NAME
screen - screen manager with VT100/ANSI terminal emulation
SYNOPSIS
screen [
-options ] [ cmd [ args ] ]
screen -r
[[pid.]tty[.host]]
screen -r
sessionowner/[[pid.]tty[.host]]
DESCRIPTION
Screen is a full-screen window manager that multiplexes a physical terminal between several processes (typically interactive shells). Each virtual terminal provides the functions of a DEC VT100 terminal and, in addition, several control functions from the ISO 6429 (ECMA 48, ANSI X3.64) and ISO 2022 standards (e.g. insert/delete line and support for multiple character sets). There is a scrollback history buffer for each virtual terminal and a copy-and-paste mechanism that allows moving text regions between windows.
When screen is called, it creates a single window with a shell in it (or the specified command) and then gets out of your way so that you can use the program as you normally would. Then, at any time, you can create new (full-screen) windows with other programs in them (including more shells), kill existing windows, view a list of windows, turn output logging on and off, copy-and-paste text between windows, view the scrollback history, switch between windows in whatever manner you wish, etc. All windows run their programs completely independent of each other. Programs continue to run when their window is currently not visible and even when the whole screen session is detached from the user’s terminal. When a program terminates, screen (per default) kills the window that contained it. If this window was in the foreground, the display switches to the previous window; if none are left, screen exits. Shells usually distinguish between running as login-shell or sub-shell. Screen runs them as sub-shells, unless told otherwise (See shell .screenrc command).
Everything you type is sent to the program running in the current window. The only exception to this is the one keystroke that is used to initiate a command to the window manager. By default, each command begins with a control-a (abbreviated C-a from now on), and is followed by one other keystroke. The command character and all the key bindings can be fully customized to be anything you like, though they are always two characters in length.
Screen does not understand the prefix C- to mean control, although this notation is used in this manual for readability. Please use the caret notation (^A instead of C-a) as arguments to e.g. the escape command or the -e option. Screen will also print out control characters in caret notation.
The standard way to create a new window is to type C-a c. This creates a new window running a shell and switches to that window immediately, regardless of the state of the process running in the current window. Similarly, you can create a new window with a custom command in it by first binding the command to a keystroke (in your .screenrc file or at the C-a : command line) and then using it just like the C-a c command. In addition, new windows can be created by running a command like:
screen emacs prog.c
from a shell prompt within a previously created window. This will not run another copy of screen, but will instead supply the command name and its arguments to the window manager (specified in the $STY environment variable) who will use it to create the new window. The above example would start the emacs editor (editing prog.c) and switch to its window. - Note that you cannot transport environment variables from the invoking shell to the application (emacs in this case), because it is forked from the parent screen process, not from the invoking shell.
If /run/utmp is writable by screen, an appropriate record will be written to this file for each window, and removed when the window is terminated. This is useful for working with talk, script, shutdown, rsend, sccs and other similar programs that use the utmp file to determine who you are. As long as screen is active on your terminal, the terminal’s own record is removed from the utmp file. See also C-a L.
GETTING STARTED
Before you begin to use screen you’ll need to make sure you have correctly selected your terminal type, just as you would for any other termcap/terminfo program. (You can do this by using test for example.)
If you’re impatient and want to get started without doing a lot more reading, you should remember this one command: C-a ?. Typing these two characters will display a list of the available screen commands and their bindings. Each keystroke is discussed in the section DEFAULT KEY BINDINGS. The manual section CUSTOMIZATION deals with the contents of your .screenrc.
If your terminal is a true auto-margin terminal (it doesn’t allow the last position on the screen to be updated without scrolling the screen) consider using a version of your terminal’s termcap that has automatic margins turned off. This will ensure an accurate and optimal update of the screen in all circumstances. Most terminals nowadays have magic margins (automatic margins plus usable last column). This is the VT100 style type and perfectly suited for screen. If all you’ve got is a true auto-margin terminal screen will be content to use it, but updating a character put into the last position on the screen may not be possible until the screen scrolls or the character is moved into a safe position in some other way. This delay can be shortened by using a terminal with insert-character capability.
COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS
Screen has the following command-line options:
-a |
include all capabilities (with some minor exceptions) in each window’s termcap, even if screen must redraw parts of the display in order to implement a function. | ||
-A |
Adapt the sizes of all windows to the size of the current terminal. By default, screen tries to restore its old window sizes when attaching to resizable terminals (those with WS in its description, e.g. suncmd or some xterm). |
-c file
override the default configuration file from $HOME/.screenrc to file.
-d|-D [pid.tty.host]
does not start screen, but detaches the elsewhere running screen session. It has the same effect as typing C-a d from screen’s controlling terminal. -D is the equivalent to the power detach key. If no session can be detached, this option is ignored. In combination with the -r/-R option more powerful effects can be achieved:
-d -r |
Reattach a session and if necessary detach it first. | ||
-d -R |
Reattach a session and if necessary detach or even create it first. | ||
-d -RR |
Reattach a session and if necessary detach or create it. Use the first session if more than one session is available. | ||
-D -r |
Reattach a session. If necessary detach and logout remotely first. | ||
-D -R |
Attach here and now. In detail this means: If a session is running, then reattach. If necessary detach and logout remotely first. If it was not running create it and notify the user. This is the author’s favorite. | ||
-D -RR |
Attach here and now. Whatever that means, just do it. |
Note: It is always a good idea to check the status of your sessions by means of screen -list.
-e xy
specifies the command character to be x and the character generating a literal command character to y (when typed after the command character). The default is C-a and ’a’, which can be specified as -e^Aa. When creating a screen session, this option sets the default command character. In a multiuser session all users added will start off with this command character. But when attaching to an already running session, this option changes only the command character of the attaching user. This option is equivalent to either the commands defescape or escape respectively.
-f, -fn, and -fa
turns flow-control on, off, or automatic switching mode. This can also be defined through the defflow .screenrc command.
-h num
Specifies the history scrollback buffer to be num lines high.
-i |
will cause the interrupt key (usually C-c) to interrupt the display immediately when flow-control is on. See the defflow .screenrc command for details. The use of this option is discouraged. |
-l and -ln
turns login mode on or off (for /run/utmp updating). This can also be defined through the deflogin .screenrc command.
-ls [match]
-list [match]
does not start screen, but prints a list of pid.tty.host strings and creation timestamps identifying your screen sessions. Sessions marked ’detached’ can be resumed with screen -r. Those marked ’attached’ are running and have a controlling terminal. If the session runs in multiuser mode, it is marked ’multi’. Sessions marked as ’unreachable’ either live on a different host or are ’dead’. An unreachable session is considered dead, when its name matches either the name of the local host, or the specified parameter, if any. See the -r flag for a description how to construct matches. Sessions marked as ’dead’ should be thoroughly checked and removed. Ask your system administrator if you are not sure. Remove sessions with the -wipe option.
-L |
tells screen to turn on automatic output logging for the windows. |
-Logfile file
By default logfile name is screenlog.0. You can set new logfile name with the -Logfile option.
-m |
causes screen to ignore the $STY environment variable. With screen -m creation of a new session is enforced, regardless whether screen is called from within another screen session or not. This flag has a special meaning in connection with the ’-d’ option: | |
-d -m |
Start screen in detached mode. This creates a new session but doesn’t attach to it. This is useful for system startup scripts. | |
-D -m |
This also starts screen in detached mode, but doesn’t fork a new process. The command exits if the session terminates. | |
-O |
selects an optimal output mode for your terminal rather than true VT100 emulation (only affects auto-margin terminals without ’LP’). This can also be set in your .screenrc by specifying ’OP’ in a termcap command. |
-p number_or_name|-|=|+
Preselect a window. This is useful when you want to reattach to a specific window or you want to send a command via the -X option to a specific window. As with screen’s select command, - selects the blank window. As a special case for reattach, = brings up the windowlist on the blank window, while a + will create a new window. The command will not be executed if the specified window could not be found.
-q |
Suppress printing of error messages. In combination with -ls the exit value is as follows: 9 indicates a directory without sessions. 10 indicates a directory with running but not attachable sessions. 11 (or more) indicates 1 (or more) usable sessions. In combination with -r the exit value is as follows: 10 indicates that there is no session to resume. 12 (or more) indicates that there are 2 (or more) sessions to resume and you should specify which one to choose. In all other cases -q has no effect. | ||
-Q |
Some commands now can be queried from a remote session using this flag, e.g. screen -Q windows. The commands will send the response to the stdout of the querying process. If there was an error in the command, then the querying process will exit with a non-zero status. |
The commands
that can be queried now are:
echo
info
lastmsg
number
select
time
title
windows
-r [pid.tty.host]
-r sessionowner/[pid.tty.host]
resumes a detached screen session. No other options (except combinations with -d/-D) may be specified, though an optional prefix of [pid.]tty.host may be needed to distinguish between multiple detached screen sessions. The second form is used to connect to another user’s screen session which runs in multiuser mode. This indicates that screen should look for sessions in another user’s directory. This requires setuid-root.
-R |
resumes screen only when it’s unambiguous which one to attach, usually when only one screen is detached. Otherwise lists available sessions. -RR attempts to resume the youngest (in terms of creation time) detached screen session it finds. If successful, all other command-line options are ignored. If no detached session exists, starts a new session using the specified options, just as if -R had not been specified. The option is set by default if screen is run as a login-shell (actually screen uses -xRR in that case). For combinations with the -d/-D option see there. Note: Time-based session selection is a Debian addition. |
-s program
sets the default shell to the program specified, instead of the value in the environment variable $SHELL (or /bin/sh if not defined). This can also be defined through the shell .screenrc command. See also there.
-S sessionname
When creating a new session, this option can be used to specify a meaningful name for the session. This name identifies the session for screen -list and screen -r actions. It substitutes the default [tty.host] suffix. This name should not be longer then 80 symbols.
-t name
sets the title (a.k.a.) for the default shell or specified program. See also the shelltitle .screenrc command.
-T term
Set the $TERM environment variable using the specified term as opposed to the default setting of screen.
-U |
Run screen in UTF-8 mode. This option tells screen that your terminal sends and understands UTF-8 encoded characters. It also sets the default encoding for new windows to ’utf8’. | ||
-v |
Print version number. |
-wipe [match]
does the same as screen -ls, but removes destroyed sessions instead of marking them as ’dead’. An unreachable session is considered dead, when its name matches either the name of the local host, or the explicitly given parameter, if any. See the -r flag for a description how to construct matches.
-x |
Attach to a not detached screen session. (Multi display mode). Screen refuses to attach from within itself. But when cascading multiple screens, loops are not detected; take care. | ||
-X |
Send the specified command to a running screen session. You may use the -S option to specify the screen session if you have several screen sessions running. You can use the -d or -r option to tell screen to look only for attached or detached screen sessions. Note that this command doesn’t work if the session is password protected. | ||
-4 |
Resolve hostnames only to IPv4 addresses. | ||
-6 |
Resolve hostnames only to IPv6 addresses. |
DEFAULT KEY BINDINGS
As mentioned, each screen command consists of a C-a followed by one other character. For your convenience, all commands that are bound to lower-case letters are also bound to their control character counterparts (with the exception of C-a a; see below), thus, C-a c as well as C-a C-c can be used to create a window. See section CUSTOMIZATION for a description of the command.
The following table shows the default key bindings. The trailing commas in boxes with multiple keystroke entries are separators, not part of the bindings.
CUSTOMIZATION
The socket directory defaults either to $HOME/.screen or simply to /tmp/screens or preferably to /run/screen chosen at compile-time. If screen is installed setuid-root, then the administrator should compile screen with an adequate (not NFS mounted) socket directory. If screen is not running setuid-root, the user can specify any mode 700 directory in the environment variable $SCREENDIR.
When screen is invoked, it executes initialization commands from the files /etc/screenrc and defaults that can be overridden in the following ways: for the global screenrc file screen searches for the environment variable $SYSSCREENRC (this override feature may be disabled at compile-time). The user specific screenrc file is searched in $SCREENRC, then $HOME/.screenrc. The command line option -c takes precedence over the above user screenrc files.
Commands in these files are used to set options, bind functions to keys, and to automatically establish one or more windows at the beginning of your screen session. Commands are listed one per line, with empty lines being ignored. A command’s arguments are separated by tabs or spaces, and may be surrounded by single or double quotes. A ’#’ turns the rest of the line into a comment, except in quotes. Unintelligible lines are warned about and ignored. Commands may contain references to environment variables. The syntax is the shell-like "$VAR " or "${VAR}". Note that this causes incompatibility with previous screen versions, as now the ’$’-character has to be protected with ’\’ if no variable substitution shall be performed. A string in single-quotes is also protected from variable substitution.
Two configuration files are shipped as examples with your screen distribution: etc/screenrc and etc/etcscreenrc. They contain a number of useful examples for various commands.
Customization can also be done ’on-line’. To enter the command mode type ’C-a :’. Note that commands starting with def change default values, while others change current settings.
The following
commands are available:
acladd usernames [crypted-pw]
addacl usernames
Enable users to
fully access this screen session. Usernames can be
one user or a comma separated list of users. This command
enables to attach to the screen session and performs
the equivalent of ’aclchg usernames +rwx
"#?"’. executed. To add a user with
restricted access, use the ’aclchg’ command
below. If an optional second parameter is supplied, it
should be a crypted password for the named user(s).
’Addacl’ is a synonym to ’acladd’.
Multi user mode only.
aclchg usernames permbits list
chacl usernames permbits list
Change permissions for a comma separated list of users. Permission bits are represented as ’r’, ’w’ and ’x’. Prefixing ’+’ grants the permission, ’-’ removes it. The third parameter is a comma separated list of commands and/or windows (specified either by number or title). The special list ’#’ refers to all windows, ’?’ to all commands. if usernames consists of a single ’*’, all known users are affected.
A command can
be executed when the user has the ’x’ bit for
it. The user can type input to a window when he has its
’w’ bit set and no other user obtains a
writelock for this window. Other bits are currently ignored.
To withdraw the writelock from another user in window 2:
’aclchg username -w+w 2’. To allow
read-only access to the session: ’aclchg
username -w "#"’. As soon as a
user’s name is known to screen he can attach to
the session and (per default) has full permissions for all
command and windows. Execution permission for the acl
commands, ’at’ and others should also be removed
or the user may be able to regain write permission. Rights
of the special username nobody cannot be changed (see
the su command). ’Chacl’ is a synonym to
’aclchg’. Multi user mode only.
acldel username
Remove a user
from screen’s access control list. If currently
attached, all the user’s displays are detached from
the session. He cannot attach again. Multi user mode only.
aclgrp username [groupname]
Creates groups
of users that share common access rights. The name of the
group is the username of the group leader. Each member of
the group inherits the permissions that are granted to the
group leader. That means, if a user fails an access check,
another check is made for the group leader. A user is
removed from all groups the special value none is used for
groupname. If the second parameter is omitted all
groups the user is in are listed.
aclumask [[ users ] +bits | [ users
] -bits... ]
umask [[ users ] +bits | [ users ]
-bits... ]
This specifies
the access other users have to windows that will be created
by the caller of the command. Users may be no, one or
a comma separated list of known usernames. If no users are
specified, a list of all currently known users is assumed.
