Over the last week, I’ve written a nifty tool that I call reptyr. reptyr is a utility for taking an existing running program and attaching it to a new terminal. Started a long-running process over ssh, but have to leave and don’t want to interrupt it? Just start a screen, use reptyr to grab it, and then kill the ssh session and head on home.

You can grab the source, or read on for some more details.

There’s a shell script called screenify that’s been going around the internet for nigh on 10 years now that is supposed to use gdb to accomplish the same thing. There’s also a project called retty that tries to do the same thing, in C using ptrace() directly.

The difference between those programs and reptyr is that reptyr works much, much, better.

If you attach a less using screenify or retty, it will still take input from the old terminal. If you attach an ncurses program, and resize the window, the program probably won’t resize correctly. ^C and ^Z will still be processed on the old terminal – typing them in the new terminal won’t do anything useful.

reptyr fixes all of these problems and more, and is the only such tool I know of that does so. I’ve never seen a program that doesn’t behave noticeably incorrectly after attaching with retty or screenify, whereas with reptyr most programs I have tried work flawlessly.

How does it work? 🔗︎

reptyr works in the same basic way as screenify and retty – it attaches to the target process using the ptrace API, opens the new terminal, and dup2 s it over the old file descriptors. It also copies the termios settings from the old terminal to the new terminal.

The main thing that reptyr does that no one else does is that it actually changes the controlling terminal of the process you are attaching. This is the detail that makes many things Just Work, including ^C and ^Z and window resizing.

Switching the target’s controlling terminal is not easy and involves a fair bit of trickery with ptrace and Linux’s terminal APIs. I will probably do another blog post some time about the dirty details of how I make this work, but for now you can check out attach.c if you really want to know.

reptyr still has a number of limitations – it doesn’t generally work, for example, if the target process has any children. I know how to fix most of these problems, though, so expect it to get better with time. Please let me know if you find it useful!