tmux-fastcopy aids in copying of text in a tmux pane with ease.
How? When you invoke tmux-fastcopy, it inspects your tmux pane and overlays important pieces of text you may want to copy with very short labels that you can use to copy them.
Demos: A gif is worth a paragraph or two.
Before you install, make sure you are running a supported version of tmux.
$ tmux -V
Minimum supported version: 2.7.
The following methods of installation are available:
Prerequisite: To use this method, you must have a Go compiler available on your system.
If you're using Tmux Plugin Manager, to
install, add tmux-fastcopy to the plugin list in your .tmux.conf
:
set -g @plugin 'abhinav/tmux-fastcopy'
Hit <prefix> + I
to fetch and build it.
Prerequisite: To use this method, you must have a Go compiler available on your system.
Clone the repository somewhere on your system:
git clone https://github.com/abhinav/tmux-fastcopy ~/.tmux/plugins/tmux-fastcopy
Source it in your .tmux.conf
.
run-shell ~/.tmux/plugins/tmux-fastcopy/fastcopy.tmux
Refresh your tmux server if it's already running.
tmux source-file ~/.tmux.conf
Instead of installing tmux-fastcopy as a tmux plugin, you can install it as an independent binary.
Use one of the following to install the binary.
-
If you're using Homebrew/Linuxbrew, run:
brew install abhinav/tap/tmux-fastcopy
-
If you're using ArchLinux, install it from AUR using the tmux-fastcopy package, or the tmux-fastcopy-bin package if you don't want to build it from source.
git clone https://aur.archlinux.org/tmux-fastcopy.git cd tmux-fastcopy makepkg -si
With an AUR helper like yay, run:
yay -S tmux-fastcopy # or yay -S tmux-fastcopy-bin
-
Download a pre-built binary from the releases page and place it on your
$PATH
. -
Build it from source with Go.
go install github.com/abhinav/tmux-fastcopy@latest
Once you have the binary installed, add the following to your .tmux.conf
.
bind-key f run-shell -b tmux-fastcopy
When there is text on the screen you'd like to copy:
- Press
<prefix> + f
to invoke tmux-fastcopy. (You can change this key by setting the@fastcopy-key
option.) - Enter the label next to the highlighted text to copy that text. (You can also select multiple items.)
For example,
By default, the copied text will be placed in your tmux buffer. Paste it by
pressing <prefix> + ]
.
If you'd like to copy the text to your system clipboard, and you're using tmux >= 3.2, add the following to your .tmux.conf:
set-option -g set-clipboard on
set-option -g @fastcopy-action 'tmux load-buffer -w -'
See How to copy text to the clipboard? for older versions of tmux.
tmux-fastcopy also supports a multi-selection mode. To select multiple items:
- Press
<prefix> + f
to invoke tmux-fastcopy as usual. - Press
Tab
. This enters multi-selection mode. - Enter all the labels for text you want to copy. If you selected something accidentally, enter that label again to deselect it.
- Press
Tab
orEnter
to accept your selections.
tmux-fastcopy will join your selections together and copy the result.
Invoke tmux-fastcopy in tmux with this the prefix
followed by this key.
Default:
set-option -g @fastcopy-key f
Change how text is copied with this action.
Default:
set-option -g @fastcopy-action 'tmux load-buffer -'
The string specifies the command to run with the selection, as well as the
arguments for the command. The special argument {}
acts as a placeholder for
the selected text.
set-option -g @fastcopy-action 'tmux set-buffer {}'
If {}
is absent from the command, tmux-fastcopy will pass the selected text
to the command over stdin. For example,
set-option -g @fastcopy-action pbcopy # for macOS
Note that if the command string uses {}
,
the selected text is not passed via stdin.
The command string is executed directly by tmux-fastcopy, so it must be a path to a binary or shell script that is executable. It is not executed in the context of a full login shell.
The command runs inside the directory of the pane where tmux-fastcopy was invoked if this information is available from tmux. It runs with the following environment variables set:
FASTCOPY_REGEX_NAME
: Name of@fastcopy-regex
rule that matched. See Regex names and Accessing the regex name for more information.FASTCOPY_TARGET_PANE_ID
: Unique identifier for the pane inside which fastcopy was invoked. Use this when running tmux operations inside the action to target them to that pane.
An alternative action when you select a label while pressing shift. Nothing happens if this is unset.
