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A collection of scripts that work together to manage multiple invocations of GNU Screen to overcome some of its limitations on Mac OS X.

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screenAppAttach.sh

Installation

    ~/Tools/screenAppAttach.sh
    ~/Library/LaunchAgents/gnu.screen.plist
Then, two preferences need to be changed:
    com.apple.Terminal/Shell will be set to ~/Tools/screenAppAttach.sh
    "source ~/Tools/screenAppAttach.sh" will be added to the end of .bashrc

Background

My name is John. I use screen(1) constantly. I wrote a few little tid-bits to make it work a little bit better for me. I hope these help you to. If you make any improvements, please post bugs and patches on http://sourceforge.net/projects/screen-osx .

There are two files in this project:

  1. screenAppAttach.sh
  2. gnu.screen.plist
  • screenAppAttach.sh : Set this as the command to run in Terminal.app (or whatever you use). Then, every time you open a new Terminal window you get attached into your screen session automatically. Ok. Big deal, right? You could just do /usr/bin/screen as your command to run and you'll get the same thing, right? Almost. By attaching through this script, your pre-screen-environment is actually saved into a file before attaching. That's where the second file comes in. : screenAppAttach.sh is also a snippit for .bashrc. In particular, it sets the PROMPT_COMMAND variable so that the environment saved by screenAppAttach.sh is loaded inside screen. Who cares?! Well, if you leave screen running in the background for long periods of time, then you do! If not, then you don't need this package. A little bit smarter: what if you have DISPLAY set differently in different situations, such as... when logging in via ssh(1)? Well, that's taken care of right here!

  • gnu.screen.plist : a launchd(1) plist (for macOS X) which starts screen such that it isn't a child of your shell, but actually running independently. Sort of a screen-server in the background.

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A collection of scripts that work together to manage multiple invocations of GNU Screen to overcome some of its limitations on Mac OS X.

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