ScreenCommand: Difference between revisions

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(added quick start command reference)
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screen -S screen-getting-started
screen -S screen-getting-started
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== Quick start ==
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Action !! Keystroke
|-
| Help menu || Ctrl-a ?
|-
| Version || Ctrl-a v
|-
| List windows || Ctrl-a w
|-
| Scroll through windows || Ctrl-a Ctrl-a
|-
| Rename window session || Ctrl-a A
|}


== Adding configuration options to screenrc file ==
== Adding configuration options to screenrc file ==

Revision as of 16:30, 26 September 2013

As the man page states, Screen is a full-screen window manager that multiplexes a physical terminal between several processes (typically interactive shells). A process (shell or command like ls) can be attached to the screen command/session. The screen session won't die or exit until terminated by the attached command/shell. This is useful when working over a flaky network connection. Screen can multiplex commands into a single window so it makes it convenient to open new shell sessions in the same window.

Starting a screen session

You can start a new screen session just by typing 'screen' command. You can name your screen session using -S option as follows:

screen -S screen-getting-started

Quick start

Action Keystroke
Help menu Ctrl-a ?
Version Ctrl-a v
List windows Ctrl-a w
Scroll through windows Ctrl-a Ctrl-a
Rename window session Ctrl-a A

Adding configuration options to screenrc file

You can customize screen settings using command-line options or by creating a screenrc file. See Customization section in the man page for detailed options. See Red Hat magazine article for examples.

Logging screen window to a screenlog file

Screen can log it's window output to a screenlog file. This can be done by invoking screen with -L option.

Viewing screenlog file

Screen log file contains escape characters and hence it's not directly human readable. You can get pretty output using less command with -R or -r options. See stackoverflow answers for hints.