I want to use a script to open a tmux session with 6 windows, each in a different directory. I started with a script I found and tried this first:
tmux new-sessi
The shell errors are probably due to some problem in your startup files (or something they run).
As shellter commented, temporarily including the command set -vx early in your startup sequence is a good way to find out where the errors are occurring.
If you find the -vx output too verbose, you could try “printf debugging” (manually adding debug statements to your startup files until you can narrow down exactly which lines are causing the errors):
echo start of .bashrc and echo end of .bashrc at the start/end of your .bashrc to see if the error occurs during your .bashrc. If not, instrument your other startup files: .bash_profile/.bash_login/.profile. If the errors happen before that file, then the problem may be in /etc/profile.Note: These debug additions need to be temporary since they will cause problems if you ever use a program that makes automated logins (e.g. rsync, SSH-based Git access, etc.) since these programs expect a “clean” connection without such debugging noise present.
There should be no need to use cd command like that in the shell-command argument given to either tmux new-session or tmux new-window.
A new window will “inherit”† the current working directory when using new-session and new-window from the command line (i.e. when done through the tmux binary, instead of via a binding or at a tmux-: prompt). According to the CHANGES file, it looks like this has been the case since tmux 0.6 (at least for new-window).
† This is tmux-mediated inheritance, not the parent–child inheritance that is the usual mechanism for passing along the cwd.
This script works for me with tmux 1.5:
#!/bin/bash
# var for session name (to avoid repeated occurences)
sn=xyz
# Start the session and window 0 in /etc
# This will also be the default cwd for new windows created
# via a binding unless overridden with default-path.
cd /etc
tmux new-session -s "$sn" -n etc -d
# Create a bunch of windows in /var/log
cd /var/log
for i in {1..6}; do
tmux new-window -t "$sn:$i" -n "var$i"
done
# Set the default cwd for new windows (optional, otherwise defaults to session cwd)
#tmux set-option default-path /
# Select window #1 and attach to the session
tmux select-window -t "$sn:1"
tmux -2 attach-session -t "$sn"
This might also (as a side-effect) alleviate your shell startup errors since the way tmux starts a shell is different from a plain bash -i (it is more akin to bash -l, which uses your .bash_profile/.bash_login/.profile instead of (just) your .bashrc).