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I use the Mac Terminal with a hand full of tabs each assigned to a different working directory. I have configured it to open new windows with the same working directory. Nevertheless, when I am quitting Terminal, and restart it it rebuilds all the tabs, their names, even shows me the last output in the window but stays in the user home directory and does not restore the latest working directory of each tab.

What am I doing wrong? Can this be caused by some setting in the ~/.bash_profile?

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3 Answers 3

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(For reference, we’re talking about the Resume feature of Mac OS X Lion 10.7 and later.)

Terminal automatically restores the working directory if you’re using the default shell, bash. If you’re using some other shell, you’ll need to adapt the code in /etc/bashrc to send an escape sequence to communicate the working directory to Terminal so it can restore the directory later for Resume. If you’re using zsh, see my answer to Resume Zsh-Terminal (OS X Lion), in which I include the appropriate code for zsh.

If you have a custom ~/.bash_profile or ~/.bashrc you may need to ensure that you’re not undoing the default behavior by modifying /etc/bashrc’s customizations. In particular, it sets the PROMPT_COMMAND environment variable to send the escape sequence at each prompt. If you customize that variable, you’ll need to prefix or append your code to the current value, e.g.:

PROMPT_COMMAND="<your code here>;$PROMPT_COMMAND"

Also, generally, ~/.bash_profile should execute ~/.bashrc:

if [ -f ~/.bashrc ]; then
    . ~/.bashrc
fi
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    Thanks for the reply but I don't seem to be able to get that working. I have removed my .bashrc (although I couldn't spot any prompt command customization. Now I do the following: 1. Open a new Terminal window (opens in my user's home directory) 2. cd Documents 3. Quit Terminal 4. Open Terminal 5. Window reopens displaying the directory change output but still located in the user's home directory. Commented Aug 1, 2012 at 12:32
  • @OliverGierke Terminal creates login shells, so also check for ~/.bash_profile, ~/.bash_login, and ~/.profile.
    – Chris Page
    Commented Aug 3, 2012 at 16:23
  • I don't have the latter two, the former now executes ~/.bashrc as per your suggestion in your answer. Commented Aug 5, 2012 at 17:58
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    I got it figured out, Chris. My /etc/bashrc seems to have been tweaked by an install script or whatever. There was a /etc/bashrc.orig that contained some additional config (which I assume to be the original setup) gist.github.com/3273170. Re-adding that to the /etc/bashrc made things working as expected again. Thanks a lot for help and patience! Commented Aug 6, 2012 at 10:16
  • I don't change the $PROMPT_COMMAND in my .bashrc and I only have the system default /etc/bashrc. Any further suggestions?
    – Richard
    Commented Jun 28, 2013 at 20:06
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If you are using Bash-It, you may run into the problem of $PROMPT_COMMAND being overwritten by it.

As mentioned it is used by OS X to restore cwd in new tabs. Bash it should append values, not override them.

But a workaround for now would be to add the following line to your ~/.bash_profile

source $BASH_IT/bash_it.sh
export PROMPT_COMMAND="$PROMPT_COMMAND;update_terminal_cwd;"

For more info checkout the issue tracker for updates: https://github.com/revans/bash-it/issues/240

And the Apple reference for it https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/darwin/reference/manpages/man1/sh.1.html

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I wrote up a blog post on how to do this for csh/tcsh before I discovered this answer; if anyone else comes here looking for a solution for those shells, here it is:

if ("$?TERM_PROGRAM") then
  if ("$TERM_PROGRAM" == "Apple_Terminal") then
    alias precmd 'printf "\033]7;%s\a" "file://$host$cwd:ags/ /%20/"'
  endif
endif

Add that to your .cshrc or .tcshrc as appropriate. (The outer if statement is necessary to avoid an error when remotely logging in, as with ssh. It has to be a separate statement because of the variable expansion rules in tcsh.)

Like Apple's builtin bash support, this solution uses no external programs other than printf, at the cost of only escaping spaces. If you need to escape other special characters, you'll have to work a little harder to find a more comprehensive solution.

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