Bits is any combination of access control bits
allowed defined with the aclchg command. The special
username ? predefines the access that not yet known users
will be granted to any window initially. The special
username ?? predefines the access that not yet known users
are granted to any command. Rights of the special username
nobody cannot be changed (see the su command).
’Umask’ is a synonym to ’aclumask’.
activity message
When any activity occurs in a background window that is being monitored, screen displays a notification in the message line. The notification message can be re-defined by means of the activity command. Each occurrence of ’%’ in message is replaced by the number of the window in which activity has occurred, and each occurrence of ’^G’ is replaced by the definition for bell in your termcap (usually an audible bell). The default message is
’Activity in window %n’ |
Note that
monitoring is off for all windows by default, but can be
altered by use of the monitor command (C-a M).
allpartial [ on | off ]
If set to on,
only the current cursor line is refreshed on window change.
This affects all windows and is useful for slow terminal
lines. The previous setting of full/partial refresh for each
window is restored with allpartial off. This is a global
flag that immediately takes effect on all windows overriding
the partial settings. It does not change the default redraw
behavior of newly created windows.
altscreen [ on | off ]
If set to on,
"alternate screen" support is enabled in virtual
terminals, just like in xterm. Initial setting is
’off’.
at [identifier][#|*|%]
command [args ... ]
Execute a command at other displays or windows as if it had been entered there. At changes the context (the ’current window’ or ’current display’ setting) of the command. If the first parameter describes a non-unique context, the command will be executed multiple times. If the first parameter is of the form ’identifier*’ then identifier is matched against user names. The command is executed once for each display of the selected user(s). If the first parameter is of the form ’identifier%’ identifier is matched against displays. Displays are named after the ttys they attach. The prefix ’/dev/’ or ’/dev/tty’ may be omitted from the identifier. If identifier has a ’#’ or nothing appended it is matched against window numbers and titles. Omitting an identifier in front of the ’#’, ’*’ or ’%’-character selects all users, displays or windows because a prefix-match is performed. Note that on the affected display(s) a short message will describe what happened. Permission is checked for initiator of the at command, not for the owners of the affected display(s). Note that the ’#’ character works as a comment introducer when it is preceded by whitespace. This can be escaped by prefixing a ’\’. Permission is checked for the initiator of the at command, not for the owners of the affected display(s).
Caveat: When
matching against windows, the command is executed at least
once per window. Commands that change the internal
arrangement of windows (like other) may be called again. In
shared windows the command will be repeated for each
attached display. Beware, when issuing toggle commands like
login! Some commands (e.g. process) require that a display
is associated with the target windows. These commands may
not work correctly under at looping over windows.
attrcolor attrib
[attribute/color-modifier]
This command can be used to highlight attributes by changing the color of the text. If the attribute attrib is in use, the specified attribute/color modifier is also applied. If no modifier is given, the current one is deleted. See the STRING ESCAPES chapter for the syntax of the modifier. Screen understands two pseudo-attributes, i stands for high-intensity foreground color and I for high-intensity background color.
Examples:
attrcolor b "R"
Change the color to bright red if bold text is to be printed.
attrcolor u "-u b"
Use blue text instead of underline.
attrcolor b ".I"
Use bright colors for bold text. Most terminal emulators do this already.
attrcolor i "+b"
Make bright
colored text also bold.
autodetach [ on | off ]
Sets whether
screen will automatically detach upon hangup, which
saves all your running programs until they are resumed with
a screen -r command. When turned off, a hangup signal
will terminate screen and all the processes it
contains. Autodetach is on by default.
autonuke [ on | off ]
Sets whether a
clear screen sequence should nuke all the output that has
not been written to the terminal. See also obuflimit.
backtick id lifespan autorefresh cmd args...
backtick id
Program the backtick command with the numerical id id. The output of such a command is used for substitution of the %’ string escape. The specified lifespan is the number of seconds the output is considered valid. After this time, the command is run again if a corresponding string escape is encountered. The autorefresh parameter triggers an automatic refresh for caption and hardstatus strings after the specified number of seconds. Only the last line of output is used for substitution.
If both the lifespan and the autorefresh parameters are zero, the backtick program is expected to stay in the background and generate output once in a while. In this case, the command is executed right away and screen stores the last line of output. If a new line gets printed screen will automatically refresh the hardstatus or the captions.
The second form
of the command deletes the backtick command with the
numerical id id.
bce [ on | off ]
Change
background-color-erase setting. If bce is set to on, all
characters cleared by an erase/insert/scroll/clear operation
will be displayed in the current background color. Otherwise
the default background color is used.
bell_msg [message]
When a bell character is sent to a background window, screen displays a notification in the message line. The notification message can be re-defined by this command. Each occurrence of ’%’ in message is replaced by the number of the window to which a bell has been sent, and each occurrence of ’^G’ is replaced by the definition for bell in your termcap (usually an audible bell). The default message is
’Bell in window %n’ |
An empty
message can be supplied to the bell_msg command to suppress
output of a message line (bell_msg ""). Without
parameter, the current message is shown.
bind [class] key [command
[args]]
Bind a command to a key. By default, most of the commands provided by screen are bound to one or more keys as indicated in the DEFAULT KEY BINDINGS section, e.g. the command to create a new window is bound to C-c and c. The bind command can be used to redefine the key bindings and to define new bindings. The key argument is either a single character, a two-character sequence of the form ^x (meaning C-x), a backslash followed by an octal number (specifying the ASCII code of the character), or a backslash followed by a second character, such as \^ or \\. The argument can also be quoted, if you like. If no further argument is given, any previously established binding for this key is removed. The command argument can be any command listed in this section.
If a command class is specified via the -c option, the key is bound for the specified class. Use the command command to activate a class. Command classes can be used to create multiple command keys or multi-character bindings.
Some examples:
bind ’ ’ windows | |
bind ^k | |
bind k | |
bind K kill | |
bind ^f screen telnet foobar | |
bind \033 screen -ln -t root -h 1000 9 su |
would bind the space key to the command that displays a list of windows (so that the command usually invoked by C-a C-w would also be available as C-a space). The next three lines remove the default kill binding from C-a C-k and C-a k. C-a K is then bound to the kill command. Then it binds C-f to the command create a window with a TELNET connection to foobar, and bind escape to the command that creates an non-login window with a.k.a. root in slot #9, with a superuser shell and a scrollback buffer of 1000 lines.
bind -c demo1 0 select 10 | |
bind -c demo1 1 select 11 | |
bind -c demo1 2 select 12 | |
bindkey "^B" command -c demo1 |
makes C-b 0 select window 10, C-b 1 window 11, etc.
bind -c demo2 0 select 10 | |
bind -c demo2 1 select 11 | |
bind -c demo2 2 select 12 | |
bind - command -c demo2 |
makes C-a - 0
select window 10, C-a - 1 window 11, etc.
bindkey [-d] [-m] [-a]
[[-k|-t] string [cmd-args]]
This command manages screen’s input translation tables. Every entry in one of the tables tells screen how to react if a certain sequence of characters is encountered. There are three tables: one that should contain actions programmed by the user, one for the default actions used for terminal emulation and one for screen’s copy mode to do cursor movement. See section INPUT TRANSLATION for a list of default key bindings.
If the -d option is given, bindkey modifies the default table, -m changes the copy mode table and with neither option the user table is selected. The argument string is the sequence of characters to which an action is bound. This can either be a fixed string or a termcap keyboard capability name (selectable with the -k option).
Some keys on a VT100 terminal can send a different string if application mode is turned on (e.g the cursor keys). Such keys have two entries in the translation table. You can select the application mode entry by specifying the -a option.
The -t option tells screen not to do inter-character timing. One cannot turn off the timing if a termcap capability is used.
Cmd can be any of screen’s commands with an arbitrary number of args. If cmd is omitted the key-binding is removed from the table.
Here are some examples of keyboard bindings:
bindkey -d
Show all of the default key bindings. The application mode entries are marked with [A].
bindkey -k k1 select 1
Make the "F1" key switch to window one.
bindkey -t foo stuff barfoo
Make "foo" an abbreviation of the word "barfoo". Timeout is disabled so that users can type slowly.
bindkey "\024" mapdefault
This key-binding makes ^T an escape character for key-bindings. If you did the above stuff barfoo binding, you can enter the word foo by typing ^Tfoo. If you want to insert a ^T you have to press the key twice (i.e., escape the escape binding).
bindkey -k F1 command
Make the F11
(not F1!) key an alternative screen escape (besides ^A).
break [duration]
Send a break
signal for duration*0.25 seconds to this window. For
non-Posix systems the time interval may be rounded up to
full seconds. Most useful if a character device is attached
to the window rather than a shell process (See also chapter
WINDOW TYPES). The maximum duration of a break signal is
limited to 15 seconds.
blanker
Activate the screen blanker. First the screen is cleared. If no blanker program is defined, the cursor is turned off, otherwise, the program is started and it’s output is written to the screen. The screen blanker is killed with the first keypress, the read key is discarded.
This command is
normally used together with the idle command.
blankerprg [program-args]
Defines a
blanker program. Disables the blanker program if an empty
argument is given. Shows the currently set blanker program
if no arguments are given.
breaktype
[tcsendbreak|TIOCSBRK|TCSBRK]
Choose one of
the available methods of generating a break signal for
terminal devices. This command should affect the current
window only. But it still behaves identical to defbreaktype.
This will be changed in the future. Calling breaktype with
no parameter displays the break method for the current
window.
bufferfile [exchange-file]
Change the filename used for reading and writing with the paste buffer. If the optional argument to the bufferfile command is omitted, the default setting (/tmp/screen-exchange) is reactivated. The following example will paste the system’s password file into the screen window (using the paste buffer, where a copy remains):
C-a : bufferfile /etc/passwd | |
C-a < C-a ] | |
C-a : bufferfile |
bumpleft
Swaps window
with previous one on window list.
bumpright
Swaps window
with next one on window list.
c1 [ on | off ]
Change c1 code
processing. C1 on tells screen to treat the input
characters between 128 and 159 as control functions. Such an
8-bit code is normally the same as ESC followed by the
corresponding 7-bit code. The default setting is to process
c1 codes and can be changed with the defc1 command. Users
with fonts that have usable characters in the c1 positions
may want to turn this off.
caption [ top | bottom ]
always|splitonly[string]
caption string [string]
This command controls the display of the window captions. Normally a caption is only used if more than one window is shown on the display (split screen mode). But if the type is set to always screen shows a caption even if only one window is displayed. The default is splitonly.
The second form changes the text used for the caption. You can use all escapes from the STRING ESCAPES chapter. Screen uses a default of ’%3n %t’.
You can mix both forms by providing a string as an additional argument.
You can have
the caption displayed either at the top or bottom of the
window. The default is bottom.
charset set
Change the
current character set slot designation and charset mapping.
The first four character of set are treated as
charset designators while the fifth and sixth character must
be in range ’0’ to ’3’ and set the
GL/GR charset mapping. On every position a ’.’
may be used to indicate that the corresponding
charset/mapping should not be changed (set is padded
to six characters internally by appending ’.’
chars). New windows have "BBBB02" as default
charset, unless a encoding command is active.
The current setting can be viewed with the info command.
chdir [directory]
Change the current directory of screen to the specified directory or, if called without an argument, to your home directory (the value of the environment variable $HOME). All windows that are created by means of the screen command from within .screenrc or by means of C-a : screen ... or C-a c use this as their default directory. Without a chdir command, this would be the directory from which screen was invoked.
Hardcopy and
log files are always written to the window’s
default directory, not the current directory of the
process running in the window. You can use this command
multiple times in your .screenrc to start various windows in
different default directories, but the last chdir value will
affect all the windows you create interactively.
cjkwidth [ on | off ]
Treat ambiguous width characters as full/half width.
clear |
Clears the current window and
saves its image to the scrollback buffer.
collapse
Reorders window
on window list, removing number gaps between them.
colon [prefix]
Allows you to enter .screenrc command lines. Useful for on-the-fly modification of key bindings, specific window creation and changing settings. Note that the set keyword no longer exists! Usually commands affect the current window rather than default settings for future windows. Change defaults with commands starting with ’def...’.
If you consider
this as the ’Ex command mode’ of screen,
you may regard C-a esc (copy mode) as its ’Vi command
mode’.
command [ -c class"]"
This command
has the same effect as typing the screen escape character
(^A). It is probably only useful for key bindings. If the -c
option is given, select the specified command class. See
also bind and bindkey.
compacthist [ on | off ]
This tells
screen whether to suppress trailing blank lines when
scrolling up text into the history buffer.
console [ on | off ]
Grabs or un-grabs the machines console output to a window. Note: Only the owner of /dev/console can grab the console output. This command is only available if the machine supports the ioctl TIOCCONS.
copy |
Enter copy/scrollback mode.
This allows you to copy text from the current window and its
history into the paste buffer. In this mode a vi-like
’full screen editor’ is active:
The editor’s movement keys are:
Note: Emacs style movement keys can be customized by a .screenrc command. (E.g. markkeys "h=^B:l=^F:$=^E") There is no simple method for a full emacs-style keymap, as this involves multi-character codes.
Some keys are defined to do mark and replace operations.
The copy range is specified by setting two marks. The text between these marks will be highlighted. Press:
space or enter to set the first or second mark respectively. If mousetrack is set to ’on’, marks can also be set using left mouse click.
Y and y used to mark one whole line or to mark from start of line.
W marks exactly one word.
Any of these commands can be prefixed with a repeat count number by pressing digits
0..9 which is taken as a repeat count.
Example: C-a C-[ H 10 j 5 Y will copy lines 11 to 15 into the paste buffer.
The following search keys are defined:
/ Vi-like search forward.
? Vi-like search backward.
C-a s Emacs style incremental search forward.
C-r Emacs style reverse i-search.
n Find next search pattern.
N Find previous search pattern.
There are however some keys that act differently than in vi. Vi does not allow one to yank rectangular blocks of text, but screen does. Press: c or C to set the left or right margin respectively. If no repeat count is given, both default to the current cursor position.
Example: Try this on a rather full text screen:
C-a [ M 20 l SPACE c 10 l 5 j C SPACE.
This moves one to the middle line of the screen, moves in 20 columns left, marks the beginning of the paste buffer, sets the left column, moves 5 columns down, sets the right column, and then marks the end of the paste buffer. Now try:
C-a [ M 20 l SPACE 10 l 5 j SPACE
and notice the difference in the amount of text copied.
J joins lines. It toggles between 4 modes: lines separated by a newline character (012), lines glued seamless, lines separated by a single whitespace and comma separated lines. Note that you can prepend the newline character with a carriage return character, by issuing a crlf on.
v or V is for all the vi users with :set numbers - it toggles the left margin between column 9 and 1. Press
a before the final space key to toggle in append mode. Thus the contents of the paste buffer will not be overwritten, but is appended to.
A toggles in append mode and sets a (second) mark.
