I’m having trouble getting tmux to display lines for borders. They are being created with x and q. It’s a debian squeeze server and the locale is set to en_US UTF8. I also tried adding
# instructs tmux to expect UTF-8 sequences
setw -g utf8 on
set -g status-utf8 on
lines to .tmux.conf. Nothing seems to work. I’m not sure if it’s a locale issue or not. It displays correctly on other servers, but not the debian. I appreciate any tips you could offer! Thanks…
There is some mismatch between your terminal emulator and the terminfo database entry being used by tmux (the one named by the TERM environment variable when you start/attach to a tmux server).
Per the VT100 User Guide, Table 3-9: Special Graphics Characters, when the “special graphics set” is selected,
xis used to draw the “Vertical bar” andqis used to draw “Horizontal line – Scan 5”.Under terminfo, the VT100 special graphics characters are available as a part of the Alternate Character Set functionality; see the “Line Graphics” section of the terminfo(5) man page.
Probably (on your Debian server) the effective terminfo database entry indicates that ACS is available, but your terminal emulator is not actually responding to the specified control sequences.
The tmux CHANGES file indicates that some terminal emulators (e.g. Putty) do not respect the ACS control sequences when they are in UTF-8 mode. Thus, tmux 1.4 has a change that makes it always use UTF-8 characters instead of ACS sequences when the attaching client specifies that it can handle UTF-8 (i.e. when attaching,
-uwas given orUTF-8is present in LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE or LANG; theutf8window option is about what tmux should expect from the programs it runs, not what it can send to the attached client).Debian “squeeze” only includes tmux 1.3, so your tmux probably does not have the “prefer UTF-8 line drawing” feature (unless it pulls from a backports source).
If you can not fix your terminal emulator nor upgrade to at least tmux 1.4, then you might be able to use tmux’s
terminal-overridesoption to unset the ACS-related capabilities so that tmux will fall back to ASCII line drawing. In your.tmux.conf(on the Debian system):