In last week’s Dayton Ruby meetup, Chris Chernesky spoke about how he uses Tmux for his everyday Rails development. It was great talk and ever since the meetup, Tmux has been all the buzz at the Littlelines office.

I’ve been using Tmux for a few years and it has become an essential tool for my workflow. Tmux’s window and session management make it a no-brainer for those who live in the terminal. In this article, I explain a few tmux commands and tools that I use daily to help me work more effectively across rails projects.

Setting up Tmux

Let’s start off on the right foot. Since we’re going to spend most of our day inside tmux, we might as well configure it to best suit our needs. Here are just a few tmux configurations that are essential for me.

# Remaps tmux prefix to Control-b unbind C-b set -g prefix C-a # Improve colors set -g default-terminal 'screen-256color' # Navigate around panes easily using vim-like keybindings bind h select -pane -L bind j select -pane -D bind k select -pane -U bind l select -pane -R # Remove administrative debris (session name, hostname, time) in status bar set -g status-left '' set -g status-right ''

The biggest configuration change I made is remapping the default Tmux prefix from Control-b to Control-a instead. Since I’ve also remapped my caps lock key to the control key, this is much more convenient for me.

Now let’s take a look at a couple aliases I setup to help navigate tmux on the command line. With these three aliases we can easily list the running tmux sessions, join a current session, or kill tmux sessions.

alias tml = "tmux list-sessions" alias tma = "tmux -2 attach -t $1" alias tmk = "tmux kill-session -t $1"

Killer Rails Project Management with Tmuxinator

Working with a typical Rails project may involve several commands and long-running processes. For example, we may need to run the web server e.g. bundle exec rails server or we may need to run Sidekiq for our background workers. Tmux is great for this scenario because we can harness the power of Tmux’s windows and panes to organize these processes in a single screen.

To further make our lives even easier, Tmuxinator makes managing Tmux sessions a snap with the use of simple Yaml files. The best part, it’s a ruby gem so all we have to do is run gem install tmuxinator and we’re ready to go. Here is an example of a configuration file I setup for one of my Rails projects.

name : website root : ~ /code/ website windows : - editor : layout : main - vertical panes : - emacs - guard - tests : bundle exec rake test - console : bundle exec rails c - workers : bundle exec foreman start - logs : tail - f log / development . log - server : mosh deployer @production - server . com

With this configuration, I just run mux website and Tmuxinator will cd into the project’s root directory, create a new (or join an existing) Tmux sessions, create six windows, kick off emacs and guard panes, run tests, and start the background workers. Just one command and we’re ready to go to work.

Switch Projects and Windows with Ease

So now we have our Tmux setup and Tmuxinator helping us with session management, we can start moving around our various projects. We can do this in a couple ways: from the command line or within Tmux sessions.

From the command line:

Getting around tmux sessions on the command line is pretty easy. Using our aliases we setup earlier, we can use the tml command to list the current sessions and tma to join an existing session. We can also use the mux [project] command that Tmuxinator provides to either create a new session or join a session if it is already running.

Within Tmux sessions:

Once we’re in a tmux session, getting around windows is easy too. I usually hit Command-a [Window #] to jump to a window or Command-a w to toggle a list of windows to open. But what if I need to switch to another project within Tmux?

Thankfully we can run command Command-a s to toggle a list of running sessions to open. This is a great way to navigate all your projects without leaving Tmux.

Summary

What I really like about this setup is that not only can I navigate projects easily, but I can setup projects just one time - saving the need to create window or panes every time. And the kicker, I can hop into one project, make a change, and hop right back where I left off with just a couple keystrokes.

Do you have any Tmux tips you’d like to share? Please leave us a comment below.