> sets the (second) mark and writes the contents of the paste buffer to the screen-exchange file (/tmp/screen-exchange per default) once copy-mode is finished.
This example demonstrates how to dump the whole scrollback buffer to that file: C-A [ g SPACE G $ >.
C-g gives information about the current line and column.
x or o exchanges the first mark and the current cursor position. You can use this to adjust an already placed mark.
C-l (’el’) will redraw the screen.
@ does nothing. Does not even exit copy mode.
All keys not
described here exit copy mode.
copy_reg [key]
No longer
exists, use readreg instead.
crlf [ on | off ]
This affects
the copying of text regions with the ’C-a [’
command. If it is set to ’on’, lines will be
separated by the two character sequence ’CR’ -
’LF’. Otherwise (default) only ’LF’
is used. When no parameter is given, the state is toggled.
debug [ on | off ]
Turns runtime
debugging on or off. If screen has been compiled with
option -DDEBUG debugging available and is turned on per
default. Note that this command only affects debugging
output from the main SCREEN process correctly. Debug output
from attacher processes can only be turned off once and
forever.
defc1 [ on | off ]
Same as the
c1 command except that the default setting for new
windows is changed. Initial setting is ’on’.
defautonuke [ on | off ]
Same as the
autonuke command except that the default setting for
new displays is changed. Initial setting is
’off’. Note that you can use the special
’AN’ terminal capability if you want to have a
dependency on the terminal type.
defbce [ on | off ]
Same as the
bce command except that the default setting for new
windows is changed. Initial setting is ’off’.
defbreaktype
[tcsendbreak|TIOCSBRK|TCSBRK]
Choose one of
the available methods of generating a break signal for
terminal devices. The preferred methods are
tcsendbreak and TIOCSBRK. The third,
TCSBRK, blocks the complete screen session for
the duration of the break, but it may be the only way to
generate long breaks. Tcsendbreak and TIOCSBRK
may or may not produce long breaks with spikes (e.g. 4 per
second). This is not only system-dependent, this also
differs between serial board drivers. Calling defbreaktype
with no parameter displays the current setting.
defcharset [set]
Like the
charset command except that the default setting for
new windows is changed. Shows current default if called
without argument.
defdynamictitle [ on | off ]
Set default
behaviour for new windows regarding if screen should change
window title when seeing proper escape sequence. See also
"TITLES (naming windows)" section.
defescape xy
Set the default
command characters. This is equivalent to the escape except
that it is useful multiuser sessions only. In a multiuser
session escape changes the command character of the calling
user, where defescape changes the default command characters
for users that will be added later.
defflow [ on | off | auto [ interrupt ]]
Same as the
flow command except that the default setting for new
windows is changed. Initial setting is ’auto’.
Specifying defflow auto interrupt is the same as the
command-line options -fa and -i.
defgr [ on | off ]
Same as the
gr command except that the default setting for new
windows is changed. Initial setting is ’off’.
defhstatus [status]
The hardstatus
line that all new windows will get is set to status.
This command is useful to make the hardstatus of every
window display the window number or title or the like.
Status may contain the same directives as in the
window messages, but the directive escape character is
’^E’ (octal 005) instead of ’%’.
This was done to make a misinterpretation of program
generated hardstatus lines impossible. If the parameter
status is omitted, the current default string is
displayed. Per default the hardstatus line of new windows is
empty.
defencoding enc
Same as the
encoding command except that the default setting for
new windows is changed. Initial setting is the encoding
taken from the terminal.
deflog [ on | off ]
Same as the
log command except that the default setting for new
windows is changed. Initial setting is ’off’.
deflogin [ on | off ]
Same as the
login command except that the default setting for new
windows is changed. This is initialized with
’on’ as distributed (see config.h.in).
defmode mode
The mode of
each newly allocated pseudo-tty is set to mode.
Mode is an octal number. When no defmode command is
given, mode 0622 is used.
defmonitor [ on | off]
Same as the
monitor command except that the default setting for
new windows is changed. Initial setting is
’off’.
defmousetrack [ on | off ]
Same as the
mousetrack command except that the default setting
for new windows is changed. Initial setting is
’off’.
defnonblock [ on | off | numsecs]
Same as the
nonblock command except that the default setting for
displays is changed. Initial setting is ’off’.
defobuflimit limit
Same as the
obuflimit command except that the default setting for
new displays is changed. Initial setting is 256 bytes. Note
that you can use the special ’OL’ terminal
capability if you want to have a dependency on the terminal
type.
defscrollback num
Same as the
scrollback command except that the default setting
for new windows is changed. Initial setting is 100.
defshell command
Synonym to the
shell .screenrc command. See there.
defsilence [ on | off ]
Same as the
silence command except that the default setting for
new windows is changed. Initial setting is
’off’.
defslowpaste msec
Same as the
slowpaste command except that the default setting for
new windows is changed. Initial setting is 0 milliseconds,
meaning ’off’.
defutf8 [ on | off ]
Same as the
utf8 command except that the default setting for new
windows is changed. Initial setting is ’on’ if
screen was started with -U, otherwise ’off’.
defwrap [ on | off ]
Same as the
wrap command except that the default setting for new
windows is changed. Initially line-wrap is on and can be
toggled with the wrap command (C-a r) or by means of
"C-a : wrap on|off".
defwritelock [ on | off | auto ]
Same as the
writelock command except that the default setting for
new windows is changed. Initially writelocks will off.
detach [-h]
Detach the screen session (disconnect it from the terminal and put it into the background). This returns you to the shell where you invoked screen. A detached screen can be resumed by invoking screen with the -r option (see also section COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS). The -h option tells screen to immediately close the connection to the terminal (hangup).
dinfo |
Show what screen thinks about
your terminal. Useful if you want to know why features like
color or the alternate charset don’t work.
displays
Shows a tabular listing of all currently connected user front-ends (displays). This is most useful for multiuser sessions. The following keys can be used in displays list:
The following is an example of what displays could look like:
xterm 80x42 jnweiger@/dev/ttyp4 0(m11) &rWx facit 80x24 mlschroe@/dev/ttyhf nb 11(tcsh) rwx xterm 80x42 jnhollma@/dev/ttyp5 0(m11) &R.x (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) (F)(G) (H)(I)
The legend is as follows:
(A) The terminal type known by screen for this display.
(B) Displays geometry as width x height.
(C) Username who is logged in at the display.
(D) Device name of the display or the attached device
(E) Display is in blocking or nonblocking mode. The available modes are "nb", "NB", "Z<", "Z>", and "BL".
(F) Number of the window
(G) Name/title of window
(H) Whether the window is shared
(I) Window permissions. Made up of three characters.
displays needs a region size of at least 10 characters wide and 5 characters high in order to display.
digraph [preset[unicode-value]]
This command
prompts the user for a digraph sequence. The next two
characters typed are looked up in a builtin table and the
resulting character is inserted in the input stream. For
example, if the user enters ’a"’, an
a-umlaut will be inserted. If the first character entered is
a 0 (zero), screen will treat the following
characters (up to three) as an octal number instead. The
optional argument preset is treated as user input,
thus one can create an umlaut key. For example the command
"bindkey ^K digraph ’"’" enables
the user to generate an a-umlaut by typing CTRL-K a. When a
non-zero unicode-value is specified, a new digraph is
created with the specified preset. The digraph is unset if a
zero value is provided for the unicode-value.
dumptermcap
Write the
termcap entry for the virtual terminal optimized for the
currently active window to the file .termcap in the
user’s $HOME/.screen directory (or wherever
screen stores its sockets. See the FILES section
below). This termcap entry is identical to the value of the
environment variable $TERMCAP that is set up by
screen for each window. For terminfo based systems
you will need to run a converter like captoinfo and
then compile the entry with tic.
dynamictitle [ on | off ]
Change
behaviour for windows regarding if screen should change
window title when seeing proper escape sequence. See also
"TITLES (naming windows)" section.
echo [-n] message
The echo
command may be used to annoy screen users with a
’message of the day’. Typically installed in a
global /etc/screenrc. The option -n may be used to suppress
the line feed. See also sleep. Echo is also useful for
online checking of environment variables.
encoding enc [enc]
Tell screen how to interpret the input/output. The first argument sets the encoding of the current window. Each window can emulate a different encoding. The optional second parameter overwrites the encoding of the connected terminal. It should never be needed as screen uses the locale setting to detect the encoding. There is also a way to select a terminal encoding depending on the terminal type by using the KJ termcap entry.
Supported encodings are eucJP, SJIS, eucKR, eucCN, Big5, GBK, KOI8-R, KOI8-U, CP1251, UTF-8, ISO8859-2, ISO8859-3, ISO8859-4, ISO8859-5, ISO8859-6, ISO8859-7, ISO8859-8, ISO8859-9, ISO8859-10, ISO8859-15, jis.
See also
defencoding, which changes the default setting of a new
window.
escape xy
Set the command
character to x and the character generating a literal
command character (by triggering the meta command) to
y (similar to the -e option). Each argument is either
a single character, a two-character sequence of the form ^x
(meaning C-x), a backslash followed by an octal number
(specifying the ASCII code of the character), or a backslash
followed by a second character, such as \^ or \\. The
default is ^Aa.
eval command1[command2 ...]
Parses and
executes each argument as separate command.
exec [[fdpat]newcommand [args
...]]
Run a unix subprocess (specified by an executable path newcommand and its optional arguments) in the current window. The flow of data between newcommands stdin/stdout/stderr, the process originally started in the window (let us call it "application-process") and screen itself (window) is controlled by the file descriptor pattern fdpat. This pattern is basically a three character sequence representing stdin, stdout and stderr of newcommand. A dot (.) connects the file descriptor to screen. An exclamation mark (!) causes the file descriptor to be connected to the application-process. A colon (:) combines both. User input will go to newcommand unless newcommand receives the application-process’ output (fdpats first character is ’!’ or ’:’) or a pipe symbol (|) is added (as a fourth character) to the end of fdpat.
Invoking ’exec’ without arguments shows name and arguments of the currently running subprocess in this window. Only one subprocess a time can be running in each window.
When a subprocess is running the ’kill’ command will affect it instead of the windows process.
Refer to the postscript file ’doc/fdpat.ps’ for a confusing illustration of all 21 possible combinations. Each drawing shows the digits 2,1,0 representing the three file descriptors of newcommand. The box marked ’W’ is the usual pty that has the application-process on its slave side. The box marked ’P’ is the secondary pty that now has screen at its master side.
Abbreviations: Whitespace between the word ’exec’ and fdpat and the command can be omitted. Trailing dots and a fdpat consisting only of dots can be omitted. A simple ’|’ is synonymous for the pattern ’!..|’; the word exec can be omitted here and can always be replaced by ’!’.
Examples:
exec ... /bin/sh
exec /bin/sh
!/bin/sh
Creates another shell in the same window, while the original shell is still running. Output of both shells is displayed and user input is sent to the new /bin/sh.
exec !.. stty 19200
exec ! stty 19200
!!stty 19200
Set the speed of the window’s tty. If your stty command operates on stdout, then add another ’!’.
exec !..| less
|less |
This adds a pager to the window output. The special character ’|’ is needed to give the user control over the pager although it gets its input from the window’s process. This works, because less listens on stderr (a behavior that screen would not expect without the ’|’) when its stdin is not a tty. Less versions newer than 177 fail miserably here; good old pg still works. |
!:sed -n s/.*Error.*/\007/p
Sends window output to both, the user and the sed command. The sed inserts an additional bell character (oct. 007) to the window output seen by screen. This will cause "Bell in window x" messages, whenever the string "Error" appears in the window.
fit |
Change the window size to the
size of the current region. This command is needed because
screen doesn’t adapt the window size automatically if
the window is displayed more than once.
flow [ on | off | auto]
Sets the
flow-control mode for this window. Without parameters it
cycles the current window’s flow-control setting from
"automatic" to "on" to "off".
See the discussion on FLOW-CONTROL later on in this document
for full details and note, that this is subject to change in
future releases. Default is set by ’defflow’.
focus [ next | prev | up | down | left | right | top |
bottom ]
Move the input focus to the next region. This is done in a cyclic way so that the top left region is selected after the bottom right one. If no option is given it defaults to ’next’. The next region to be selected is determined by how the regions are layered. Normally, the next region in the same layer would be selected. However, if that next region contains one or more layers, the first region in the highest layer is selected first. If you are at the last region of the current layer, ’next’ will move the focus to the next region in the lower layer (if there is a lower layer). ’Prev’ cycles in the opposite order. See split for more information about layers.
The rest of the options (’up’, ’down’, ’left’, ’right’, ’top’, and ’bottom’) are more indifferent to layers. The option ’up’ will move the focus upward to the region that is touching the upper left corner of the current region. ’Down’ will move downward to the region that is touching the lower left corner of the current region. The option ’left’ will move the focus leftward to the region that is touching the upper left corner of the current region, while ’right’ will move rightward to the region that is touching the upper right corner of the current region. Moving left from a left most region or moving right from a right most region will result in no action.
The option ’top’ will move the focus to the very first region in the upper list corner of the screen, and ’bottom’ will move to the region in the bottom right corner of the screen. Moving up from a top most region or moving down from a bottom most region will result in no action.
Useful bindings
are (h, j, k, and l as in vi)
bind h focus left
bind j focus down
bind k focus up
bind l focus right
bind t focus top
bind b focus bottom
Note that k is traditionally bound to the kill
command.
focusminsize [ ( width|max|_ ) (
height|max|_ ) ]
This forces any
currently selected region to be automatically resized at
least a certain width and height. All other
surrounding regions will be resized in order to accommodate.
This constraint follows every time the focus command is
used. The resize command can be used to increase either
dimension of a region, but never below what is set with
focusminsize. The underscore ’_’ is a synonym
for max. Setting a width and height of
’0 0’ (zero zero) will undo any constraints and
allow for manual resizing. Without any parameters, the
minimum width and height is shown.
gr [ on | off ]
Turn GR charset
switching on/off. Whenever screen sees an input character
with the 8th bit set, it will use the charset stored in the
GR slot and print the character with the 8th bit stripped.
The default (see also defgr) is not to process GR switching
because otherwise the ISO88591 charset would not work.
group [grouptitle]
Change or show
the group the current window belongs to. Windows can be
moved around between different groups by specifying the name
of the destination group. Without specifying a group, the
title of the current group is displayed.
hardcopy [-h] [file]
Writes out the
currently displayed image to the file file, or, if no
filename is specified, to hardcopy.n in the default
directory, where n is the number of the current
window. This either appends or overwrites the file if it
exists. See below. If the option -h is specified,
dump also the contents of the scrollback buffer.
hardcopy_append [ on | off ]
If set to
"on", screen will append to the
"hardcopy.n" files created by the command C-a h,
otherwise these files are overwritten each time. Default is
’off’.
hardcopydir directory
Defines a
directory where hardcopy files will be placed. If unset,
hardcopys are dumped in screen’s current
working directory.
hardstatus [ on | off ]
hardstatus [ always ] firstline | lastline | message |
ignore [ string
]
hardstatus string [ string ]
This command configures the use and emulation of the terminal’s hardstatus line. The first form toggles whether screen will use the hardware status line to display messages. If the flag is set to ’off’, these messages are overlaid in reverse video mode at the display line. The default setting is ’on’.
