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Stmux

Simple Terminal Multiplexer for Node.js Environments

Install / Use

/learn @rse/Stmux
About this skill

Quality Score

0/100

Supported Platforms

Universal

README

stmux

Simple Terminal Multiplexing for Node Environments

<p/> <img src="https://nodei.co/npm/stmux.png?downloads=true&stars=true" alt=""/> <p/> <img src="https://david-dm.org/rse/stmux.png" alt=""/>

Abstract

This is a simple terminal multiplexing utility for Node.js environments. It is inspired by the awesome and unreachable tmux native Unix utility. The stmux utility is intended to provide just a very tiny subset of the original tmux functionality, but in a portable way for bare Node.js environments and with some special features for application build environments. Most notably, stmux has a built-time error detection and notification feature, can automatically restart terminated commands, and can automatically close or wait after all spawned commands have successfully or unsuccessfully terminated.

Internally, stmux is based on the awesome Blessed screen rendering environment and emulates full XTerm-compatible pseudo-terminals to the spawned programs with the help of Blessed XTerm and the underlying XTerm.js terminal rendering and node-pty pseudo-terminal integration modules.

Example

The following command...

$ stmux -- [ [ -s 1/3 bash .. vim ] : mc ]

...leads to the following particular terminal multiplexing environment, where GNU bash, Vim and Midnight Commander are running side-by-side inside their own XTerm emulating terminal widget (and, just for fun, CTRL+a ? was pressed to open up the stmux help window):

stmux usage

Intention

This utility is primarily intended to be used from within a package.json script to easily side-by-side run various NPM-based commands in a Node.js build-time environment. Sample package.json entries from a top-level NPM-based project follows, which on npm run dev allows one to conveniently run the commands of two sub-projects. First, the build-time of the frontend user interface (UI) project. Second, the build-time of the backend server (SV) project. Third, the run-time of the backend server project.

{
    ...
    "dependencies": {
        "stmux":      "*"
    },
    "scripts": {
        "install":    "npm run install:ui && npm run install:sv",
        "install:ui": "cd ui && npm install",
        "install:sv": "cd sv && npm install",

        "build":      "npm run build:ui && npm run build:sv",
        "build:ui":   "cd ui && npm run build",
        "build:sv":   "cd sv && npm run build",

        "start":      "cd sv && npm start",

        "clean":      "npm run clean:ui && npm run clean:sv",
        "clean:ui":   "cd ui && npm run clean",
        "clean:sv":   "cd sv && npm run clean",

        "dev":        "stmux -w always -e ERROR -m beep,system -- [ [ \"npm run dev:ui\" .. \"npm run dev:sv\" ] : -s 1/3 -f \"npm start\" ]",
        "dev:ui":     "cd ui && npm run build:watch",
        "dev:sv":     "cd sv && npm run build:watch"
    }
}

In case of a build-time error in the frontend user interface (SV), the result might be similar to the following one:

stmux example

Installation

$ npm install -g stmux

Transitive Dependency

The dependencies of stmux transitively include node-pty which must be built with node-gyp during npm install. Please check out the documentation of node-gyp on how to provide the necessary C/C++ compiler environment on your operating system.

  • macOS: install the "Command Line Tools" under "Preferences > Downloads" in Xcode.
  • Windows: open an elevated cmd.exe and run the commands npm install --global windows-build-tools and npm config set msvs_version 2015 --global
  • Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL), Ubuntu distribution: run the commands sudo apt-get update and sudo apt-get install -y python make build-essential
  • Under Linux or FreeBSD you usually don't have to do anything.

Usage

The following command line arguments are supported:

$ stmux [-h] [-V] [-w <condition>] [-a <activator>] [-t <title>]
        [-c <type>] [-n] [-e <regexp>] [-m <method>] [-M] [-f <file>]
        [-- <spec>]
  • -h, --help<br/> Show usage help.
  • -V, --version<br/> Show program version information.
  • -w <condition>, --wait <condition><br/> Wait after last finished command (and do not shutdown automatically), either if any command terminated with an error or just always.
  • -a <activator>, --activator <activator><br/> Use CTRL+<activator> as the prefix to special commands. The default activator character is a. For instance, for the default activator case, opening the help popup requires you to press CTRL+a (and release it again) and then (separately) press ?.
  • -t <title>, --title <title><br/> Set title on terminal. The default title is stmux.
  • -c <type>, --cursor <type><br/> Set type of cursor to block (default), underline or line.
  • -n, --number<br/> Show terminal number in terminal title.
  • -e <regexp>[,...], --error <regexp>[,...]<br/> Observe terminal lines for errors (global option). One or more regular expressions can be specified and have to match on a single line. If a regular expression is preceeded with the prefix !, it is required that it does not match.
  • -m <methods>, --method <methods><br/> In case of detected errors, use the comma-separated list of methods to perform user notification. The default is no extra notification (just the terminal annotation). Possible methods are beep and system.
  • -M, --mouse<br/> Enable mouse event handling. This enables the focus switching by left mouse click, the scrolling with mouse wheel and sends down mouse events to the terminal as mouse key sequences.
  • -f <file>, --file <file><br/> Read specification <spec> from a configuration file. The default is to use the specification inside the command line arguments or (alternatively) to read the specification from stdin.

