MOSH(1)MOSH(1)NAMEmosh - mobile shell with roaming and intelligent local echo
SYNOPSISmosh [options] [--] [user@]host [command...]
DESCRIPTIONmosh (mobile shell) is a remote terminal application that supports
intermittent connectivity, allows roaming, and provides speculative
local echo and line editing of user keystrokes.
Compared with ssh, mosh is more robust — its connections stay up across
sleeps and changes in the client's IP address — and more responsive,
because the protocol is tolerant of packet loss and the client can echo
most keystrokes immediately, without waiting for a network round-trip.
mosh uses ssh to establish a connection to the remote host and authen‐
ticate with existing means (e.g., public-key authentication or a pass‐
word). mosh executes the unprivileged mosh-server helper program on the
server, then closes the SSH connection and starts the mosh-client,
which establishes a long-lived datagram connection over UDP.
To improve responsiveness, mosh runs a predictive model of the server's
behavior in the background, trying to guess the effect of each key‐
stroke on the screen. It makes predictions for normal typing,
backspace, and the left- and right-arrow keys. When it is confident,
mosh displays the predictions without waiting for the server. The pre‐
dictive model must prove itself anew on each row of the terminal and
after each control character, so mosh avoids echoing passwords or non-
echoing editor commands.
By default, mosh shows its predictions only on high-latency connections
and to smooth out network glitches. (On longer-latency links, the pre‐
dicted cells are underlined until confirmed by the server.) Occasional
echo mistakes are corrected within a network round-trip and do not
cause lasting effect.
mosh does not support X forwarding or the non-interactive uses of SSH,
including port forwarding or sshfs. mosh works through typical client-
side network address translators but requires UDP to pass between
client and server. By default, mosh uses the ports between 60000 and
61000, but allows the user to request a particular UDP port instead.
mosh will do its best to arrange a UTF-8 character set locale on the
client and server. The client must have locale-related environment
variables that specify UTF-8. mosh will pass these client variables to
the mosh-server on its command line, but in most cases they will not
need to be used. mosh-server first attempts to use its own locale-
related environment variables, which come from the system default con‐
figuration (sometimes /etc/default/locale) or from having been passed
over the SSH connection. But if these variables don't call for the use
of UTF-8, mosh-server will apply the locale-related environment vari‐
ables from the client and try again.
OPTIONS
command
Command to run on remote host. By default, mosh executes a login
shell.
--client=PATH
path to client helper on local machine (default: "mosh-client")
--server=COMMAND
command to run server helper on remote machine (default: "mosh-
server")
The server helper is unprivileged and can be installed in the
user's home directory.
--ssh=COMMAND
OpenSSH command to remotely execute mosh-server on remote
machine (default: "ssh")
An alternate ssh port can be specified with, e.g., --ssh="ssh -p
2222".
--predict=WHEN
Controls use of speculative local echo. WHEN defaults to `adap‐
tive' (show predictions on slower links and to smooth out net‐
work glitches) and can also be `always` or `never'.
The MOSH_PREDICTION_DISPLAY environment variable controls this
setting permanently and can adopt the same three values.
Even on `always', mosh will only show predictions when it is
confident. This generally means a previous prediction on the
same row of the terminal has been confirmed by the server, with‐
out any intervening control character keystrokes.
-a Synonym for --predict=always
-n Synonym for --predict=never
--family=FAMILY
Force the use of a particular address family, which defaults to
`inet' (IPv4), and can also be `inet6' (IPv6; requires
IO::Socket::IP or IO::Socket::INET6).
-4 Synonym for --family=inet
-6 Synonym for --family=inet6
-p PORT[:PORT2], --port=PORT[:PORT2]
Use a particular server-side UDP port or port range, for exam‐
ple, if this is the only port that is forwarded through a fire‐
wall to the server. Otherwise, mosh will choose a port between
60000 and 61000.
--bind-server={ssh|any|IP}
Control the IP address that the mosh-server binds to.
The default is `ssh', in which case the server will reply from
the IP address that the SSH connection came from (as found in
the SSH_CONNECTION environment variable). This is useful for
multihomed servers.
With --bind-server=any, the server will reply on the default
interface and will not bind to a particular IP address. This can
be useful if the connection is made through sslh or another tool
that makes the SSH connection appear to come from localhost.
With --bind-server=IP, the server will attempt to bind to the
specified IP address.
--no-init
Do not send the smcup initialization string and rmcup deinitial‐
ization string to the client's terminal. On many terminals this
disables alternate screen mode.
ESCAPE SEQUENCES
The default escape character used by Mosh is ASCII RS (decimal 30).
This is typically typed as Ctrl-^ or Ctrl-Shift-6, on US English key‐
boards. Users of non-English keyboards may find it difficult or impos‐
sible to type the default escape character, and may need to change the
escape character. See the description of MOSH_ESCAPE_KEY, below. In
this description, the configured escape character is represented as
Esc.
There are two slightly different modes for escape sequences, depending
whether the escape character is printable or not.
If the escape character is a printable character, it must be prefixed
with a newline, similar to OpenSSH. To send the escape character
itself, type it twice. If the escape character is set to ~, mosh will
behave much like OpenSSH.
If the escape character is a non-printable control character, no prefix
is used and the escape character is recognized at any time. To send
the escape character itself, type the escape character, then its corre‐
sponding ASCII character (for Ctrl-^ you would type ^, for Ctrl-B you
would type B).
The escape sequence to shut down the connection is Esc .. The sequence
Esc Ctrl-Z suspends the client. Any other sequence passes both charac‐
ters through to the server.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
These variables are not actually interpreted by mosh(1) itself, but are
passed through to mosh-server(1). They are described here for ease of
use.
MOSH_ESCAPE_KEY
When set, this configures the escape character used for local
commands. The escape character may be set to any ASCII charac‐
ter in the range 1-127. The variable must be set with a single
literal ASCII character. Control characters are set with the
actual ASCII control character, not with a printable representa‐
tion such as "^B".
MOSH_PREDICTION_DISPLAY
Controls local echo as described above. The command-line flag
overrides this variable.
MOSH_TITLE_NOPREFIX
When set, inhibits prepending "[mosh]" to window title.
SEE ALSOmosh-client(1), mosh-server(1).
Project home page: http://mosh.mit.edu
AUTHORmosh was written by Keith Winstein <mosh-devel@mit.edu>.
BUGS
Please report bugs to mosh-devel@mit.edu. Users may also subscribe to
the mosh-users@mit.edu mailing list, at
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/mosh-users
April 2013 MOSH(1)