The second form tells screen what to do if the terminal doesn’t have a hardstatus line (i.e. the termcap/terminfo capabilities "hs", "ts", "fs" and "ds" are not set). When firstline/lastline is used, screen will reserve the first/last line of the display for the hardstatus. message uses screen’s message mechanism and ignore tells screen never to display the hardstatus. If you prepend the word always to the type (e.g., alwayslastline), screen will use the type even if the terminal supports a hardstatus.
The third form specifies the contents of the hardstatus line. ’%h’ is used as default string, i.e., the stored hardstatus of the current window (settable via ESC]0;<string>^G or ESC_<string>ESC\) is displayed. You can customize this to any string you like including the escapes from the STRING ESCAPES chapter. If you leave out the argument string, the current string is displayed.
You can mix the
second and third form by providing the string as additional
argument.
height [-w|-d] [lines
[cols]]
Set the display
height to a specified number of lines. When no argument is
given it toggles between 24 and 42 lines display. You can
also specify a width if you want to change both values. The
-w option tells screen to leave the display size
unchanged and just set the window size, -d vice
versa.
help[class]
Not really a
online help, but displays a help screen showing you
all the key bindings. The first pages list all the internal
commands followed by their current bindings. Subsequent
pages will display the custom commands, one command per key.
Press space when you’re done reading each page, or
return to exit early. All other characters are ignored. If
the -c option is given, display all bound commands for the
specified command class. See also DEFAULT KEY BINDINGS
section.
history
Usually users
work with a shell that allows easy access to previous
commands. For example csh has the command !! to repeat the
last command executed. Screen allows you to have a
primitive way of re-calling the command that started ...:
You just type the first letter of that command, then hit
’C-a {’ and screen tries to find a
previous line that matches with the ’prompt
character’ to the left of the cursor. This line is
pasted into this window’s input queue. Thus you have a
crude command history (made up by the visible window and its
scrollback buffer).
hstatus status
Change the
window’s hardstatus line to the string status.
idle [timeout[cmd-args]]
Sets a command
that is run after the specified number of seconds inactivity
is reached. This command will normally be the blanker
command to create a screen blanker, but it can be any screen
command. If no command is specified, only the timeout is
set. A timeout of zero (or the special timeout off)
disables the timer. If no arguments are given, the current
settings are displayed.
ignorecase [ on | off ]
Tell screen to ignore the case of characters in searches. Default is ’off’. Without any options, the state of ignorecase is toggled.
info |
Uses the message line to display some information about the current window: the cursor position in the form (column,row) starting with (1,1), the terminal width and height plus the size of the scrollback buffer in lines, like in (80,24)+50, the current state of window XON/XOFF flow control is shown like this (See also section FLOW CONTROL):
The current line wrap setting (’+wrap’ indicates enabled, ’-wrap’ not) is also shown. The flags ’ins’, ’org’, ’app’, ’log’, ’mon’ or ’nored’ are displayed when the window is in insert mode, origin mode, application-keypad mode, has output logging, activity monitoring or partial redraw enabled.
The currently active character set (G0, G1, G2, or G3) and in square brackets the terminal character sets that are currently designated as G0 through G3 is shown. If the window is in UTF-8 mode, the string UTF-8 is shown instead.
Additional modes depending on the type of the window are displayed at the end of the status line (See also chapter WINDOW TYPES).
If the state machine of the terminal emulator is in a non-default state, the info line is started with a string identifying the current state.
For system
information use the time command.
ins_reg [key]
No longer exists, use paste instead.
kill |
Kill current window.
If there is an ’exec’ command running then it is killed. Otherwise the process (shell) running in the window receives a HANGUP condition, the window structure is removed and screen (your display) switches to another window. When the last window is destroyed, screen exits. After a kill screen switches to the previously displayed window.
Note:
Emacs users should keep this command in mind, when
killing a line. It is recommended not to use C-a as the
screen escape key or to rebind kill to C-a K.
lastmsg
Redisplay the
last contents of the message/status line. Useful if
you’re typing when a message appears, because the
message goes away when you press a key (unless your terminal
has a hardware status line). Refer to the commands msgwait
and msgminwait for fine tuning.
layout new [title]
Create a new
layout. The screen will change to one whole region and be
switched to the blank window. From here, you build the
regions and the windows they show as you desire. The new
layout will be numbered with the smallest available integer,
starting with zero. You can optionally give a title to your
new layout. Otherwise, it will have a default title of
layout. You can always change the title later by using the
command layout title.
layout remove [n|title]
Remove, or in other words, delete the specified layout. Either the number or the title can be specified. Without either specification, screen will remove the current layout.
Removing a
layout does not affect your set windows or regions.
layout next
Switch to the
next layout available
layout prev
Switch to the
previous layout available
layout select [n|title]
Select the
desired layout. Either the number or the title can be
specified. Without either specification, screen will
prompt and ask which screen is desired. To see which layouts
are available, use the layout show command.
layout show
List on the
message line the number(s) and title(s) of the available
layout(s). The current layout is flagged.
layout title [title]
Change or
display the title of the current layout. A string given will
be used to name the layout. Without any options, the current
title and number is displayed on the message line.
layout number [n]
Change or
display the number of the current layout. An integer given
will be used to number the layout. Without any options, the
current number and title is displayed on the message line.
layout attach [title|:last]
Change or
display which layout to reattach back to. The default is
:last, which tells screen to reattach back to
the last used layout just before detachment. By supplying a
title, You can instruct screen to reattach to a
particular layout regardless which one was used at the time
of detachment. Without any options, the layout to reattach
to will be shown in the message line.
layout save [n|title]
Remember the current arrangement of regions. When used, screen will remember the arrangement of vertically and horizontally split regions. This arrangement is restored when a screen session is reattached or switched back from a different layout. If the session ends or the screen process dies, the layout arrangements are lost. The layout dump command should help in this situation. If a number or title is supplied, screen will remember the arrangement of that particular layout. Without any options, screen will remember the current layout.
Saving your
regions can be done automatically by using the layout
autosave command.
layout autosave [ on | off]
Change or
display the status of automatically saving layouts. The
default is on, meaning when screen is detached
or changed to a different layout, the arrangement of regions
and windows will be remembered at the time of change and
restored upon return. If autosave is set to off, that
arrangement will only be restored to either to the last
manual save, using layout save, or to when the layout
was first created, to a single region with a single window.
Without either an on or off, the current
status is displayed on the message line.
layout dump [filename]
Write to a file the order of splits made in the current layout. This is useful to recreate the order of your regions used in your current layout. Only the current layout is recorded. While the order of the regions are recorded, the sizes of those regions and which windows correspond to which regions are not. If no filename is specified, the default is layout-dump, saved in the directory that the screen process was started in. If the file already exists, layout dump will append to that file. As an example:
C-a : layout dump /home/user/.screenrc
will save or
append the layout to the user’s .screenrc file.
license
Display the
disclaimer page. This is done whenever screen is
started without options, which should be often enough. See
also the startup_message command.
lockscreen
Lock this display. Call a screenlock program. Screen does not accept any command keys until this program terminates. Meanwhile processes in the windows may continue, as the windows are in the ’detached’ state. The screenlock program may be changed through the environment variable $LOCKPRG (which must be set in the shell from which screen is started) and is executed with the user’s uid and gid.
Warning: When
you leave other shells unlocked and you have no password set
on screen, the lock is void: One could easily
re-attach from an unlocked shell. This feature should rather
be called ’lockterminal’.
log [ on | off ]
Start/stop
writing output of the current window to a file
screenlog.n in the window’s default directory,
where n is the number of the current window. This
filename can be changed with the ’logfile’
command. If no parameter is given, the state of logging is
toggled. The session log is appended to the previous
contents of the file if it already exists. The current
contents and the contents of the scrollback history are not
included in the session log. Default is ’off’.
logfile filename
logfile flush secs
Defines the
name the log files will get. The default is screenlog.%n.
The second form changes the number of seconds screen
will wait before flushing the logfile buffer to the
file-system. The default value is 10 seconds.
login [ on | off ]
Adds or removes
the entry in the utmp database file for the current window.
This controls if the window is ’logged in’. When
no parameter is given, the login state of the window is
toggled. Additionally to that toggle, it is convenient
having a ’log in’ and a ’log out’
key. E.g. ’bind I login on’ and ’bind O
login off’ will map these keys to be C-a I and C-a O.
The default setting (in config.h.in) should be on for a
screen that runs under suid-root. Use the deflogin
command to change the default login state for new windows.
Both commands are only present when screen has been
compiled with utmp support.
logtstamp [on|off]
logtstamp after [secs]
logtstamp string
[string]
This command
controls logfile time-stamp mechanism of screen. If
time-stamps are turned on, screen adds a string
containing the current time to the logfile after two minutes
of inactivity. When output continues and more than another
two minutes have passed, a second time-stamp is added to
document the restart of the output. You can change this
timeout with the second form of the command. The third form
is used for customizing the time-stamp string (’--
%n:%t -- time-stamp -- %M/%d/%y %c:%s --\n’ by
default).
mapdefault
Tell
screen that the next input character should only be
looked up in the default bindkey table. See also bindkey.
mapnotnext
Like
mapdefault, but don’t even look in the default bindkey
table.
maptimeout [timeout]
Set the
inter-character timer for input sequence detection to a
timeout of timeout ms. The default timeout is 300ms.
Maptimeout with no arguments shows the current setting. See
also bindkey.
markkeys string
This is a
method of changing the keymap used for copy/history mode.
The string is made up of oldchar=newchar pairs
which are separated by ’:’. Example: The string
B=^B:F=^F will change the keys ’C-b’ and
’C-f’ to the vi style binding (scroll up/down
fill page). This happens to be the default binding for
’B’ and ’F’. The command markkeys
h=^B:l=^F:$=^E would set the mode for an emacs-style
binding. If your terminal sends characters, that cause you
to abort copy mode, then this command may help by binding
these characters to do nothing. The no-op character is
’@’ and is used like this: markkeys @=L=H if you
do not want to use the ’H’ or ’L’
commands any longer. As shown in this example, multiple keys
can be assigned to one function in a single statement.
maxwin num
Set the maximum window number screen will create. Doesn’t affect already existing windows. The number can be increased only when there are no existing windows.
meta |
Insert the command character
(C-a) in the current window’s input stream.
monitor [ on | off ]
Toggles
activity monitoring of windows. When monitoring is turned on
and an affected window is switched into the background, you
will receive the activity notification message in the status
line at the first sign of output and the window will also be
marked with an ’@’ in the window-status display.
Monitoring is initially off for all windows.
mousetrack [ on | off ]
This command
determines whether screen will watch for mouse
clicks. When this command is enabled, regions that have been
split in various ways can be selected by pointing to them
with a mouse and left-clicking them. Without specifying
on or off, the current state is displayed. The
default state is determined by the defmousetrack
command.
msgminwait sec
Defines the
time screen delays a new message when one message is
currently displayed. The default is 1 second.
msgwait sec
Defines the
time a message is displayed if screen is not
disturbed by other activity. The default is 5 seconds.
multiuser [ on | off ]
Switch between
singleuser and multiuser mode. Standard screen
operation is singleuser. In multiuser mode the commands
’acladd’, ’aclchg’,
’aclgrp’ and ’acldel’ can be used to
enable (and disable) other users accessing this
screen session.
nethack [ on | off ]
Changes the
kind of error messages used by screen. When you are
familiar with the game nethack, you may enjoy the
nethack-style messages which will often blur the facts a
little, but are much funnier to read. Anyway, standard
messages often tend to be unclear as well.
This option is only available if screen was compiled
with the NETHACK flag defined. The default setting is then
determined by the presence of the environment variable
$NETHACKOPTIONS and the file ~/.nethackrc - if either one is
present, the default is on.
next |
Switch to the next window. This command can be used repeatedly to cycle through the list of windows.
nonblock [ on | off | numsecs ]
Tell screen how
to deal with user interfaces (displays) that cease to accept
output. This can happen if a user presses ^S or a TCP/modem
connection gets cut but no hangup is received. If nonblock
is off (this is the default) screen waits until the
display restarts to accept the output. If nonblock is
on, screen waits until the timeout is reached
(on is treated as 1s). If the display still
doesn’t receive characters, screen will consider it
blocked and stop sending characters to it. If at some time
it restarts to accept characters, screen will unblock the
display and redisplay the updated window contents.
number [[+|-]n]
Change the
current window’s number. If the given number n
is already used by another window, both windows exchange
their numbers. If no argument is specified, the current
window number (and title) is shown. Using ’+’ or
’-’ will change the window’s number by the
relative amount specified.
obuflimit [limit]
If the output buffer contains more bytes than the specified limit, no more data will be read from the windows. The default value is 256. If you have a fast display (like xterm), you can set it to some higher value. If no argument is specified, the current setting is displayed.
only |
Kill all regions but the current one.
other |
Switch to the window displayed
previously. If this window does no longer exist,
other has the same effect as next.
partial [ on | off ]
Defines whether
the display should be refreshed (as with redisplay)
after switching to the current window. This command only
affects the current window. To immediately affect all
windows use the allpartial command. Default is
’off’, of course. This default is fixed, as
there is currently no defpartial command.
password [crypted_pw]
Present a
crypted password in your .screenrc file and screen
will ask for it, whenever someone attempts to resume a
detached. This is useful if you have privileged programs
running under screen and you want to protect your
session from reattach attempts by another user masquerading
as your uid (i.e. any superuser.) If no crypted password is
specified, screen prompts twice for typing a password
and places its encryption in the paste buffer. Default is
’none’, this disables password checking.
paste [registers [dest_reg]]
Write the
(concatenated) contents of the specified registers to the
stdin queue of the current window. The register
’.’ is treated as the paste buffer. If no
parameter is given the user is prompted for a single
register to paste. The paste buffer can be filled with the
copy, history and readbuf commands.
Other registers can be filled with the register,
readreg and paste commands. If paste is
called with a second argument, the contents of the specified
registers is pasted into the named destination register
rather than the window. If ’.’ is used as the
second argument, the displays paste buffer is the
destination. Note, that paste uses a wide variety of
resources: Whenever a second argument is specified no
current window is needed. When the source specification only
contains registers (not the paste buffer) then there need
not be a current display (terminal attached), as the
registers are a global resource. The paste buffer exists
once for every user.
pastefont [ on | off ]
Tell
screen to include font information in the paste
buffer. The default is not to do so. This command is
especially useful for multi character fonts like kanji.
pow_break
Reopen the
window’s terminal line and send a break condition. See
’break’.
pow_detach
Power detach.
