I have a nice bash alias for tmux which opens a new window and directly ssh to whatever I specify

function s() {
    tmux neww -n "$1" -- ssh "$1"
}

I want to also have something similar directly as an alias in tmux, so I can do C-b :s myhost when I’m already in a ssh to another server, instead of having to change windows, and then run s myhost in bash.

I tried using tmux’s confiug to do various variations of

set -s command-alias[100] s='run s'

Also using directly ssh, or without using run etc. But I can’t figure it out.

  • PenguinCoder@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    This is what I have in my . tmux.conf for SSH you can adapt

    bind-key S command-prompt -p "ssh to:","port:" "new-window -n %1 'ssh %1 -p %2'"

    That means when I press C-b, SHIFT S it asks what IP to connect to (type it in when it asks on the status bar of TMUX), press enter, the it asks the port to use.

    • db0@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      1 year ago

      bind-key S command-prompt -p "ssh to:","port:" "new-window -n %1 'ssh %1 -p %2'"

      Brilliant. I removed the port since I usually use my ssh config or I can just type with with : and it’s what I needed. Cheers

  • rayon@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    In tmux, you usually set configuration options with set -g in tmux.conf. “-g” sets a global option which will apply to all new windows and sessions, otherwise the option applies only for the current window, which is usually not what you want.

    Since command-alias is an array, you can use the -a flag to append a new value at the end.

    With that said, try this:

    set -ga command-alias s="new-window ssh foo"
    

    Keep in mind that run in tmux runs a shell command in the background, so you most likely want to use something like new-window or new-session instead.