Default:
set-option -g @fastcopy-shift-action ''
Similarly to [@fastcopy-action
], the string specifies a command and its
arguments, and the special argument {}
(if any) is a placeholder for the
selected text.
set-option -g @fastcopy-shift-action "fastcopy-shift.sh {}"
The @fastcopy-shift-action
will run with the same
execution context
as the @fastcopy-action
.
Specify the letters used to generate labels for matched text.
Default:
set-option -g @fastcopy-alphabet abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
This must be a string containing at least two letters, and all of them must be unique.
For example, if you want to only use the letters from the QWERTY home row, use the following.
set-option -g @fastcopy-alphabet asdfghjkl
These specify the regular expressions used to match text.
Default:
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-ipv4 "\\b\\d{1,3}(?:\\.\\d{1,3}){3}\\b"
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-gitsha "\\b[0-9a-f]{7,40}\\b"
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-hexaddr "\\b(?i)0x[0-9a-f]{2,}\\b"
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-hexcolor "(?i)#(?:[0-9a-f]{3}|[0-9a-f]{6})\\b"
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-int "(?:-?|\\b)\\d{4,}\\b"
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-path "(?:[\\w\\-\\.]+|~)?(?:/[\\w\\-\\.]+){2,}\\b"
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-uuid "\\b(?i)[0-9a-f]{8}(?:-[0-9a-f]{4}){3}-[0-9a-f]{12}\\b"
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-isodate "\\d{4}-\\d{2}-\\d{2}"
Add new regular expressions by introducing new options with the prefix,
@fastcopy-regex-
. For example, the following will match Phabricator revision
IDs if they're at least three letters long.
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-phab-diff "\\bD\\d{3,}\\b"
Note: You must double all \
symbols inside regular expressions to
escape them properly.
Read this FAQ entry for an explanation of the
\\b
s inside the regular expressions above.
Use regex capturing groups if you wish to copy only a portion of the matched string. tmux-fastcopy will copy the contents of the first capturing group. For example,
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-python-import "import ([\\w\\.]+)"
# From "import os.path", copy only "os.path"
This also means that to use (...)
in regular expressions that should copy the
whole string, you should add the ?:
prefix to the start of the capturing
group to ignore it. For example,
# Matches commands suggested by 'git status'
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-git-rebase "git rebase --(?:continue|abort)"
The portion after the @fastcopy-regex-
can be any name that uniquely
identifies this regular expression.
For example, the name of this regular expression is phab-diff
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-phab-diff "\\bD\\d{3,}\\b"
You cannot have multiple regular expressions with the same name. New regular
expressions with previously used names will overwrite them. For example, this
overwrites the default hexcolor
regular expression to copy only the color
code, skipping the preceding #
:
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-hexcolor "(?i)#([0-9a-f]{3}|[0-9a-f]{6})\\b"
You can delete previously defined or default regular expressions by setting them to a blank string.
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-isodate ""
The name of the regular expression that matched the selection is available to
the @fastcopy-action
via the FASTCOPY_REGEX_NAME
environment variable.
See Accessing the regex name for more details.
tmux-fastcopy executes the action with the FASTCOPY_REGEX_NAME
environment
variable set. This holds the name of the regex that matched the
selected string.
If multiple different regexes matched the string, FASTCOPY_REGEX_NAME
holds a
space-separated list of them.
You can use this to customize the action on a per-regex basis.
For example, the following will copy most strings to the tmux buffer as usual. However, if the string is matched by the "path" regular expression and it represents an existing directory, this will open that directory in the file browser.
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Place this inside a file like "fastcopy.sh",
# mark it executable (chmod +x fastcopy.sh),
# and set the @fastcopy-action setting to:
# '/path/to/fastcopy.sh {}'
if [ "$FASTCOPY_REGEX_NAME" == path ] && [ -d "$1" ]; then
xdg-open "$1" # on macOS, use "open" instead
exit 0
fi
tmux set-buffer -w "$1"
To copy text to your system clipboard, you can use tmux's set-clipboard
option and change the action to tmux load-buffer -w -
if you're using
at least tmux 3.2.
set-option -g set-clipboard on
set-option -g @fastcopy-action 'tmux load-buffer -w -'
With this option set, and the -w
flag for load-buffer
, tmux will use the
OSC52 escape sequence to directly set the clipboard for your terminal
emulator--it should work even through an SSH session. Check out
A guide on how to copy text from anywhere to read more about OSC52.