Mainly the same as detach, but also sends a HANGUP
signal to the parent process of screen. CAUTION: This
will result in a logout, when screen was started from
your login-shell.
pow_detach_msg [message]
The message specified here is output whenever a ’Power detach’ was performed. It may be used as a replacement for a logout message or to reset baud rate, etc. Without parameter, the current message is shown.
prev |
Switch to the window with the
next lower number. This command can be used repeatedly to
cycle through the list of windows.
printcmd [cmd]
If cmd is not an empty string, screen will not use the terminal capabilities po/pf if it detects an ansi print sequence ESC [ 5 i, but pipe the output into cmd. This should normally be a command like lpr or printcmd without a command displays the current setting. The ansi sequence ESC [ 4 i ends printing and closes the pipe.
Warning: Be
careful with this command! If other user have write access
to your terminal, they will be able to fire off print
commands.
process [key]
Stuff the contents of the specified register into screen’s input queue. If no argument is given you are prompted for a register name. The text is parsed as if it had been typed in from the user’s keyboard. This command can be used to bind multiple actions to a single key.
quit |
Kill all windows and terminate
screen. Note that on VT100-style terminals the keys
C-4 and C-\ are identical. This makes the default bindings
dangerous: Be careful not to type C-a C-4 when selecting
window no. 4. Use the empty bind command (as in bind
’^\’) to remove a key binding.
readbuf [encoding] [filename]
Reads the
contents of the specified file into the paste buffer. You
can tell screen the encoding of the file via the -e
option. If no file is specified, the screen-exchange
filename is used. See also bufferfile command.
readreg [encoding] [register
[filename]]
Does one of two things, dependent on number of arguments: with zero or one arguments it duplicates the paste buffer contents into the register specified or entered at the prompt. With two arguments it reads the contents of the named file into the register, just as readbuf reads the screen-exchange file into the paste buffer. You can tell screen the encoding of the file via the -e option. The following example will paste the system’s password file into the screen window (using register p, where a copy remains):
C-a : readreg p /etc/passwd
C-a : paste p |
redisplay
Redisplay the
current window. Needed to get a full redisplay when in
partial redraw mode.
register [-eencoding]key-string
Save the specified string to the register key. The encoding of the string can be specified via the -e option. See also the paste command.
remove |
Kill the current region. This
is a no-op if there is only one region.
removebuf
Unlinks the
screen-exchange file used by the commands writebuf
and readbuf.
rendition [ bell | monitor | silence | so ] attr [ color
]
Change the way screen renders the titles of windows that have monitor or bell flags set in caption or hardstatus or windowlist. See the STRING ESCAPES chapter for the syntax of the modifiers. The default for monitor is currently =b (bold, active colors), for bell =ub (underline, bold and active colors), and =u for silence.
reset |
Reset the virtual terminal to its power-on values. Useful when strange settings (like scroll regions or graphics character set) are left over from an application.
resize |
[-h|-v|-b|-l|-p] [[+|-] n[%] |=|max|min|_|0] |
Resize the current region. The space will be removed from or added to the surrounding regions depending on the order of the splits. The available options for resizing are ’-h’(horizontal), ’-v’(vertical), ’-b’(both), ’-l’(local to layer), and ’-p’(perpendicular). Horizontal resizes will add or remove width to a region, vertical will add or remove height, and both will add or remove size from both dimensions. Local and perpendicular are similar to horizontal and vertical, but they take in account of how a region was split. If a region’s last split was horizontal, a local resize will work like a vertical resize. If a region’s last split was vertical, a local resize will work like a horizontal resize. Perpendicular resizes work in opposite of local resizes. If no option is specified, local is the default.
The amount of lines to add or remove can be expressed a couple of different ways. By specifying a number n by itself will resize the region by that absolute amount. You can specify a relative amount by prefixing a plus ’+’ or minus ’-’ to the amount, such as adding +n lines or removing -n lines. Resizing can also be expressed as an absolute or relative percentage by postfixing a percent sign ’%’. Using zero ’0’ is a synonym for ’min’ and using an underscore ’_’ is a synonym for ’max’.
Some examples
are:
resize +N
increase current region by N
resize -N
decrease current region by N
resize N
set current region to N
resize 20%
set current region to 20% of original size
resize +20%
increase current region by 20%
resize -b =
make all windows equally
resize max
maximize current region
resize min
minimize current region
Without any arguments, screen will prompt for how you would like to resize the current region.
See
focusminsize if you want to restrict the minimum size a
region can have.
screen [-opts] [n] [cmd
[args]|//group]
Establish a new window. The flow-control options (-f, -fn and -fa), title (a.k.a.) option (-t), login options (-l and -ln) , terminal type option (-T <term>), the all-capability-flag (-a) and scrollback option (-h <num>) may be specified with each command. The option (-M) turns monitoring on for this window. The option (-L) turns output logging on for this window. If an optional number n in the range 0..MAXWIN-1 is given, the window number n is assigned to the newly created window (or, if this number is already in-use, the next available number). If a command is specified after screen, this command (with the given arguments) is started in the window; otherwise, a shell is created. If //group is supplied, a container-type window is created in which other windows may be created inside it.
Thus, if your .screenrc contains the lines
# example for .screenrc:
screen 1 | |
screen -fn -t foobar -L 2 telnet foobar |
screen creates a shell window (in window #1) and a window with a TELNET connection to the machine foobar (with no flow-control using the title foobar in window #2) and will write a logfile (screenlog.2) of the telnet session. Note, that unlike previous versions of screen no additional default window is created when screen commands are included in your .screenrc file. When the initialization is completed, screen switches to the last window specified in your .screenrc file or, if none, opens a default window #0.
Screen has
built in some functionality of cu and telnet. See also
chapter WINDOW TYPES.
scrollback num
Set the size of
the scrollback buffer for the current windows to num
lines. The default scrollback is 100 lines. See also the
defscrollback command and use info to view the current
setting. To access and use the contents in the scrollback
buffer, use the copy command.
select [WindowID]
Switch to the
window identified by WindowID. This can be a prefix
of a window title (alphanumeric window name) or a window
number. The parameter is optional and if omitted, you get
prompted for an identifier. When a new window is
established, the first available number is assigned to this
window. Thus, the first window can be activated by select 0.
The number of windows is set by the MAXWIN configuration
parameter (which defaults to 100), but it can be changed by
using ’maxwin’ command. There are two special
WindowIDs, - selects the internal blank window and . selects
the current window. The latter is useful if used with
screen’s -X option.
sessionname [name]
Rename the
current session. Note, that for screen -list the name shows
up with the process-id prepended. If the argument name is
omitted, the name of this session is displayed. Caution: The
$STY environment variables will still reflect the old name
in pre-existing shells. This may result in confusion. Use of
this command is generally discouraged. Use the -S
command-line option if you want to name a new session. The
default is constructed from the tty and host names.
setenv [var [string]]
Set the
environment variable var to value string. If
only var is specified, the user will be prompted to
enter a value. If no parameters are specified, the user will
be prompted for both variable and value. The environment is
inherited by all subsequently forked shells.
setsid [ on | off ]
Normally screen
uses different sessions and process groups for the windows.
If setsid is turned off, this is not done anymore and
all windows will be in the same process group as the screen
backend process. This also breaks job-control, so be
careful. The default is on, of course. This command
is probably useful only in rare circumstances.
shell command
Set the command
to be used to create a new shell. This overrides the value
of the environment variable $SHELL. This is useful if
you’d like to run a tty-enhancer which is expecting to
execute the program specified in $SHELL. If the command
begins with a ’-’ character, the shell will be
started as a login-shell. Typical shells do only minimal
initialization when not started as a login-shell. E.g. Bash
will not read your ~/.bash_profile unless it is a
login-shell.
shelltitle title
Set the title
for all shells created during startup or by the C-A C-c
command. For details about what a title is, see the
discussion entitled TITLES (naming windows).
silence [ on | off | sec ]
Toggles silence
monitoring of windows. When silence is turned on and an
affected window is switched into the background, you will
receive the silence notification message in the status line
after a specified period of inactivity (silence). The
default timeout can be changed with the
’silencewait’ command or by specifying a number
of seconds instead of ’on’ or ’off’.
Silence is initially off for all windows.
silencewait sec
Define the time that all windows monitored for silence should wait before displaying a message. Default 30 seconds.
sleep num
This command
will pause the execution of a .screenrc file for num
seconds. Keyboard activity will end the sleep. It may be
used to give users a chance to read the messages output by
echo.
slowpaste msec
Define the speed at which text is inserted into the current window by the paste ("C-a ]") command. If the slowpaste value is nonzero text is written character by character. screen will make a pause of msec milliseconds after each single character write to allow the application to process its input. Only use slowpaste if your underlying system exposes flow control problems while pasting large amounts of text.
sort |
Sort the windows in
alphabetical order of the window tiles.
source file
Read and execute commands from file file. Source commands may be nested to a maximum recursion level of ten. If file is not an absolute path and screen is already processing a source command, the parent directory of the running source command file is used to search for the new command file before screen’s current directory.
Note that
termcap/terminfo/termcapinfo commands only work at startup
and reattach time, so they must be reached via the default
screenrc files to have an effect.
sorendition [attr[color]]
This command is
deprecated. See "rendition so" instead.
split[-v]
Split the current region into two new ones. All regions on the display are resized to make room for the new region. The blank window is displayed in the new region. The default is to create a horizontal split, putting the new regions on the top and bottom of each other. Using ’-v’ will create a vertical split, causing the new regions to appear side by side of each other. Use the remove or the only command to delete regions. Use focus to toggle between regions.
When a region is split opposite of how it was previously split (that is, vertical then horizontal or horizontal then vertical), a new layer is created. The layer is used to group together the regions that are split the same. Normally, as a user, you should not see nor have to worry about layers, but they will affect how some commands (focus and resize) behave.
With this
current implementation of screen, scrolling data will appear
much slower in a vertically split region than one that is
not. This should be taken into consideration if you need to
use system commands such as cat or tail -f.
startup_message [ on | off ]
Select whether you want to see the copyright notice during startup. Default is ’on’, as you probably noticed.
status [ top | up | down | bottom ] [ left | right ]
The status
window by default is in bottom-left corner. This command can
move status messages to any corner of the screen. top
is the same as up, down is the same as
bottom.
stuff [string]
Stuff the
string string in the input buffer of the current
window. This is like the paste command but with much less
overhead. Without a parameter, screen will prompt for a
string to stuff. You cannot paste large buffers with the
stuff command. It is most useful for key bindings. See also
bindkey.
su [username [password
[password2]]]
Substitute the
user of a display. The command prompts for all parameters
that are omitted. If passwords are specified as parameters,
they have to be specified un-crypted. The first password is
matched against the systems passwd database, the second
password is matched against the screen password as
set with the commands acladd or password. Su may be useful
for the screen administrator to test multiuser
setups. When the identification fails, the user has access
to the commands available for user nobody. These are
detach, license, version, help and displays.
suspend
Suspend
screen. The windows are in the ’detached’
state, while screen is suspended. This feature relies
on the shell being able to do job control.
term term
In each
window’s environment screen opens, the $TERM
variable is set to screen by default. But when no
description for screen is installed in the local termcap or
terminfo data base, you set $TERM to - say - vt100. This
won’t do much harm, as screen is VT100/ANSI
compatible. The use of the term command is discouraged for
non-default purpose. That is, one may want to specify
special $TERM settings (e.g. vt100) for the next screen
rlogin othermachine command. Use the command screen -T vt100
rlogin othermachine rather than setting and resetting the
default.
termcap term
terminal-tweaks[window-tweaks]
terminfo term
terminal-tweaks[window-tweaks]
termcapinfo term
terminal-tweaks[window-tweaks]
Use this command to modify your terminal’s termcap entry without going through all the hassles involved in creating a custom termcap entry. Plus, you can optionally customize the termcap generated for the windows. You have to place these commands in one of the screenrc startup files, as they are meaningless once the terminal emulator is booted.
If your system uses the terminfo database rather than termcap, screen will understand the ’terminfo’ command, which has the same effects as the ’termcap’ command. Two separate commands are provided, as there are subtle syntactic differences, e.g. when parameter interpolation (using ’%’) is required. Note that termcap names of the capabilities have to be used with the ’terminfo’ command.
In many cases, where the arguments are valid in both terminfo and termcap syntax, you can use the command ’termcapinfo’, which is just a shorthand for a pair of ’termcap’ and ’terminfo’ commands with identical arguments.
The first argument specifies which terminal(s) should be affected by this definition. You can specify multiple terminal names by separating them with ’|’s. Use ’*’ to match all terminals and ’vt*’ to match all terminals that begin with vt.
Each tweak argument contains one or more termcap defines (separated by ’:’s) to be inserted at the start of the appropriate termcap entry, enhancing it or overriding existing values. The first tweak modifies your terminal’s termcap, and contains definitions that your terminal uses to perform certain functions. Specify a null string to leave this unchanged (e.g. ’’). The second (optional) tweak modifies all the window termcaps, and should contain definitions that screen understands (see the VIRTUAL TERMINAL section).
Some examples:
termcap xterm* LP:hs@
Informs screen that all terminals that begin with ’xterm’ have firm auto-margins that allow the last position on the screen to be updated (LP), but they don’t really have a status line (no ’hs’ - append ’@’ to turn entries off). Note that we assume ’LP’ for all terminal names that start with vt, but only if you don’t specify a termcap command for that terminal.
termcap vt* LP
termcap vt102|vt220 Z0=\E[?3h:Z1=\E[?3l
Specifies the firm-margined ’LP’ capability for all terminals that begin with ’vt’, and the second line will also add the escape-sequences to switch into (Z0) and back out of (Z1) 132-character-per-line mode if this is a VT102 or VT220. (You must specify Z0 and Z1 in your termcap to use the width-changing commands.)
termcap vt100 "" l0=PF1:l1=PF2:l2=PF3:l3=PF4
This leaves your vt100 termcap alone and adds the function key labels to each window’s termcap entry.
termcap h19|z19 am@:im=\E@:ei=\EO dc=\E[P
Takes a h19 or z19 termcap and turns off auto-margins (am@) and enables the insert mode (im) and end-insert (ei) capabilities (the ’@’ in the ’im’ string is after the ’=’, so it is part of the string). Having the ’im’ and ’ei’ definitions put into your terminal’s termcap will cause screen to automatically advertise the character-insert capability in each window’s termcap. Each window will also get the delete-character capability (dc) added to its termcap, which screen will translate into a line-update for the terminal (we’re pretending it doesn’t support character deletion).
If you would like to fully specify each window’s termcap entry, you should instead set the $SCREENCAP variable prior to running screen. See the discussion on the VIRTUAL TERMINAL in this manual, and the termcap(5) man page for more information on termcap definitions.
time |
[string] |
Uses the message line to display the time of day, the host name, and the load averages over 1, 5, and 15 minutes (if this is available on your system). For window specific information, use info.
