ref: 7c62730484a8cfa0aed8ba80e0e6f9f33511ed75
dir: /plumber-vt.md/
# Plumber + vt: accessing remote Unix files It's possible to use `OSC 7` extension for easier plumbing of paths displayed in vt(1). First, for each machine you're planning to ssh+vt into, set up sshfs(4). Example: sshfs -s myhost -r / myhost plumb 'Local mount -c /srv/myhost /n/myhost' The name in "/n/myhost" path MUST be the hostname of the remote machine - run `hostname` there to check. For the remote shell to start sending `OSC 7` messages, follow [these instructions](https://codeberg.org/dnkl/foot/wiki#user-content-spawning-new-terminal-instances-in-the-current-working-directory). You might want to replace `${HOSTNAME}` with `${HOSTNAME%.lan}` to get rid of `.lan` suffix, depending on how your hosts are shown in `/n/...`. If you intend to use `tmux`, it's required to pass `OSC 7` message to `vt` explicitely, by adding the following at the end of `osc7_cwd()`: if [ -n "$TMUX" ]; then printf '\e]7;file://%s%s\e\\' "${HOSTNAME%.lan}" "${encoded}" > `tmux display-message -p '#{client_tty}'` fi The full (confirmed to be working) strip from `.bash_profile`: osc7_cwd() { local strlen=${#PWD} local encoded="" local pos c o p for (( pos=0; pos<strlen; pos++ )); do c=${PWD:$pos:1} case "$c" in [-/:_.!\'\(\)~[:alnum:]] ) o="${c}" ;; * ) printf -v o '%%%02X' "'${c}" ;; esac encoded+="${o}" done p=`printf '\e]7;file://%s%s\e\\' "${HOSTNAME%.lan}" "${encoded}"` if [ -n "$TMUX" ]; then printf "%s" "$p" >`tmux display-message -p '#{client_tty}'` else printf "%s" "$p" fi } export PROMPT_COMMAND=${PROMPT_COMMAND:+$PROMPT_COMMAND; }osc7_cwd