Tired of reopening terminal windows every time you come back to a VSCode project? You can pick up right where you left off without having to re-run setup commands and reopen programs by using Tmux sessions. Read on to find out how.
Tmux (Terminal Multiplexer) is basically a window manager for your terminal. It has two main functionalities:
Tmux is super powerful and has many use cases. For example, you can protecting your remote ssh terminal sessions from being nuked when dealing with a flaky connection.
If you’re not already familiar with this tool, I recommend Ham Vocke’s “Quick and Easy Guide to tmux” to get started.
To start persisting your terminal sessions using Tmux in VSCode:
If you’re using macOS, you can use Homebrew by running the following command in your terminal:
brew install tmux
For Ubuntu or WSL users, you can install it by executing:
sudo apt-get install tmux
If you’re using any other linux distro I’m sure you probably already know what you’re doing
Open VSCode settings with Cmd+Shift+P (macOS) or Ctrl+Shift+P (Windows/Linux)
Search for Open User Settings (JSON)
. This will open the settings.json
file.
Under terminal.integrated.profiles.osx
or terminal.integrated.profiles.linux
, add:
"terminal.integrated.profiles.osx": {
//...existing profiles...
"tmux-shell": {
"path": "tmux",
"args": ["new-session", "-A", "-s", "vscode:${workspaceFolder}"]
}
}
This runs tmux new-session
on terminal startup, connecting to existing sessions named after the workspace folder. This way, if you’ve already created a terminal for this project, you’ll connect back to it automatically!
Finally, to make the newly created Tmux profile the default for your system, add or modify the following line in the settings.json
file:
"terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.osx": "tmux-shell"
Now, every time you open VSCode terminal, Tmux will startup automatically, allowing you to pick up exactly where you left off last time.
We’ve gone over how to integrate Tmux into VSCode’s integrated terminal. You can now use Tmux’s powerful session and window management easily inside VSCode!
Also published here.