If a string is
specified, it changes the format of the time report like it
is described in the STRING ESCAPES chapter. Screen uses a
default of "%c:%s %M %d %H%? %l%?".
title [windowtitle]
Set the name of
the current window to windowtitle. If no name is
specified, screen prompts for one. This command was
known as ’aka’ in previous releases.
unbindall
Unbind all the
bindings. This can be useful when screen is used solely for
its detaching abilities, such as when letting a console
application run as a daemon. If, for some reason, it is
necessary to bind commands after this, use ’screen
-X’.
unsetenv var
Unset an
environment variable.
utf8 [ on | off [ on | off ]]
Change the
encoding used in the current window. If utf8 is enabled, the
strings sent to the window will be UTF-8 encoded and vice
versa. Omitting the parameter toggles the setting. If a
second parameter is given, the display’s encoding is
also changed (this should rather be done with screen’s
-U option). See also defutf8, which changes the default
setting of a new window.
vbell [ on | off ]
Sets the visual bell setting for this window. Omitting the parameter toggles the setting. If vbell is switched on, but your terminal does not support a visual bell, a ’vbell-message’ is displayed in the status line when the bell character (^G) is received. Visual bell support of a terminal is defined by the termcap variable ’vb’ (terminfo: ’flash’).
Per default,
vbell is off, thus the audible bell is used. See also
’bell_msg’.
vbell_msg [message]
Sets the visual
bell message. message is printed to the status line
if the window receives a bell character (^G), vbell is set
to on, but the terminal does not support a visual bell. The
default message is Wuff, Wuff!!. Without a parameter, the
current message is shown.
vbellwait sec
Define a delay
in seconds after each display of screen’s
visual bell message. The default is 1 second.
verbose [ on | off ]
If verbose is
switched on, the command name is echoed, whenever a window
is created (or resurrected from zombie state). Default is
off. Without a parameter, the current setting is shown.
version
Print the
current version and the compile date in the status line.
wall message
Write a message
to all displays. The message will appear in the
terminal’s status line.
width [-w|-d] [cols
[lines]]
Toggle the
window width between 80 and 132 columns or set it to
cols columns if an argument is specified. This
requires a capable terminal and the termcap entries Z0 and
Z1. See the termcap command for more information. You can
also specify a new height if you want to change both values.
The -w option tells screen to leave the display size
unchanged and just set the window size, -d vice
versa.
windowlist [ -b ] [ -m ] [ -g ]
windowlist string [string]
windowlist title [title]
Display all windows in a table for visual window selection. If screen was in a window group, screen will back out of the group and then display the windows in that group. If the -b option is given, screen will switch to the blank window before presenting the list, so that the current window is also selectable. The -m option changes the order of the windows, instead of sorting by window numbers screen uses its internal most-recently-used list. The -g option will show the windows inside any groups in that level and downwards.
The following keys are used to navigate in windowlist:
The table format can be changed with the string and title option, the title is displayed as table heading, while the lines are made by using the string setting. The default setting is Num Name%=Flags for the title and %3n %t%=%f for the lines. See the STRING ESCAPES chapter for more codes (e.g. color settings).
Windowlist
needs a region size of at least 10 characters wide and 6
characters high in order to display.
windows [ string ]
Uses the
message line to display a list of all the windows. Each
window is listed by number with the name of process that has
been started in the window (or its title); the current
window is marked with a ’*’; the previous window
is marked with a ’-’; all the windows that are
logged in are marked with a ’$’; a background
window that has received a bell is marked with a
’!’; a background window that is being monitored
and has had activity occur is marked with an
’@’; a window which has output logging turned on
is marked with ’(L)’; windows occupied by other
users are marked with ’&’; windows in the
zombie state are marked with ’Z’. If this list
is too long to fit on the terminal’s status line only
the portion around the current window is displayed. The
optional string parameter follows the STRING ESCAPES format.
If string parameter is passed, the output size is unlimited.
The default command without any parameter is limited to a
size of 1024 bytes.
wrap [ on | off ]
Sets the
line-wrap setting for the current window. When line-wrap is
on, the second consecutive printable character output at the
last column of a line will wrap to the start of the
following line. As an added feature, backspace (^H) will
also wrap through the left margin to the previous line.
Default is ’on’. Without any options, the state
of wrap is toggled.
writebuf [-e encoding]
[filename]
Writes the
contents of the paste buffer to the specified file, or the
public accessible screen-exchange file if no filename is
given. This is thought of as a primitive means of
communication between screen users on the same host.
If an encoding is specified the paste buffer is recoded on
the fly to match the encoding. The filename can be set with
the bufferfile command and defaults to
/tmp/screen-exchange.
writelock [ on | off | auto]
In addition to access control lists, not all users may be able to write to the same window at once. Per default, writelock is in ’auto’ mode and grants exclusive input permission to the user who is the first to switch to the particular window. When he leaves the window, other users may obtain the writelock (automatically). The writelock of the current window is disabled by the command writelock off. If the user issues the command writelock on he keeps the exclusive write permission while switching to other windows.
xoff |
||
xon |
Insert a CTRL-s / CTRL-q
character to the stdin queue of the current window.
zmodem [ off | auto | catch | pass ]
zmodem sendcmd [string]
zmodem recvcmd [string]
Define zmodem support for screen. Screen understands two different modes when it detects a zmodem request: pass and catch. If the mode is set to pass, screen will relay all data to the attacher until the end of the transmission is reached. In catch mode screen acts as a zmodem endpoint and starts the corresponding rz/sz commands. If the mode is set to auto, screen will use catch if the window is a tty (e.g. a serial line), otherwise it will use pass.
You can define the templates screen uses in catch mode via the second and the third form.
Note also that
this is an experimental feature.
zombie [keys[onerror]]
Per default screen windows are removed from the window list as soon as the windows process (e.g. shell) exits. When a string of two keys is specified to the zombie command, ’dead’ windows will remain in the list. The kill command may be used to remove such a window. Pressing the first key in the dead window has the same effect. When pressing the second key, screen will attempt to resurrect the window. The process that was initially running in the window will be launched again. Calling zombie without parameters will clear the zombie setting, thus making windows disappear when their process exits.
As the zombie-setting is manipulated globally for all windows, this command should probably be called defzombie, but it isn’t.
Optionally you
can put the word onerror after the keys. This will cause
screen to monitor exit status of the process running in the
window. If it exits normally (’0’), the window
disappears. Any other exit value causes the window to become
a zombie.
zombie_timeout[seconds]
Per default screen windows are removed from the window list as soon as the windows process (e.g. shell) exits. If zombie keys are defined (compare with above zombie command), it is possible to also set a timeout when screen tries to automatically reconnect a dead screen window.
THE MESSAGE LINE
Screen displays informational messages and other diagnostics in a message line. While this line is distributed to appear at the bottom of the screen, it can be defined to appear at the top of the screen during compilation. If your terminal has a status line defined in its termcap, screen will use this for displaying its messages, otherwise a line of the current screen will be temporarily overwritten and output will be momentarily interrupted. The message line is automatically removed after a few seconds delay, but it can also be removed early (on terminals without a status line) by beginning to type.
The message line facility can be used by an application running in the current window by means of the ANSI Privacy message control sequence. For instance, from within the shell, try something like:
echo ’<esc>^Hello world from window ’$WINDOW’<esc>\\’
where ’<esc>’ is an escape, ’^’ is a literal up-arrow, and ’\\’ turns into a single backslash.
WINDOW TYPES
Screen provides three different window types. New windows are created with screen’s screen command (see also the entry in chapter CUSTOMIZATION). The first parameter to the screen command defines which type of window is created. The different window types are all special cases of the normal type. They have been added in order to allow screen to be used efficiently as a console multiplexer with 100 or more windows.
• |
The normal window contains a shell (default, if no parameter is given) or any other system command that could be executed from a shell (e.g. slogin, etc...) | ||
• |
If a tty (character special device) name (e.g. /dev/ttya) is specified as the first parameter, then the window is directly connected to this device. This window type is similar to screen cu -l /dev/ttya. Read and write access is required on the device node, an exclusive open is attempted on the node to mark the connection line as busy. An optional parameter is allowed consisting of a comma separated list of flags in the notation used by stty(1): |
<baud_rate>
Usually 300, 1200, 9600 or 19200. This affects transmission as well as receive speed.
cs8 or cs7
Specify the transmission of eight (or seven) bits per byte.
cstopb or -cstopb
Specify two stop bits per character (one with ’-’)
parenb or -parenb
Generate parity bit in output and expect parity bit in input
parodd or -parodd
Set odd parity (or even parity with ’-’)
ixon or -ixon
Enables (or disables) software flow-control (CTRL-S/CTRL-Q) for sending data.
ixoff or -ixoff
Enables (or disables) software flow-control for receiving data.
istrip or -istrip
Clear (or keep) the eight bit in each received byte.
You may want to specify as many of these options as applicable. Unspecified options cause the terminal driver to make up the parameter values of the connection. These values are system dependent and may be in defaults or values saved from a previous connection.
For tty windows, the info command shows some of the modem control lines in the status line. These may include ’RTS’, ’CTS’, ’DTR’, ’DSR’, ’CD’ and more. This depends on the available ioctl()’s and system header files as well as the on the physical capabilities of the serial board. Signals that are logical low (inactive) have their name preceded by an exclamation mark (!), otherwise the signal is logical high (active). Signals not supported by the hardware but available to the ioctl() interface are usually shown low.
When the CLOCAL status bit is true, the whole set of modem signals is placed inside curly braces ({ and }). When the CRTSCTS or TIOCSOFTCAR bit is set, the signals ’CTS’ or ’CD’ are shown in parenthesis, respectively.
For tty windows, the command break causes the Data transmission line (TxD) to go low for a specified period of time. This is expected to be interpreted as break signal on the other side. No data is sent and no modem control line is changed when a break is issued.
• |
If the first parameter is //telnet, the second parameter is expected to be a host name, and an optional third parameter may specify a TCP port number (default decimal 23). Screen will connect to a server listening on the remote host and use the telnet protocol to communicate with that server. |
For telnet windows, the command info shows details about the connection in square brackets ([ and ]) at the end of the status line.
b |
BINARY. The connection is in binary mode. | ||
e |
ECHO. Local echo is disabled. | ||
c |
SGA. The connection is in ’character mode’ (default: ’line mode’). | ||
t |
TTYPE. The terminal type has been requested by the remote host. Screen sends the name screen unless instructed otherwise (see also the command ’term’). | ||
w |
NAWS. The remote site is notified about window size changes. | ||
f |
LFLOW. The remote host will send flow control information. (Ignored at the moment.) |
Additional flags for debugging are x, t and n (XDISPLOC, TSPEED and NEWENV).
For telnet windows, the command break sends the telnet code IAC BREAK (decimal 243) to the remote host.
This window type is only available if screen was compiled with the ENABLE_TELNET option defined.
STRING ESCAPES
Screen provides an escape mechanism to insert information like the current time into messages or file names. The escape character is ’%’ with one exception: inside of a window’s hardstatus ’^%’ (’^E’) is used instead.
Here is the full list of supported escapes:
% |
the escape character itself | ||
E |
sets %? to true if the escape character has been pressed. | ||
e |
encoding | ||
f |
flags of the window, see windows for meanings of the various flags | ||
F |
sets %? to true if the window has the focus | ||
h |
hardstatus of the window | ||
H |
hostname of the system | ||
n |
window number | ||
P |
sets %? to true if the current region is in copy/paste mode | ||
S |
session name | ||
s |
window size | ||
t |
window title | ||
u |
all other users on this window | ||
w |
all window numbers and names. With ’-’ qualifier: up to the current window; with ’+’ qualifier: starting with the window after the current one. | ||
W |
all window numbers and names except the current one | ||
x |
the executed command including arguments running in this windows | ||
X |
the executed command without arguments running in this windows | ||
? |
the part to the next ’%?’ is displayed only if a ’%’ escape inside the part expands to a non-empty string | ||
: |
else part of ’%?’ | ||
= |
pad the string to the display’s width (like TeX’s hfill). If a number is specified, pad to the percentage of the window’s width. A ’0’ qualifier tells screen to treat the number as absolute position. You can specify to pad relative to the last absolute pad position by adding a ’+’ qualifier or to pad relative to the right margin by using ’-’. The padding truncates the string if the specified position lies before the current position. Add the ’L’ qualifier to change this. | ||
< |
same as ’%=’ but just do truncation, do not fill with spaces | ||
> |
mark the current text position for the next truncation. When screen needs to do truncation, it tries to do it in a way that the marked position gets moved to the specified percentage of the output area. (The area starts from the last absolute pad position and ends with the position specified by the truncation operator.) The ’L’ qualifier tells screen to mark the truncated parts with ’...’. | ||
{ |
attribute/color modifier string terminated by the next } | ||
’ |
Substitute with the output of a ’backtick’ command. The length qualifier is misused to identify one of the commands. |
The ’c’ and ’C’ escape may be qualified with a ’0’ to make screen use zero instead of space as fill character. The ’0’ qualifier also makes the ’=’ escape use absolute positions. The ’n’ and ’=’ escapes understand a length qualifier (e.g. ’%3n’), ’D’ and ’M’ can be prefixed with ’L’ to generate long names, ’w’ and ’W’ also show the window flags if ’L’ is given.
An attribute/color modifier is used to change the attributes or the color settings. Its format is [attribute modifier] [color description]. The attribute modifier must be prefixed by a change type indicator if it can be confused with a color description. The following change types are known:
+ |
add the specified set to the current attributes |
|||
- |
remove the set from the current attributes |
|||
! |
invert the set in the current attributes |
|||
= |
change the current attributes to the specified set |
The attribute set can either be specified as a hexadecimal number or a combination of the following letters:
d |
dim |
|||
u |
underline |
|||
b |
bold |
|||
r |
reverse |
|||
s |
/standout |
|||
B |
blinking |
Colors are coded either as a hexadecimal number or two letters specifying the desired background and foreground color (in that order). The following colors are known:
k |
black |
|||
r |
red |
|||
g |
green |
|||
y |
yellow |
|||
b |
blue |
|||
m |
magenta |
|||
c |
cyan |
|||
w |
white |
|||
d |
default color |
|||
. |
leave color unchanged |
The capitalized
versions of the letter specify bright colors. You can also
use the pseudo-color ’i’ to set just the
brightness and leave the color unchanged.
A one digit/letter color description is treated as
foreground or background color dependent on the current
attributes: if reverse mode is set, the background color is
changed instead of the foreground color. If you don’t
like this, prefix the color with a .. If you want the same
behavior for two-letter color descriptions, also prefix them
with a ..
As a special case, %{-} restores the attributes and colors
that were set before the last change was made (i.e., pops
one level of the color-change stack).
Examples:
G |
set color to bright green | ||
+b r |
use bold red | ||
= yd |
clear all attributes, write in default color on yellow background. |
%-Lw%{= BW}%50>%n%f* %t%{-}%+Lw%<
The available windows centered at the current window and truncated to the available width. The current window is displayed white on blue. This can be used with hardstatus alwayslastline.
%?%F%{.R.}%?%3n %t%? [%h]%?
The window number and title and the window’s hardstatus, if one is set. Also use a red background if this is the active focus. Useful for caption string.