If you're using an older version of tmux or your terminal emulator does not
support OSC52, you can configure @fastcopy-action
to have tmux-fastcopy
send the text elsewhere. For example,
# On macOS:
set-option -g @fastcopy-action pbcopy
# For Linux systems using X11, install [xclip] and use:
#
# [xclip]: https://github.com/astrand/xclip
set-option -g @fastcopy-action 'xclip -selection clipboard'
# For Linux systems using Wayland, install [wl-clipboard] and use:
#
# [wl-clipboard]: https://github.com/bugaevc/wl-clipboard
set-option -g @fastcopy-action wl-copy
If you'd like to select the matched text rather than copy in, you can define an action that takes the target pane in copy mode, and moves your cursor over to the matched text.
The following script should suffice for this:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
MATCH_TEXT="$1"
PANE_ID="$FASTCOPY_TARGET_PANE_ID"
tmux \
copy-mode -t "$PANE_ID" ';' \
send-keys -t "$PANE_ID" -X search-backward-text "$MATCH_TEXT" ';' \
send-keys -t "$PANE_ID" -X begin-selection ';' \
send-keys -t "$PANE_ID" -X -N "$((${#MATCH_TEXT} - 1))" cursor-right ';' \
send-keys -t "$PANE_ID" -X end-selection
Explanation
The script above expects the matched text as an argument,
and grabs the target pane ID from the environment.
tmux-fastcopy sets FASTCOPY_TARGET_PANE_ID
when running the action
(see Execution context).
It then runs the following tmux commands on the pane:
- switch it to copy mode
- search for the closest recent instance of the matched text and move your cursor there
- begin a selection
- move the cursor to the end of the selected text
- end the selection
The end result of this is that when the action runs, your cursor will have selected the matched text leaving you room to adjust the selection before copying.
Place this script in a location of your choice, say, ~/.tmux/select.sh
and mark it as an executable:
chmod +x ~/.tmux/select.sh
Then add the following to your ~/tmux.conf
.
set -g @fastcopy-action "~/.tmux/select.sh {}"
Or add the following if you want to do this
only when you press shift along with the label
(see @fastcopy-shift-action
).
set -g @fastcopy-shift-action "~/.tmux/select.sh {}"
The \b
at either end of the regular expression above specifies that it must
start and/or end at a word boundary. A word boundary is the start or end of a
line, or a non-alphanumeric character.
For example, the regular expression \bgit\b
will match the string git
inside git rebase --continue
and git-rebase
, but not inside github
because the "h" following the "git" is not a word boundary.
If your regular expression uses capturing groups (...)
, tmux-fastcopy will
only copy the first of these from the matched string.
In the regex below, only the strings "continue" or "abort" will be copied.
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-git-rebase "git rebase --(continue|abort)"
To copy the entire string, you can put the whole string in a capturing group, making it the first capturing group.
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-git-rebase "(git rebase --(continue|abort))"
Or you can mark the (continue|abort)
group as ignored by starting it with
?:
.
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-git-rebase "git rebase --(?:continue|abort)"
Yes, the regular expressions matched by tmux-fastcopy are case sensitive. For example,
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-github-project "github.com/(\w+/\w+)"
This will match github.com/abhinav/tmux-fastcopy
but not
GitHub.com/abhinav/tux-fastcopy
.
If you want to turn your regular expression case insensitive, prefix it with
(?i)
.
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-github-project "(?i)github.com/(\w+/\w+)"
To overwrite or remove default regular expressions, add a new regex to your
tmux.conf
with the same name as the default one, using a blank string as the
value to delete it.
For example, the following deletes the isodate
regular expression.
set-option -g @fastcopy-regex-isodate ""
The FASTCOPY_REGEX_NAME
environment variable holds the name of the regex that
matched your selection.
You can run different actions on a per-regex basis by inspecting the
FASTCOPY_REGEX_NAME
environment variable in your
@fastcopy-action
.
See Accessing the regex name for more details.
The plugin is inspired by functionality provided by the Vimium and Vimperator Chrome and Firefox plugins.
This software is distributed under the GPL-2.0 License:
tmux-fastcopy
Copyright (C) 2023 Abhinav Gupta
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 2 of the License, 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; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
The LICENSE file holds the full text of the GPL-2.0 license.