Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 8 years ago
MobileSafari and other apps stay persistent, though. It should be do-able
without
being hackish.
Original comment by timd...@gmail.com
on 5 Aug 2007 at 6:39
Yes it should be possible without being hackish, but if that proves difficult
then screen could be a nice quick
fix. It would of course be better to do it right.
Original comment by britr...@gmail.com
on 5 Aug 2007 at 7:19
Actually, I wouldn't even call using screen "hackish". It already provides an
incredible set of features for
multiplexing one VTY. Why not use it instead of recoding most of its
functionality?
Original comment by RobertDy...@gmail.com
on 5 Aug 2007 at 7:48
That was my original thought. With very little work we could have many cool
features, such as persistent
sessions, tabs, etc.
It will work well and be much easier to implement than doing it the "right way".
Original comment by britr...@gmail.com
on 5 Aug 2007 at 8:05
My point is what makes using screen not the "right way"? The functionality is
already there. It would basically
give MobileTerminal session persistence, tabs, etc. "for free" similar to how
Core Data provides undo
functionality and saving "for free".
Original comment by RobertDy...@gmail.com
on 5 Aug 2007 at 11:28
Screen would be nice. We'd need to be able to send control keys, or perhaps
have buttons at the bottom of the
screen to be able to disconnect from sessions etc.
Original comment by simonrsp...@gmail.com
on 6 Aug 2007 at 12:03
yeah I'm pretty convinced that screen is the way to go. I'm pretty sure that
you can specify a key other than
contol-a to use with a command line argument. This would make for a very easy
method of resuming
sessions and creating "tabs".
So at startup simply run "screen -dr mobileterminal" to reconnect to the
session, and if that fails (returns non
0) then run "screen -S mobileterminal" instead to start a new session instead.
Then adding a plus button to create a new screen another a button for next and
prev would be all we need.
I'd be very happy with that.
This all assumes we have vt100 soon and that we can build screen for the iPhone
(should be easy)
Original comment by britr...@gmail.com
on 6 Aug 2007 at 12:24
I found the argument to screen to switch the control character.
-e^Bb
That will change the control character to control b instead of control a. I
think we should find some key that is
very hard to actually type in real life, and use that. The nice upside to
using something other than control-a is
that screen can still be used inside terminal.app. That will be VERY nice for
connection to remote server and
being able to use screen there with the normal key strokes, but still get the
extra functionality in mobile
terminal.
I haven't looked at the code used to launch the keyboard yet, but I'm really
wondering what kind of control we
have over the keyboard. It is obvious that the keyboard can be changed, if you
look at things like address
entry in mobile safari. Do we have full control over that though? Or are
there simply a handful of modes.
If we had full control over it then it would be very nice to add a few extra
keys, possibly by making space bar
smaller, or something like that.
Another option that might be nice for the terminal would be to have transparent
buttons on the top portion of
the screen for various common tasks. That way the pixels would still be useful
for showing text, but touch
there would be useful for an action. In fact, we could even simply define
areas to be common buttons, and
not make it visible at all. For example, the top left corner could be
'previous window' and the top right could
be 'next window' and the top center could be 'new window', and bottom left
could be control, bottom right
could switch the keyboard to arrow keys, etc.
There is a lot of cool stuff we can do here. I really think that before long
we can have the best mobile phone
terminal application ever made.
Original comment by britr...@gmail.com
on 6 Aug 2007 at 12:44
Transparent buttons might be nice, but I would *really* prefer them to be
visible. I like to be able to see things
that I'm about to trigger. Maybe a good thing to stick into a Preference
system.
The ideal system to me would be something like Safari's tabs. Press a special
button to go into tab switching
mode, then flick through the list to find the one you want. Might not work
that well, since terminals tend to
look pretty similar, so the visual cues for which is which aren't as big as
with websites. Still, it's a decent
method of displaying tabs on a small screen and the behavior is already
established.
Maybe rather than a set of transparent buttons, a single, screen-wide
transparent button that brings up a
visible bar to change tabs and so forth. Kind of like in Photos.
Original comment by RobertDy...@gmail.com
on 6 Aug 2007 at 4:31
Yeah, perhaps tapping on the screen should show a button bar, similar to the
way photos work. One button
could be used to show tabs like safari, and of course there are many other
things that could be included.
Since the small views will all look the same perhaps the thumbnail view should
show cropped view instead of
a stretched view. Perhaps the bottom left corner of the screen. This would
generally be a lot more useful
than a scaled image of the terminal where you can't read anything. Maybe even
do some simple processing to
determine the busiest portion of the screen and show that.
Also, screen allows naming of tabs. Asking for a name when creating a new
screen, and showing that as a
title would be useful as well.
Original comment by britr...@gmail.com
on 6 Aug 2007 at 5:23
What if we use screen(1) to handle this? run screen -D -RR on terminal startup
and
then we don't have to worry about it
To do it myself, I do this --
[ "$TERM" = "network" ] && (export TERM=xterm-color;screen -D -RR)
in my .zshrc (I use zsh for my main shell)
This seems pretty reliable, and once we get naim or centericq or bitchx or
irssi or
pidgin-text going, we'll be able to use them easily this way
Of course we need arrow-keys too
Original comment by LivingLa...@gmail.com
on 15 Aug 2007 at 1:41
Does anyone have a copy of screen running? I built it from source with a
PPC-hosted toolchain, but when I run
screen I only receive "permission denied". It's not a permissions issue - chmod
755 doesn't help - but I'm
guessing an incorrect TTY.
I'm very interested as my office requires us to ssh to a specific machine to
enable general wireless use - and
without screen, I can have ssh or anything else, not both.
Original comment by aber...@zathras.net
on 23 Aug 2007 at 2:51
What directory did you put your copy of screen in? I tried to run something I
compiled in /var/root and got the permission denied error but it worked after I
moved
it to /bin.
Original comment by vince...@gmail.com
on 28 Aug 2007 at 7:44
Yeah, I'm an idiot.
I was executing screen from the local directory (./screen from /var/root), but
copying it to /bin gets me farther.
The new error is "mkfifo /tmp/screens/S-root/86.ttyp0.Corwin failed". The files
are there, but they're definitely
not fifos.
Original comment by aber...@gmail.com
on 31 Aug 2007 at 3:30
I think keeping the previous terminal session should definitely be the default
behavior.
That said, I don't know if we have found a way (yet) to keep keyboard focus when
resuming the application. Moved to high priority.
Original comment by allen.po...@gmail.com
on 21 Sep 2007 at 12:55
Yes, please try to fix this problem ASAP. This is the only thing that prevents
me and hundreds others from
accessing the Internet on my campus. I truly appreciate your efforts and I
thank you in advance for getting this
done.
Original comment by anbad...@gmail.com
on 1 Oct 2007 at 1:44
Is anyone able to get screen to work correctly ?
I run "screen bash" and check the processes with ps and see it running just
fine.
I disconnected mobile terminal with the belly button, come back in and try to
"screen -r" and it won't connect,
although a screen process is running, but it doesn't show that it's running
bash.
I use screen a lot on my other unix boxes this way and have no trouble.
Anyone have a know working sequence to get something retained during mobile
terminal running, quit and
running again ?
Original comment by simonrsp...@gmail.com
on 1 Oct 2007 at 11:52
MobileTerminal now supports suspend and resume as of revision 199, and it will
be
included in the next binary release (whenever that happens). I am closing this
bug,
but feel free to open it if there are any problems (or mark it as verified if
you
like it)
Original comment by allen.po...@gmail.com
on 2 Oct 2007 at 2:35
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
britr...@gmail.com
on 5 Aug 2007 at 3:30