The following PEG-style grammar loosly describes the specification <spec>. For exact details see the real PEG grammar of stmux.

spec      ::= "[" directive (":"  directive)* "]"  /* vertical   split */
            | "[" directive (".." directive)* "]"  /* horizontal split */

directive ::= option* spec                         /* RECURSION */
            | option* string                       /* shell command */

option    ::= ("-f" | "--focus")                   /* focus terminal initially */
            | ("-r" | "--restart")                 /* restart command automatically */
            | ("-d" | "--delay") number            /* delay <number> seconds on restart */
            | ("-t" | "--title") string            /* set title of terminal */
            | ("-s" | "--size") size               /* request a size on terminal */
            | ("-e" | "--error") regexp            /* observe terminal for errors (local option) */

size      ::= /^\d+$/                              /* fixed character size */
            | /^\d+\.\d+$/                         /* total size factor */
            | /^\d+\/\d+$/                         /* total size fraction */
            | /^\d+%$/                             /* total size percentage */

The following keystrokes are supported under run-time:

  • CTRL+activator activator:<br/> Send the CTRL+activator key-sequence to the focused terminal.
  • CTRL+activator BACKSPACE:<br/> Switch the focus to the previous terminal in sequence.
  • CTRL+activator SPACE:<br/> Switch the focus to the next terminal in sequence.
  • CTRL+activator LEFT/RIGHT/UP/DOWN:<br/> Switch the focus to the best matching terminal in a direction.
  • CTRL+activator 1/2/.../9:<br/> Directly switch to a particular terminal.
  • CTRL+activator n:<br/> Toggle showing/hiding of terminal numbers.
  • CTRL+activator z:<br/> Toggle the zooming of focused terminal.
  • CTRL+activator v:<br/> Switch the focused terminal into visual/scrolling mode. Use PAGEUP/PAGEDOWN during this mode to scroll up/down. Any other key leaves this mode.
  • CTRL+activator l:<br/> Relayout the screen.
  • CTRL+activator r:<br/> Restart the program in the focused terminal.
  • CTRL+activator k:<br/> Kill the application and all shell commands in all terminals.
  • CTRL+activator ?:<br/> Show help window.

Specification Examples

  • stmux [ A ]:

    +-----------+
    |           |
    |     A     |
    |           |
    +-----------+
    
  • stmux [ A .. B ]:

    +-----+-----+
    |     |     |
    |  A  |  B  |
    |     |     |
    +-----+-----+
    
  • stmux [ A : B ]:

    +-----------+
    |     A     |
    +-----------+
    |     B     |
    +-----------+
    
  • stmux [ [ A .. B ] : C ]:

    +-----+-----+
    |  A  |  B  |
    +-----+-----+
    |     C     |
    +-----------+
    
  • stmux [ [ A : B ] .. C ]:

    +-----+-----+
    |  A  |     |
    +-----+  C  |
    |  B  |     |
    +-----+-----+
    
  • stmux [ [ A : B ] .. [ C : D ] ]:

    +-----+-----+
    |  A  |  C  |
    +-----+-----+
    |  B  |  D  |
    +-----+-----+
    
  • stmux [ [ A .. B ] : [ C .. D ] ]:

    +-----+-----+
    |  A  |  B  |
    +-----+-----+
    |  C  |  D  |
    +-----+-----+
    
  • stmux -- [ [ -s 1/3 A .. B ] : [ C .. -s 1/3 D ] ]:

    +---+-------+
    | A |    B  |
    +---+---+---+
    |    C  | D |
    +-------+---+
    

License

Copyright (c) 2017-2024 Dr. Ralf S. Engelschall (http://engelschall.com/)

Permis

View on GitHub
GitHub Stars543
CategoryDevelopment
Updated10d ago
Forks22

Languages

JavaScript

Security Score

85/100

Audited on Mar 29, 2026

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