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tmux
// Instructions for using tmux to spawn multiple processes, inspect them, and capture their output. Useful for running servers or long-running tasks in the background.
// Instructions for using tmux to spawn multiple processes, inspect them, and capture their output. Useful for running servers or long-running tasks in the background.
| name | tmux |
| description | Instructions for using tmux to spawn multiple processes, inspect them, and capture their output. Useful for running servers or long-running tasks in the background. |
| allowed-tools | ["Bash"] |
This skill empowers you to manage multiple concurrent processes (like servers, watchers, or long builds) using tmux directly from the Bash tool.
Since you are likely already running inside a tmux session, you can spawn new windows or panes to handle these tasks without blocking your main communication channel.
First, verify you are running inside tmux:
echo $TMUX
If this returns empty, you are not running inside tmux and these commands will not work as expected.
Once verified, check your current windows:
tmux list-windows
To run a command (e.g., a dev server) in a way that persists and can be inspected:
Create a new detached window with a specific name. This keeps it isolated and easy to reference.
tmux new-window -n "server-log" -d
(Replace "server-log" with a relevant name for your task)
Send the command to that window.
tmux send-keys -t "server-log" "npm start" C-m
(C-m simulates the Enter key)
You can read the output of that pane at any time without switching your context.
Get the current visible screen:
tmux capture-pane -p -t "server-log"
Get the entire history (scrollback):
tmux capture-pane -p -S - -t "server-log"
Use this if the output might have scrolled off the screen.
If you need to stop or restart the process:
Send Ctrl+C (Interrupt):
tmux send-keys -t "server-log" C-c
Kill the window (Clean up):
tmux kill-window -t "server-log"
You can chain multiple tmux commands in a single invocation using ';' (note the quotes to avoid interpretation by the shell). This is faster and cleaner than running multiple tmux commands.
Example: Create window and start process in one go:
tmux new-window -n "server-log" -d ';' send-keys -t "server-log" "npm start" C-m
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