Prolonging terminal sessions/fr: Difference between revisions
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Pour soumettre et faire le suivi des tâches, modifier des fichiers et plusieurs autres opérations, vous aurez peut-être besoin de vous connecter à une grappe via [[SSH/fr|SSH]]. Il est quelquefois nécessaire de garder la connexion active pendant plusieurs heures, même plusieurs jours et nous décrivons ici certaines techniques pour ce faire. | |||
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Revision as of 14:05, 4 July 2023
Pour soumettre et faire le suivi des tâches, modifier des fichiers et plusieurs autres opérations, vous aurez peut-être besoin de vous connecter à une grappe via SSH. Il est quelquefois nécessaire de garder la connexion active pendant plusieurs heures, même plusieurs jours et nous décrivons ici certaines techniques pour ce faire.
SSH configuration
One simple solution is to modify the configuration of your SSH client to prolong the connection. On MacOS and Linux the client configuration is found in $HOME/.ssh/config
while in Windows it is located in C:\Users\<username>\.ssh\config
. Note that the file may not exist initially, so you will need to create it; you should add the lines
Host *
ServerAliveInterval 240
This addition will ensure the transmission of a sign-of-life signal over the SSH connection to any remote server (such as an Alliance cluster) every 240 seconds, i.e. four minutes, which should help to keep your SSH connection alive even if it is idle for several hours.
Multiplexeur de terminal
The programs tmux
and screen
are examples of a terminal multiplexer—a program which allows you to detach your terminal session entirely, where it will keep on running on its own until you choose to reattach to it. With such a program, you can logout from the cluster, turn off the workstation or hibernate the laptop you use to connect to the cluster and when you're ready to start working again the next day, reattach to your session and start from right where you left off.
Login Node Dependency
|
tmux
The tmux software is a terminal multiplexer, allowing multiple virtual sessions in a single terminal session. You can thus disconnect from an SSH session without interrupting its process(es).
Here are some introductions to tmux:
- "The Tao of tmux", an online book
- "Getting Started With TMUX", a 24-minute video
- "Turbo boost your interactive experience on the cluster with tmux", a 58-minute video
Cheat sheet
For a complete reference, see this page.
Command | Description |
---|---|
tmux |
Start a server |
Ctrl+B D |
Disconnect from server |
tmux a |
Reconnect to server |
Ctrl+B C |
Create a new window |
Ctrl+B N |
Go to next window |
Ctrl+B [ |
Enable "copy" mode, allowing to scroll with the mouse and Page-Up Page-Down |
Esc |
Disable "copy" mode |
Launch tmux inside a job submitted through tmux
lost server
error message. This happens because the $TMUX
environment variable pointing to the tmux server is propagated to the job. The value of the variable is not valid and you can reset it with: [name@server ~]$ unset TMUX
However, nested use of tmux is not recommended. To send commands to a nested tmux, one has to hit Ctrl+B
twice; for example, to create a new window, one has to use Ctrl+B Ctrl+B C
. Consider using screen inside your job (if you are using tmux on a login node).
GNU Screen
The screen program is another widely used terminal multiplexer. To create a detached terminal session, you can use the following command
[name@server ~]$ screen -S <session name>
It's a good idea to give a descriptive name to your terminal sessions, making it easier to identify them later. You can use the command screen -list
to see a list of your detached terminal sessions on this node,
[name@server ~]$ screen -list
There is a screen on:
164133.foo (Attached)
1 Socket in /tmp/S-stubbsda.
You can attach to one of your sessions using the command screen -d -r <session name>
.