In tmux, the status bar normally shows the current working directory of a pane in the window list. If I have for example two panes in a window, and the two panes have differ
In addition to the previous answer, I'd like to add you don't have to rely on the status-interval option. Waiting to see the change isn't really elegant. You can manually update the status bar on events with:
tmux refresh-client -S
I use this option after pane/window/session switching. In my tmux config you will find for instance to switch panes:
bind -r k select-pane -U\; refresh-client -S
bind -r j select-pane -D\; refresh-client -S
bind -r l select-pane -R\; refresh-client -S
bind -r h select-pane -L\; refresh-client -S
I have previously posted on this: manually refresh status bar
This is another way to do this.
~/.tmux.config
to call out to an external bash script in the example provided, the file is here: ~/.tmux_path.sh
set -g status-interval 1
set -g status-right-length 150
set -g status-right "#(~/.tmux_path.sh #{pane_current_path}) %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"
Example bash script that reads #{pane_current_path) arg. basename
truncates the beginning path and just displays current. This is nice if using as a window id.
#!/bin/sh
printf '\033%s\007' $(basename $1) # show full path use $1 instead of $(basename $1)
chmod +x ~/.tmux_path.sh
~/.tmux_path.sh
from aboveset -g status-interval 1
set -g window-status-current-format "[#[fg=white] #(~/.tmux_path.sh #{pane_current_path})]"
set -g window-status-format "#[fg=black] #(~/.tmux_path.sh #{pane_current_path})"
There are several ways that you can do this. I do it myself. The easiest and most customisable way is to set a global variable that tmux can access.
First add this to your .bashrc
or .zshrc
file, to set the PWD variable after every prompt:
# create a global per-pane variable that holds the pane's PWD
export PS1=$PS1'$( [ -n $TMUX ] && tmux setenv -g TMUX_PWD_$(tmux display -p "#D" | tr -d %) $PWD)'
Now, make a script that displays this variable such as ~/bin/display_tmux_pane_pwd.sh
:
#!/bin/bash
tmux showenv -g TMUX_PWD_$(tmux display -p "#D" | tr -d %) | sed 's/^.*=//'
All that is left is to add this to the satis-bar in .tmux.conf
:
set -g status-left '#(~/bin/display_tmux_pane_pwd.sh)'
It may take awhile to update after switching panes, so you can change that with this command. By default it updates every 15 seconds, this will make it 5 seconds. Change it as you like.
set -g status-interval 5
Sometimes it is useful to open up a pane or window and immediately execute a program instead of booting up another shell (e.g. tmux new-window vim
). This way, when you close that program you also close the window. Unfortunately, the way I describe above requires a prompt in order to broadcast the status of PWD. However, in many programs, you can work around this fairly easily. Here's an example of what is in my .vimrc
file so that vim updates the PWD status whenever it changes buffers.
if exists("$TMUX")
" Get the environment variable
let tmux_pane_name_cmd = 'tmux display -p \#D'
let tmux_pane_name = substitute(system(g:tmux_pane_name_cmd), "\n", "", "")
let tmux_env_var = "TMUX_PWD_" . substitute(g:tmux_pane_name, "%", "", "")
unlet tmux_pane_name tmux_pane_name_cmd
function! BroadcastTmuxCwd()
let filename = substitute(expand("%:p:h"), $HOME, "~", "")
let output = system("tmux setenv -g ".g:tmux_env_var." ".l:filename)
endfunction
autocmd BufEnter * call BroadcastTmuxCwd()
endif