ~/.zshrc; ..." not zsh -lc to avoid hangs.
User Notification
After starting a session, ALWAYS print:
To monitor: tmux attach -t $SESSION
To capture: tmux capture-pane -t $SESSION -p
Tips
- Use
-x 120 -y 40 for consistent pane size
- Poll with
capture-pane -p rather than wait-for
- Send literal text with
-l flag to avoid shell expansion
- Control keys:
C-c (interrupt), C-d (EOF), Escape
- For Python REPL: set
PYTHON_BASIC_REPL=1 to avoid fancy console interference
Helper Scripts
Poll tmux pane for a text pattern with timeout:
scripts/wait-for-text.sh -t session:0.0 -p '^>>>' -T 15
List tmux sessions, optionally filtered:
scripts/find-sessions.sh -q claude
scripts/find-sessions.sh --all