FLOW-CONTROL
Each window has a flow-control setting that determines how screen deals with the XON and XOFF characters (and perhaps the interrupt character). When flow-control is turned off, screen ignores the XON and XOFF characters, which allows the user to send them to the current program by simply typing them (useful for the emacs editor, for instance). The trade-off is that it will take longer for output from a normal program to pause in response to an XOFF. With flow-control turned on, XON and XOFF characters are used to immediately pause the output of the current window. You can still send these characters to the current program, but you must use the appropriate two-character screen commands (typically C-a q (xon) and C-a s (xoff)). The xon/xoff commands are also useful for typing C-s and C-q past a terminal that intercepts these characters.
Each window has an initial flow-control value set with either the -f option or the defflow .screenrc command. Per default the windows are set to automatic flow-switching. It can then be toggled between the three states ’fixed on’, ’fixed off’ and ’automatic’ interactively with the flow command bound to "C-a f".
The automatic flow-switching mode deals with flow control using the TIOCPKT mode (like rlogin does). If the tty driver does not support TIOCPKT, screen tries to find out the right mode based on the current setting of the application keypad - when it is enabled, flow-control is turned off and visa versa. Of course, you can still manipulate flow-control manually when needed.
If you’re running with flow-control enabled and find that pressing the interrupt key (usually C-c) does not interrupt the display until another 6-8 lines have scrolled by, try running screen with the interrupt option (add the interrupt flag to the flow command in your .screenrc, or use the -i command-line option). This causes the output that screen has accumulated from the interrupted program to be flushed. One disadvantage is that the virtual terminal’s memory contains the non-flushed version of the output, which in rare cases can cause minor inaccuracies in the output. For example, if you switch screens and return, or update the screen with C-a l you would see the version of the output you would have gotten without interrupt being on. Also, you might need to turn off flow-control (or use auto-flow mode to turn it off automatically) when running a program that expects you to type the interrupt character as input, as it is possible to interrupt the output of the virtual terminal to your physical terminal when flow-control is enabled. If this happens, a simple refresh of the screen with C-a l will restore it. Give each mode a try, and use whichever mode you find more comfortable.
TITLES (naming windows)
You can customize each window’s name in the window display (viewed with the windows command (C-a w)) by setting it with one of the title commands. Normally the name displayed is the actual command name of the program created in the window. However, it is sometimes useful to distinguish various programs of the same name or to change the name on-the-fly to reflect the current state of the window.
The default name for all shell windows can be set with the shelltitle command in the .screenrc file, while all other windows are created with a screen command and thus can have their name set with the -t option. Interactively, there is the title-string escape-sequence (<esc>kname<esc>\) and the title command (C-a A). The former can be output from an application to control the window’s name under software control, and the latter will prompt for a name when typed. You can also bind pre-defined names to keys with the title command to set things quickly without prompting. Changing title by this escape sequence can be controlled by defdynamictitle and dynamictitle commands.
Finally, screen has a shell-specific heuristic that is enabled by setting the window’s name to search|name and arranging to have a null title escape-sequence output as a part of your prompt. The search portion specifies an end-of-prompt search string, while the name portion specifies the default shell name for the window. If the name ends in a ’:’ screen will add what it believes to be the current command running in the window to the end of the window’s shell name (e.g. name:cmd). Otherwise the current command name supersedes the shell name while it is running.
Here’s how it works: you must modify your shell prompt to output a null title-escape-sequence (<esc>k<esc>\) as a part of your prompt. The last part of your prompt must be the same as the string you specified for the search portion of the title. Once this is set up, screen will use the title-escape-sequence to clear the previous command name and get ready for the next command. Then, when a newline is received from the shell, a search is made for the end of the prompt. If found, it will grab the first word after the matched string and use it as the command name. If the command name begins with either ’!’, ’%’, or ’^’ screen will use the first word on the following line (if found) in preference to the just-found name. This helps csh users get better command names when using job control or history recall commands.
Here’s some .screenrc examples:
screen -t top 2 nice top
Adding this line to your .screenrc would start a nice-d version of the top command in window 2 named top rather than nice.
shelltitle ’> |csh’
screen 1 |
These commands would start a shell with the given shelltitle. The title specified is an auto-title that would expect the prompt and the typed command to look something like the following:
/usr/joe/src/dir> trn |
(it looks after the ’> ’ for the command name). The window status would show the name trn while the command was running, and revert to csh upon completion.
bind R screen -t ’% |root:’ su |
Having this command in your .screenrc would bind the key sequence C-a R to the su command and give it an auto-title name of root:. For this auto-title to work, the screen could look something like this:
% !em | |
emacs file.c |
Here the user typed the csh history command !em which ran the previously entered emacs command. The window status would show root:emacs during the execution of the command, and revert to simply root: at its completion.
bind o title | |
bind E title "" | |
bind u title (unknown) |
The first binding doesn’t have any arguments, so it would prompt you for a title when you type C-a o. The second binding would clear an auto-title’s current setting (C-a E). The third binding would set the current window’s title to (unknown) (C-a u).
One thing to keep in mind when adding a null title-escape-sequence to your prompt is that some shells (like the csh) count all the non-control characters as part of the prompt’s length. If these invisible characters aren’t a multiple of 8 then backspacing over a tab will result in an incorrect display. One way to get around this is to use a prompt like this:
set prompt=’^[[0000m^[k^[\% ’ |
The escape-sequence <esc>[0000m not only normalizes the character attributes, but all the zeros round the length of the invisible characters up to 8. Bash users will probably want to echo the escape sequence in the PROMPT_COMMAND:
PROMPT_COMMAND=’printf "\033k\033\134"’ |
(I used \134 to output a ’\’ because of a bug in bash v1.04).
THE VIRTUAL TERMINAL
Each window in
a screen session emulates a VT100 terminal, with some
extra functions added. The VT100 emulator is hard-coded, no
other terminal types can be emulated.
Usually screen tries to emulate as much of the
VT100/ANSI standard as possible. But if your terminal lacks
certain capabilities, the emulation may not be complete. In
these cases screen has to tell the applications that
some of the features are missing. This is no problem on
machines using termcap, because screen can use the
$TERMCAP variable to customize the standard screen
termcap.
But if you do a rlogin on another machine or your machine supports only terminfo this method fails. Because of this, screen offers a way to deal with these cases. Here is how it works:
When screen tries to figure out a terminal name for itself, it first looks for an entry named screen.<term>, where <term> is the contents of your $TERM variable. If no such entry exists, screen tries screen (or screen-w if the terminal is wide (132 cols or more)). If even this entry cannot be found, vt100 is used as a substitute.
The idea is that if you have a terminal which doesn’t support an important feature (e.g. delete char or clear to EOS) you can build a new termcap/terminfo entry for screen (named screen.<dumbterm>) in which this capability has been disabled. If this entry is installed on your machines you are able to do a rlogin and still keep the correct termcap/terminfo entry. The terminal name is put in the $TERM variable of all new windows. Screen also sets the $TERMCAP variable reflecting the capabilities of the virtual terminal emulated. Notice that, however, on machines using the terminfo database this variable has no effect. Furthermore, the variable $WINDOW is set to the window number of each window.
The actual set of capabilities supported by the virtual terminal depends on the capabilities supported by the physical terminal. If, for instance, the physical terminal does not support underscore mode, screen does not put the ’us’ and ’ue’ capabilities into the window’s $TERMCAP variable, accordingly. However, a minimum number of capabilities must be supported by a terminal in order to run screen; namely scrolling, clear screen, and direct cursor addressing (in addition, screen does not run on hardcopy terminals or on terminals that over-strike).
Also, you can customize the $TERMCAP value used by screen by using the termcap .screenrc command, or by defining the variable $SCREENCAP prior to startup. When the latter is defined, its value will be copied verbatim into each window’s $TERMCAP variable. This can either be the full terminal definition, or a filename where the terminal screen (and/or screen-w) is defined.
Note that screen honors the terminfo .screenrc command if the system uses the terminfo database rather than termcap.
When the boolean ’G0’ capability is present in the termcap entry for the terminal on which screen has been called, the terminal emulation of screen supports multiple character sets. This allows an application to make use of, for instance, the VT100 graphics character set or national character sets. The following control functions from ISO 2022 are supported: lock shift G0 (SI), lock shift G1 (SO), lock shift G2, lock shift G3, single shift G2, and single shift G3. When a virtual terminal is created or reset, the ASCII character set is designated as G0 through G3. When the ’G0’ capability is present, screen evaluates the capabilities ’S0’, ’E0’, and ’C0’ if present. ’S0’ is the sequence the terminal uses to enable and start the graphics character set rather than SI. ’E0’ is the corresponding replacement for SO. ’C0’ gives a character by character translation string that is used during semi-graphics mode. This string is built like the ’acsc’ terminfo capability.
When the ’po’ and ’pf’ capabilities are present in the terminal’s termcap entry, applications running in a screen window can send output to the printer port of the terminal. This allows a user to have an application in one window sending output to a printer connected to the terminal, while all other windows are still active (the printer port is enabled and disabled again for each chunk of output). As a side-effect, programs running in different windows can send output to the printer simultaneously. Data sent to the printer is not displayed in the window. The info command displays a line starting ’PRIN’ while the printer is active.
Screen maintains a hardstatus line for every window. If a window gets selected, the display’s hardstatus will be updated to match the window’s hardstatus line. If the display has no hardstatus the line will be displayed as a standard screen message. The hardstatus line can be changed with the ANSI Application Program Command (APC): ESC_<string>ESC\. As a convenience for xterm users the sequence ESC]0..2;<string>^G is also accepted.
Some capabilities are only put into the $TERMCAP variable of the virtual terminal if they can be efficiently implemented by the physical terminal. For instance, ’dl’ (delete line) is only put into the $TERMCAP variable if the terminal supports either delete line itself or scrolling regions. Note that this may provoke confusion, when the session is reattached on a different terminal, as the value of $TERMCAP cannot be modified by parent processes.
The "alternate screen" capability is not enabled by default. Set the altscreen .screenrc command to enable it.
The following is a list of control sequences recognized by screen. (V) and (A) indicate VT100-specific and ANSI- or ISO-specific functions, respectively.
ESC E |
Next Line | ||
ESC D |
Index | ||
ESC M |
Reverse Index | ||
ESC H |
Horizontal Tab Set | ||
ESC Z |
Send VT100 Identification String | ||
ESC 7 (V) |
Save Cursor and Attributes | ||
ESC 8 (V) |
Restore Cursor and Attributes | ||
ESC [s (A) |
Save Cursor and Attributes | ||
ESC [u (A) |
Restore Cursor and Attributes | ||
ESC c |
Reset to Initial State | ||
ESC g |
Visual Bell | ||
ESC Pn p |
Cursor Visibility (97801) |
Pn = 6
Invisible | |||
Pn = 7 |
Visible | ||
ESC = (V) |
Application Keypad Mode
ESC > (V) |
Numeric Keypad Mode | ||
ESC # 8 (V) |
Fill Screen with E’s | ||
ESC \ (A) |
String Terminator | ||
ESC ^ (A) |
Privacy Message String (Message Line) | ||
ESC ! |
Global Message String (Message Line) | ||
ESC k |
A.k.a. Definition String | ||
ESC P (A) |
Device Control String. Outputs a string directly to the host terminal without interpretation. | ||
ESC _ (A) |
Application Program Command (Hardstatus) | ||
ESC ] 0 ; string ^G (A) |
Operating System Command (Hardstatus, xterm title hack) | ||
ESC ] 83 ; cmd ^G (A) |
Execute screen command. This only works if multi-user support is compiled into screen. The pseudo-user :window: is used to check the access control list. Use addacl :window: -rwx #? to create a user with no rights and allow only the needed commands. | ||
Control-N (A) |
Lock Shift G1 (SO) | ||
Control-O (A) |
Lock Shift G0 (SI) | ||
ESC n (A) |
Lock Shift G2 | ||
ESC o (A) |
Lock Shift G3 | ||
ESC N (A) |
Single Shift G2 | ||
ESC O (A) |
Single Shift G3 | ||
ESC ( Pcs (A) |
Designate character set as G0 | ||
ESC ) Pcs (A) |
Designate character set as G1 | ||
ESC * Pcs (A) |
Designate character set as G2 | ||
ESC + Pcs (A) |
Designate character set as G3 | ||
ESC [ Pn ; Pn H |
Direct Cursor Addressing | ||
ESC [ Pn ; Pn f |
same as above | ||
ESC [ Pn J |
Erase in Display |
Pn = None or 0
From Cursor to End of Screen | |||
Pn = 1 |
From Beginning of Screen to Cursor | ||
Pn = 2 |
Entire Screen | ||
ESC [ Pn K |
Erase in Line
Pn = None or 0 |
From Cursor to End of Line | ||
Pn = 1 |
From Beginning of Line to Cursor | ||
Pn = 2 |
Entire Line | ||
ESC [ Pn X |
Erase character
ESC [ Pn A |
Cursor Up |
|||
ESC [ Pn B |
Cursor Down |
|||
ESC [ Pn C |
Cursor Right |
|||
ESC [ Pn D |
Cursor Left |
|||
ESC [ Pn E |
Cursor next line |
|||
ESC [ Pn F |
Cursor previous line |
|||
ESC [ Pn G |
Cursor horizontal position |
|||
ESC [ Pn ’ |
same as above |
|||
ESC [ Pn d |
Cursor vertical position |
|||
ESC [ Ps ;...; Ps m |
Select Graphic Rendition |
Ps = None or 0
Default Rendition | |||
Ps = 1 |
Bold | ||
Ps = 2 (A) |
Faint | ||
Ps = 3 (A) |
Standout Mode (ANSI: Italicized) | ||
Ps = 4 |
Underlined | ||
Ps = 5 |
Blinking | ||
Ps = 7 |
Negative Image | ||
Ps = 22 (A) |
Normal Intensity | ||
Ps = 23 (A) |
Standout Mode off (ANSI: Italicized off) | ||
Ps = 24 (A) |
Not Underlined | ||
Ps = 25 (A) |
Not Blinking | ||
Ps = 27 (A) |
Positive Image | ||
Ps = 30 (A) |
Foreground Black | ||
Ps = 31 (A) |
Foreground Red | ||
Ps = 32 (A) |
Foreground Green | ||
Ps = 33 (A) |
Foreground Yellow | ||
Ps = 34 (A) |
Foreground Blue | ||
Ps = 35 (A) |
Foreground Magenta | ||
Ps = 36 (A) |
Foreground Cyan | ||
Ps = 37 (A) |
Foreground White | ||
Ps = 39 (A) |
Foreground Default | ||
Ps = 40 (A) |
Background Black | ||
Ps = ... |
|||
Ps = 49 (A) |
Background Default | ||
ESC [ Pn g |
Tab Clear
Pn = None or 0 |
Clear Tab at Current Position | ||
Pn = 3 |
Clear All Tabs | ||
ESC [ Pn ; Pn r (V) |
Set Scrolling Region
ESC [ Pn I (A) |
Horizontal Tab |
|||
ESC [ Pn Z (A) |
Backward Tab |
|||
ESC [ Pn L (A) |
Insert Line |
|||
ESC [ Pn M (A) |
Delete Line |
|||
ESC [ Pn @ (A) |
Insert Character |
|||
ESC [ Pn P (A) |
Delete Character |
|||
ESC [ Pn S |
Scroll Scrolling Region Up |
|||
ESC [ Pn T |
Scroll Scrolling Region Down |
|||
ESC [ Pn ^ |
same as above |
|||
ESC [ Ps ;...; Ps h |
Set Mode |
|||
ESC [ Ps ;...; Ps l |
Reset Mode |
Ps = 4 (A)
Insert Mode | |||
Ps = 20 (A) |
Automatic Linefeed Mode | ||
Ps = 34 |
Normal Cursor Visibility | ||
Ps = ?1 (V) |
Application Cursor Keys | ||
Ps = ?3 (V) |
Change Terminal Width to 132 columns | ||
Ps = ?5 (V) |
Reverse Video | ||
Ps = ?6 (V) |
Origin Mode | ||
Ps = ?7 (V) |
Wrap Mode | ||
Ps = ?9 |
X10 mouse tracking | ||
Ps = ?25 (V) |
Visible Cursor | ||
Ps = ?47 |
Alternate Screen (old xterm code) | ||
Ps = ?1000 (V) |
VT200 mouse tracking | ||
Ps = ?1047 |
Alternate Screen (new xterm code) | ||
Ps = ?1049 |
Alternate Screen (new xterm code) | ||
ESC [ 5 i (A) |
Start relay to printer (ANSI Media Copy)
ESC [ 4 i (A) |
Stop relay to printer (ANSI Media Copy) | ||
ESC [ 8 ; Ph ; Pw t |
Resize the window to ’Ph’ lines and ’Pw’ columns (SunView special) | ||
ESC [ c |
Send VT100 Identification String | ||
ESC [ x |
Send Terminal Parameter Report | ||
ESC [ > c |
Send VT220 Secondary Device Attributes String | ||
ESC [ 6 n |
Send Cursor Position Report |
INPUT TRANSLATION
In order to do a full VT100 emulation screen has to detect that a sequence of characters in the input stream was generated by a keypress on the user’s keyboard and insert the VT100 style escape sequence. Screen has a very flexible way of doing this by making it possible to map arbitrary commands on arbitrary sequences of characters. For standard VT100 emulation the command will always insert a string in the input buffer of the window (see also command stuff in the command table). Because the sequences generated by a keypress can change after a reattach from a different terminal type, it is possible to bind commands to the termcap name of the keys. Screen will insert the correct binding after each reattach. See the bindkey command for further details on the syntax and examples.
