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Manipulate the system (clip)board with (e)macs from a (tty)

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Clipetty

MELPA MELPA Stable Build Status License

Clipetty is a minor mode for terminal (TTY) users that sends text that you kill in Emacs to your Operating System's clipboard. If you predominately use Emacs in GUI (X-Windows, macOS, Windows) frames you don't need Clipetty.

For this to work you need to be using a terminal emulator that supports OSC 52 escape sequences. See the Terminals section below to check if your favorite terminal emulator is on the list.

Reasons to Use Clipetty Over Emacs' Built-in Xterm Support

Here are some reasons why you might want to use Clipetty instead of the native functionality found in Emacs' xterm.el:

Install

The recommended way to get Clipetty is as a package from the MELPA repository, which tracks the master branch of this repository and will almost always be up-to-date. You can also get Clipetty from MELPA Stable, which tracks the most recent stable release.

If you want Clipetty to work everywhere, you can enable global-clipetty-mode, otherwise you can enable clipetty-mode on a buffer-by-buffer basis.

Use-package

If you're using use-package you can add this to your init.el file:

(use-package clipetty
  :ensure t
  :hook (after-init . global-clipetty-mode))

Manual

You can manually install Clipetty from MELPA with M-x package-install RET clipetty RET. Afterwards you can add the following to your init.el file:

(require 'clipetty)
(global-clipetty-mode)

Using Clipetty From a Key Binding

Sometimes it can be annoying to have Clipetty overwrite your system clipboard every time you kill something. Let's say you want to paste something from your system clipboard into Emacs, but before you can paste it, you need to do some minor editing (like hitting C-k or M-d) which kills some text. Now you've overwritten your system clipboard (which doesn't have a kill ring) and you have to copy it all over again. Doh!

You can invoke Clipetty explicitly from a key binding to copy a region to the clipboard rather than using either the local or global minor modes. To that end, Clipetty has a function called clipetty-kill-ring-save which I like to bind to M-w like so:

(use-package clipetty
  :ensure t
  :bind ("M-w" . clipetty-kill-ring-save))

How Clipetty Works

Clipetty does its magic by hooking Emacs' interprogram-cut-function, which is what happens when you activate clipetty-mode. When the mode is active, every time you kill a line or region Clipetty gets sent the content that is destined for the kill ring. The clipetty-cut function takes this content, converts it to base64, wraps it in an ANSI OSC 52 escape sequence, and then sends it to your terminal. Terminal programs which support OSC 52 commands will react to this by stripping off the escape sequence, decoding the base64 content, and then inserting the resulting string into the system clipboard.

Terminals that Support OSC Clipboard Operations

This is not an exhaustive list, these are just the ones I know about. Submit a PR if you know of any I missed.

Alacritty

Alacritty versions prior to 0.4.2 suffer from an issue that will cause any attempted copy of more than 765 bytes to fail to be inserted into the OS clipboard.

Kitty

The kitty terminal gets honorable mention for extending the xterm protocol to support larger clipboards. While Clipetty at this time does not support Kitty's larger clipboard, it is compatible, which means you don't have to disable Kitty's protocol extension with no-append.

Clipetty and Terminal Multiplexers

If you're running Emacs under a terminal multiplexer like tmux or screen, these programs will intercept these ANSI OSC 52 escape sequences, and if they don't think your terminal supports OSC 52 (i.e. you don't have a very specific terminfo(5) capability) they'll not pass them on to your outer terminal. With enough tweaking you can prevent them from doing this, but it can be a challenge. Running Emacs on a remote host with nested terminal multiplexers (something I often do) can further complicate things.

Clipetty attempts to deal with this problem by looking for environment variables that indicate you're using a terminal multiplexer, and then wrapping the OSC 52 escape sequence in a "Device Control String" (DCS). This presence of a DCS tells tmux or screen to unwrap the message and send it along unmolested, where it can be interpreted by the outer terminal. Clipetty handles the case of nested terminal multiplexers by writing the DCS wrapped OSC 52 escape sequence directly to your $SSH_TTY thereby bypassing the terminal multiplexer on the remote host entirely.

Dealing With a Stale SSH_TTY Environment Variable

Let's say you SSH into a host, start tmux, and then run Emacs. A little later you detach your session and log out. You then SSH back into the same host, and re-attach your session. Your Emacs process is still running right where you left it, but the $SSH_TTY environment variable it inherited from the shell is now stale (or longer accurate) as it still points to your old SSH tty. This means that Clipetty will no longer function in tmux windows that were created during your previous login until you manually update the $SSH_TTY environment variable.

Thankfully in tmux there is an easy way of dealing with this problem! Add the following to your .tmux.conf file:

set -ag update-environment "SSH_TTY"

This will tell tmux to update its local $SSH_TTY environment variable when you re-attach, and Clipetty will ask tmux about it rather than relying on the (possibly stale) variable that Emacs inherited from the shell.

Customization

You can run M-x customize-group RET clipetty RET to use Emacs' Easy Customization Interface or you can manually set some of the variables below in your init.el:

Configuring Multiplexer Nesting

The clipetty-assume-nested-mux variable, when set to a non-nill value, tells Clipetty to assume that if you're running a terminal mulitplexer on a remote host that it's nested – that is to say that you're also running the same terminal multiplexer on the local host.

(setq clipetty-assume-nested-mux nil)

Configuring Tmux Integration

The clipetty-tmux-ssh-tty variable tells Clipetty how to run tmux to query it's local SSH_TTY environment variable. This default assumes that tmux is on your PATH. If tmux lives elsewhere for you, or it is named something else, you can change it here.

(setq clipetty-tmux-ssh-tty "tmux show-environment SSH_TTY")

Acknowledgements

This code was inspired by osc52.el (part of the Chromium OS) which was very helpful in showing me how this could be done, but lacked support for tmux and didn't have support for nested terminal multiplexers. I'd also like to thank Suraj N. Kurapati, as I learned a lot by studying his shell script yank. Thanks to everyone on the Freenode #emacs IRC channel for helping me out, especially bpalmer who graciously reviewed my code and offered great suggestions.