'How to send a command to all panes in tmux?

I like to call :clear-history on panes with a huge scrollback. However, I want to script a way to send this command to all the panes in the various windows.

I know how to send a command to all the windows, courtesy of this question, but how do I send a command to all the panes of which window as well?

send-keys and synchronize-panes from the tmux manpage come to mind, but I'm not sure how to marry them together. But maybe there is a simpler way to do this.

Extra Observations:

Thinking about this a little bit, tmux list-panes -a seems to list all the panes in the current session. Pretty useful to start off with. Where do I go from here?



Solution 1:[1]

Have you tried following in tmux window with multiple panes

Ctrl-B :

setw synchronize-panes on

clear history

Solution 2:[2]

A bit late to the party but I didn't want to set and unset synchronize-panes just to send one command so I created a wrapper function around tmux and added a custom function called send-keys-all-panes.

_tmux_send_keys_all_panes_ () {
  for _pane in $(tmux list-panes -F '#P'); do
    tmux send-keys -t ${_pane} "$@"
  done
}

I also create a wrapper around the tmux command to simplify calling this function (for convenience). The wrapper and the above code are all here.

This allows me to run tmux send-keys-all-panes <command> or tmux skap <command to send <command> to all panes.

Note that tmux is aliased to my wrapper function tmux_pp.

Solution 3:[3]

Update June 2019

Quick illustration on how to configure your own binding for synchronize panes.

Added the following into my tmux.conf (the comments certainly apply to my overall configuration):

# synchronize all panes in a window
# don't use control S, too easily confused
# with navigation key sequences in tmux (show sessions)
unbind C-S
bind C-Y set-window-option synchronize-panes

Now, I can toggle the ability to synchronize commands across multiple panes with <C-a><C-y>.

(Yes, I remapped the bind key to Ctrl a).

Solution 4:[4]

my tmux version is 1.9a, and this works for me, one key is enough for both on and off

bind-key X set-window-option synchronize-panes\; display-message "synchronize-panes is now #{?pane_synchronized,on,off}"

Solution 5:[5]

None of the above answers worked for me (tmux v2.3), but this did, from the bash command line:

for _pane in $(tmux list-panes -a -F '#{pane_id}'); do \
  tmux clear-history -t ${_pane}  ; done

A more generalized script, for tmux commands other than 'clear-history' would just replace that element with a parameter, eg. $1. Do be careful if you intend to write a script to handle a series of tmux commands, as "-t ${_pane}" will need to be applied to each.

Note that the -a parameter to tmux list-panes is required to cover all panes in all windows in all sessions. Without that, only panes in your current tmux window will be affected. If you have more than one tmux session open and only want to apply the command to panes within the current session, replace -a with -s (It's all in the tmux man page).

I haven't the mod points to comment directly on each of the above answers, so here's why they weren't working for me:

The problem that I had with @shailesh-garg 's answer was that the sync affected only commands issued within the panes, not tmux commands issued using Ctrl-B : which are outside the panes.

The three problems that I had with @kshenoy 's answer were that:

  1. it sends keystrokes to within a pane, not to the tmux operation of that pane, so for instance, if one had a bash shell running in the pane and one used the script to send "clear-history", those would be the keystrokes that would appear in the bash command-line. A work-around would be to send "tmux clear-history" or to pre-pend "tmux " to "$@", but I haven't edited the answer because of my other problems with the answer;
  2. I couldn't figure out how to send a new-line character without literally breaking the line;
  3. Even when I did that, sending "tmux clear-history" had no effect.

Solution 6:[6]

tmux send-keys -t <session id> <command> C-m  

Replace the "session id" and "command" accordingly.

Solution 7:[7]

This is my utility function to do it, only executing the command when there there is nothing running in the pane.

#!/bin/bash

_send_bash_command_to_session() {
    if [[ $# -eq 0 || "$1" = "--help" ]] ; then
        echo 'Usage: _send_bash_command_to_session $session_name what ever command you want: '
        return
    fi
    input_session="$1"
    input_command="${@:2}"
    for _pane in $(tmux list-panes -s -t ${input_session} -F '#{window_index}.#{pane_index}'); do
        # only apply the command in bash or zsh panes.
        _current_command=$(tmux display-message -p -t ${input_session}:${_pane} '#{pane_current_command}')
        if [ ${_current_command} = zsh ] || [ ${_current_command} = bash ] ; then
            tmux send-keys -t ${_pane} "${input_command}" Enter
        fi
    done
}

tmux_set_venv() {
    _current_session=$(tmux display-message -p '#{session_name}')
    _send_bash_command_to_session ${_current_session} workon $1
}

Example targeting a session called dev, enabling a python virtualenv in all panes that are in bash or zsh, avoiding executing the command in panes with vim or any other executable:

_send_bash_command_to_session dev workon myvirtualenv

or easier to remember: to do it in the current session:

tmux_set_venv myvirtualenv

Find my configuration file with this function.

Solution 8:[8]

You can combine synchronize-panes and send-keys in a single shortcut to send commands to all the panes:

Predefined tmux command clear-history:

bind-key C set-option -w synchronize-panes on\; clear-history \; set-option -w synchronize-panes off

Prompt an arbitrary tmux command:

bind-key p command-prompt -p "Panes command: " "set-option -w synchronize-panes on; %% ; set-option -w -u synchronize-panes"

Prompt an arbitrary shell command:

bind-key p command-prompt -p "Panes command: " "set-option -w synchronize-panes on; send-keys %%\\n ; set-option -w -u synchronize-panes"

Solution 9:[9]

If you want to send your command to every pane in every window in every session, add this to your .bashrc:

send_command_to_every_pane() {
    for session in `tmux list-sessions -F '#S'`; do
        for window in `tmux list-windows -t $session -F '#P' | sort`; do
            for pane in `tmux list-panes -t $session:$window -F '#P' | sort`; do
                tmux send-keys -t "$session:$window.$pane" "$*" C-m
            done
        done
    done
}

You can then use it like this:

send_command_to_every_pane source ~/.bash_profile

Change "$*" to "$@" if you want that behavior, but in my experience this is what you want.

Solution 10:[10]

Admittedly only semi-related, I found I could make the status background red when I toggle synchronize-panes so it's obvious when I switch back to a window with an unknown synchronize-panes state:

bind-key C-x setw synchronize-panes on \;  set-window-option status-bg red \; display-message "pane sync on"
bind-key M-x setw synchronize-panes off \;  set-window-option status-bg default \; display-message "pane sync off"

Solution 11:[11]

By default, byobu uses tmux as backend. It's a wrapper that make things much easier:

Shift+F9:
screenshot

Ctrl+F9:
screenshot

Shift+F1

screenshot

Sources

This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Source: Stack Overflow

Solution Source
Solution 1 shailesh garg
Solution 2
Solution 3
Solution 4 LIU YUE
Solution 5
Solution 6
Solution 7 phcerdan
Solution 8 duthils
Solution 9
Solution 10 Bruce Edge
Solution 11 Pablo Bianchi