- Manage sessions (attach, detach, rename, kill).
- Manage windows (switch, link, move, swap, rename, kill).
- Manage panes (switch, break, join, swap, layout, kill, resize, rename).
- Search commands and append to command prompt.
- Search key bindings and execute.
- Search clipboard history and paste to current window.
- Process management (top, pstree, terminate, kill, interrupt, continue, stop, quit, hangup).
- User menu (run custom commands).
- Preview sessions, windows and panes.
- Multiple selection.
- GNU bash
- sed
- junegunn/fzf
- CopyQ (optional): Access system clipboard, fallback to builtin tmux buffers if copyq is not executable.
- pstree (optional): Display process tree.
Note: Please use this command to check whether tmux is able to find fzf #1: tmux run-shell -b 'command -v fzf'
Install via TPM
Add this line to your ~/.tmux.conf
set -g @plugin 'sainnhe/tmux-fzf'
Reload configuration, then press prefix
+ I
.
To launch tmux-fzf, press prefix
+ F
(Shift+F).
This plugin supports multiple selection for some actions, you can press TAB
and Shift-TAB
to mark multiple items.
Most of the features work out of the box, but there are some features that need to be explained here.
The kill
action in tmux-fzf actually uses tmux unlink-window -k
instead of tmux kill-window
.
The main difference between unlink-window -k
and kill-window
is that kill-window
will kill current window and all other windows linked to it, while unlink-window -k
will only kill current window.
The logic of unlink -k
is a bit like hard links. If the current window only exists in one session, then kill; if the current window exists in multiple sessions, then unlink.
Btw, if you want to bind a key to kill current window, I would recommend unlink-window -k
instead of kill
.
You can add a custom menu to quickly execute some commands.
This feature is not enabled by default. To enable it, add something like this to ~/.tmux.conf
TMUX_FZF_MENU=\
"foo\necho 'Hello!'\n"\
"bar\nls ~\n"\
"sh\nsh ~/test.sh\n"
When you launch tmux-fzf, an extra item named menu
will appear. Selecting this item will produce this.
There will be 3 items to select from: foo
, bar
and sh
.
When you select foo
, tmux will execute echo 'Hello!'
.
When you select bar
, tmux will execute ls ~
.
When you select sh
, tmux will execute sh ~/test.sh
.
Note:
foo
andecho 'hello'
are separated by\n
inTMUX_FZF_MENU
, and you need to add another\n
afterecho 'hello'
.- DO NOT add additional white spaces/tabs at the beginning of each line.
- Commands are executed using
tmux -c
, so please make suretmux -c "your command"
does work.
Popup window is a new feature introduced in tmux 3.2 . To enable this feature, you'll need to have tmux >= 3.2 installed.
This feature is automatically enabled in tmux >= 3.2, but you can disable it using $TMUX_FZF_OPTIONS
, see Fzf Behavior.
For example, to use prefix
+ C-f
(Ctrl+F), add this line to your ~/.tmux.conf
TMUX_FZF_LAUNCH_KEY="C-f"
This plugin will read fzf environment variables, so you can use these variables to customize the behavior of fzf (e.g. prompt and color).
In addition, this plugin supports customizing the options of fzf-tmux
command which is bundled with fzf, you can customize them by adding something like this to ~/.tmux.conf
# Default value in tmux < 3.2
TMUX_FZF_OPTIONS="-m"
# Default value in tmux >= 3.2
TMUX_FZF_OPTIONS="-p -w 62% -h 38% -m"
To list all available options of fzf-tmux
, execute ~/.tmux/plugins/tmux-fzf/scripts/.fzf-tmux --help
in your shell.
Preview is enabled by default. To hide it, add something like this to your ~/.tmux.conf
:
TMUX_FZF_PREVIEW=0
Then the preview window will be hidden until toggle-preview
is triggered.
To customize the order of the actions, add something like this to your ~/.tmux.conf
:
TMUX_FZF_ORDER="session|window|pane|command|keybinding|clipboard|process"
You can also use this variable to disable unwanted features. For example, to disable clipboard
and process
, simply delete them in $TMUX_FZF_ORDER
:
TMUX_FZF_ORDER="session|window|pane|command|keybinding"
For some reasons, you may want to customize format of panes, windows, sessions listed in fzf. There are three variables to complete this work:
TMUX_FZF_PANE_FORMAT
TMUX_FZF_WINDOW_FORMAT
TMUX_FZF_SESSION_FORMAT
For example, tmux list-panes -a
doesn't show running program and window name by default. If you want to show running program and window name, add something like this to ~/.tmux.conf
TMUX_FZF_PANE_FORMAT="[#{window_name}] #{pane_current_command} [#{pane_width}x#{pane_height}] [history #{history_size}/#{history_limit}, #{history_bytes} bytes] #{?pane_active,[active],[inactive]}"
Similarly, TMUX_FZF_WINDOW_FORMAT
and TMUX_FZF_SESSION_FORMAT
can also be handled in this way.
For more information, check "FORMATS" section in tmux manual.
Q: Why use environment variables instead of tmux options to customize this plugin?
A: Because the performance of tmux options is very bad. I pushed a branch named tmux-options
to demonstrate how bad the performance will be if we use tmux options to customize this plugin, you can checkout this branch and get it a try.
Q: How to launch tmux-fzf with preselected action?
A: See #6.
Q: What's your status line configuration?
A: See this post.
Q: What's the color scheme used in the screenshot?
- sainnhe/tmux-translator: A translation plugin powered by popup window.
The code of /scripts/.fzf-tmux is copied from junegunn/fzf which is licensed under MIT.