Here is the table of the default key bindings. The fourth is what command is executed if the keyboard is switched into application mode.
SPECIAL TERMINAL CAPABILITIES
The following table describes all terminal capabilities that are recognized by screen and are not in the termcap(5) manual. You can place these capabilities in your termcap entries (in ’/etc/termcap’) or use them with the commands ’termcap’, ’terminfo’ and ’termcapinfo’ in your screenrc files. It is often not possible to place these capabilities in the terminfo database.
LP (bool) |
Terminal has VT100 style margins (’magic margins’). Note that this capability is obsolete because screen uses the standard ’xn’ instead. | ||
Z0 (str) |
Change width to 132 columns. | ||
Z1 (str) |
Change width to 80 columns. | ||
WS (str) |
Resize display. This capability has the desired width and height as arguments. SunView(tm) example: ’\E[8;%d;%dt’. | ||
NF (bool) |
Terminal doesn’t need flow control. Send ^S and ^Q direct to the application. Same as ’flow off’. The opposite of this capability is ’nx’. | ||
G0 (bool) |
Terminal can deal with ISO 2022 font selection sequences. | ||
S0 (str) |
Switch charset ’G0’ to the specified charset. Default is ’\E(%.’. | ||
E0 (str) |
Switch charset ’G0’ back to standard charset. Default is ’\E(B’. | ||
C0 (str) |
Use the string as a conversion table for font ’0’. See the ’ac’ capability for more details. | ||
CS (str) |
Switch cursor-keys to application mode. | ||
CE (str) |
Switch cursor-keys back to normal mode. | ||
AN (bool) |
Turn on autonuke. See the ’autonuke’ command for more details. | ||
OL (num) |
Set the output buffer limit. See the ’obuflimit’ command for more details. | ||
KJ (str) |
Set the encoding of the terminal. See the ’encoding’ command for valid encodings. | ||
AF (str) |
Change character foreground color in an ANSI conform way. This capability will almost always be set to ’\E[3%dm’ (’\E[3%p1%dm’ on terminfo machines). | ||
AB (str) |
Same as ’AF’, but change background color. | ||
AX (bool) |
Does understand ANSI set default fg/bg color (\E[39m / \E[49m). | ||
XC (str) |
Describe a translation of characters to strings depending on the current font. More details follow in the next section. | ||
XT (bool) |
Terminal understands special xterm sequences (OSC, mouse tracking). | ||
C8 (bool) |
Terminal needs bold to display high-intensity colors (e.g. Eterm). | ||
TF (bool) |
Add missing capabilities to the termcap/info entry. (Set by default). |
CHARACTER TRANSLATION
Screen has a powerful mechanism to translate characters to arbitrary strings depending on the current font and terminal type. Use this feature if you want to work with a common standard character set (say ISO8851-latin1) even on terminals that scatter the more unusual characters over several national language font pages.
Syntax:
XC=<charset-mapping>{,,<charset-mapping>}
<charset-mapping> :=
<designator><template>{,<mapping>}
<mapping> :=
<char-to-be-mapped><template-arg>
The things in braces may be repeated any number of times.
A <charset-mapping> tells screen how to map characters in font <designator> (’B’: Ascii, ’A’: UK, ’K’: German, etc.) to strings. Every <mapping> describes to what string a single character will be translated. A template mechanism is used, as most of the time the codes have a lot in common (for example strings to switch to and from another charset). Each occurrence of ’%’ in <template> gets substituted with the <template-arg> specified together with the character. If your strings are not similar at all, then use ’%’ as a template and place the full string in <template-arg>. A quoting mechanism was added to make it possible to use a real ’%’. The ’\’ character quotes the special characters ’\’, ’%’, and ’,’.
Here is an example:
termcap hp700 ’XC=B\E(K%\E(B,\304[,\326\\\\,\334]’
This tells screen how to translate ISOlatin1 (charset ’B’) upper case umlaut characters on a hp700 terminal that has a German charset. ’\304’ gets translated to ’\E(K[\E(B’ and so on. Note that this line gets parsed *three* times before the internal lookup table is built, therefore a lot of quoting is needed to create a single ’\’.
Another extension was added to allow more emulation: If a mapping translates the unquoted ’%’ char, it will be sent to the terminal whenever screen switches to the corresponding <designator>. In this special case the template is assumed to be just ’%’ because the charset switch sequence and the character mappings normally haven’t much in common.
This example shows one use of the extension:
termcap xterm ’XC=K%,%\E(B,[\304,\\\\\326,]\334’
Here, a part of the German (’K’) charset is emulated on an xterm. If screen has to change to the ’K’ charset, ’\E(B’ will be sent to the terminal, i.e. the ASCII charset is used instead. The template is just ’%’, so the mapping is straightforward: ’[’ to ’\304’, ’\’ to ’\326’, and ’]’ to ’\334’.
ENVIRONMENT
COLUMNS |
Number of columns on the terminal (overrides termcap entry). | ||
HOME |
Directory in which to look for .screenrc. | ||
LINES |
Number of lines on the terminal (overrides termcap entry). | ||
LOCKPRG |
Screen lock program. | ||
NETHACKOPTIONS |
Turns on nethack option. | ||
PATH |
Used for locating programs to run. | ||
SCREENCAP |
For customizing a terminal’s TERMCAP value. | ||
SCREENDIR |
Alternate socket directory. | ||
SCREENRC |
Alternate user screenrc file. | ||
SHELL |
Default shell program for opening windows (default /bin/sh). See also shell .screenrc command. | ||
STY |
Alternate socket name. | ||
SYSSCREENRC |
Alternate system screenrc file. | ||
TERM |
Terminal name. | ||
TERMCAP |
Terminal description. | ||
WINDOW |
Window number of a window (at creation time). |
FILES
.../screen-4.?.??/etc/screenrc |
|||
.../screen-4.?.??/etc/etcscreenrc |
Examples in the screen distribution package for private and global initialization files. | ||
$SYSSCREENRC |
|||
/etc/screenrc |
screen initialization commands | ||
$SCREENRC |
|||
$HOME/.screenrc |
Read in after /etc/screenrc | ||
$SCREENDIR/S-<login> |
|||
/run/screen/S-<login> |
Socket directories (default) | ||
/usr/tmp/screens/S-<login> |
Alternate socket directories. | ||
<socket directory>/.termcap |
Written by the "termcap" output function | ||
/usr/tmp/screens/screen-exchange |
or | ||
/tmp/screen-exchange |
screen ’interprocess communication buffer’ | ||
hardcopy.[0-9] |
Screen images created by the hardcopy function | ||
screenlog.[0-9] |
Output log files created by the log function | ||
/usr/lib/terminfo/?/* |
or | ||
/etc/termcap |
Terminal capability databases | ||
/run/utmp |
Login records | ||
$LOCKPRG |
Program that locks a terminal. |
AUTHORS
Originally created by Oliver Laumann. For a long time maintained and developed by Juergen Weigert, Michael Schroeder, Micah Cowan and Sadrul Habib Chowdhury. Since 2015 maintained and developed by Amadeusz Slawinski <amade [AT] asmblr.net> and Alexander Naumov <alexander_naumov [AT] opensuse.org>.
COPYLEFT
Copyright (c) 2018-2023
Alexander Naumov <alexander_naumov [AT] opensuse.org> | |
Amadeusz Slawinski <amade [AT] asmblr.net> |
Copyright (c) 2015-2017
Juergen Weigert <jnweiger [AT] immd4.de> | |
Alexander Naumov <alexander_naumov [AT] opensuse.org> | |
Amadeusz Slawinski <amade [AT] asmblr.net> |
Copyright (c) 2010-2015
Juergen Weigert <jnweiger [AT] immd4.de> | |
Sadrul Habib Chowdhury <sadrul [AT] users.net> |
Copyright (c) 2008, 2009
Juergen Weigert <jnweiger [AT] immd4.de> | |
Michael Schroeder <mlschroe [AT] immd4.de> | |
Micah Cowan <micah [AT] cowan.name> | |
Sadrul Habib Chowdhury <sadrul [AT] users.net> |
Copyright (C) 1993-2003
Juergen Weigert <jnweiger [AT] immd4.de> | |
Michael Schroeder <mlschroe [AT] immd4.de> |
Copyright (C) 1987 Oliver Laumann
This program is
free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3,
or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be
useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied
warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more
details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public
License along with this program (see the file COPYING); if
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple
Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA
CONTRIBUTORS
Vincent Lefevre
<vincent [AT] vinc17.net>,
Carl Drougge <bearded [AT] longhaired.org>,
Maarten ter Huurne <maarten [AT] treewalker.org>,
Jussi Kukkonen <jussi.kukkonen [AT] intel.com>,
Eric S. Raymond <esr [AT] thyrsus.com>,
Thomas Renninger <treen [AT] suse.com>,
Axel Beckert <abe [AT] deuxchevaux.org>,
Ken Beal <kbeal [AT] amber.com>,
Rudolf Koenig
<rfkoenig [AT] immd4.de>,
Toerless Eckert
<eckert [AT] immd4.de>,
Wayne Davison <davison [AT] borland.com>,
Patrick Wolfe <pat [AT] kai.com, kailand!pat>,
Bart Schaefer <schaefer [AT] cse.edu>,
Nathan Glasser <nathan [AT] brokaw.edu>,
Larry W. Virden <lvirden [AT] cas.org>,
Howard Chu <hyc [AT] hanauma.gov>,
Tim MacKenzie <tym [AT] dibbler.au>,
Markku Jarvinen <mta@{cc,cs,ee}.tut.fi>,
Marc Boucher <marc [AT] CAM.ORG>,
Doug Siebert <dsiebert [AT] isca.edu>,
Ken Stillson <stillson [AT] tsfsrv.org>,
Ian Frechett <frechett [AT] spot.EDU>,
Brian Koehmstedt <bpk [AT] gnu.edu>,
Don Smith <djs6015 [AT] ultb.edu>,
Frank van der Linden <vdlinden [AT] fwi.nl>,
Martin Schweikert <schweik [AT] cpp.de>,
David Vrona <dave [AT] sashimi.com>,
E. Tye McQueen <tye%spillman.UUCP [AT] uunet.net>,
Matthew Green <mrg [AT] eterna.au>,
Christopher Williams <cgw [AT] pobox.com>,
Matt Mosley <mattm [AT] access.net>,
Gregory Neil Shapiro <gshapiro [AT] wpi.EDU>,
Johannes Zellner <johannes [AT] zellner.org>,
Pablo Averbuj <pablo [AT] averbuj.com>.
AVAILABILITY
The latest official release of screen available via anonymous ftp from ftp.gnu.org/gnu/screen/ or any other GNU distribution site. The home page of screen is https://savannah.gnu.org/projects/screen/ and the git repo is https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/screen.git. If you want to help, send a note to screen-devel [AT] gnu.org.
BUGS
• |
’dm’ (delete mode) and ’xs’ are not handled correctly (they are ignored). ’xn’ is treated as a magic-margin indicator. | ||
• |
Screen has no clue about double-high or double-wide characters. But this is the only area where vttest is allowed to fail. | ||
• |
It is not possible to change the environment variable $TERMCAP when reattaching under a different terminal type. | ||
• |
The support of terminfo based systems is very limited. Adding extra capabilities to $TERMCAP may not have any effects. | ||
• |
Screen does not make use of hardware tabs. | ||
• |
Screen must be installed as set-uid with owner root on most systems in order to be able to correctly change the owner of the tty device file for each window. Special permission may also be required to write the file /run/utmp. | ||
• |
Entries in /run/utmp are not removed when screen is killed with SIGKILL. This will cause some programs (like "w" or "rwho") to advertise that a user is logged on who really isn’t. | ||
• |
Screen may give a strange warning when your tty has no utmp entry. | ||
• |
When the modem line was hung up, screen may not automatically detach (or quit) unless the device driver is configured to send a HANGUP signal. To detach a screen session use the -D or -d command line option. | ||
• |
If a password is set, the command line options -d and -D still detach a session without asking. | ||
• |
Both breaktype and defbreaktype change the break generating method used by all terminal devices. The first should change a window specific setting, where the latter should change only the default for new windows. | ||
• |
When attaching to a multiuser session, the user’s .screenrc file is not sourced. Each user’s personal settings have to be included in the .screenrc file from which the session is booted, or have to be changed manually. | ||
• |
A weird imagination is most useful to gain full advantage of all the features. |
Send bug-reports, fixes, enhancements, t-shirts, money, beer & pizza to screen-devel [AT] gnu.org.
SEE ALSO
termcap(5), utmp(5), vi(1), captoinfo(1), tic(1), tty(4), pty(7)