Trying to make a devshell using tmux can fail because "tmux new"
expects a single command, not a series of arguments. It does, however,
split strings in a suitable way. So you can quote the command.
The failure mode is particularly arcane, in that you end up
with a message like:
ERROR: Unable to spawn terminal auto: \
Execution of 'pseudo /bin/bash' failed with exit code 1:
usage: new-session [-d] [-n window-name] [-s session-name] \
[-t target-session] [command]
which is confusing because there's no "new-session" anywhere in
sight (that's actually "tmux new"), and because what failed to execute
wasn't either pseudo or bash.
(From OE-Core rev:
f8ed7446755eeb88191e16749350efa1e7e6197c)
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
class Tmux(Terminal):
"""Start a new tmux session and window"""
- command = 'tmux new -d -s devshell -n devshell {command}'
+ command = 'tmux new -d -s devshell -n devshell "{command}"'
priority = 0.75
def __init__(self, sh_cmd, title=None, env=None, d=None):
# devshells, if it's already there, add a new window to it.
window_name = 'devshell-%i' % os.getpid()
- self.command = 'tmux new -d -s {0} -n {0} {{command}}'.format(window_name)
+ self.command = 'tmux new -d -s {0} -n {0} "{{command}}"'.format(window_name)
Terminal.__init__(self, sh_cmd, title, env, d)
attach_cmd = 'tmux att -t {0}'.format(window_name)