Provided by: ttyrec_1.1.7.1-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       ttyrec - a tty recorder

SYNOPSIS

       ttyrec [options] -- <command> [command options]

       legacy compatibility mode:
              ttyrec -e <command> [options] [ttyrec file name]

OPTIONS

       -z, --uuid UUID
              specify  an  UUID  (can  be any string) that will appear in the ttyrec output file names, and kept
              with SIGUSR1 rotations (default: own PID)

       -f, --output FILE
              full path of the first ttyrec file to write to (autogenerated if omitted)

       -d, --dir FOLDER
              folder where to write the ttyrec files (taken from -f if omitted, defaulting to working  directory
              if both -f and -d are omitted)

       -F, --name-format FMT
              custom  strftime-compatible  format string to qualify the full path of the output files, including
              the SIGUSR1 rotated ones

       -a, --append
              open the ttyrec output file in append mode instead of write-clobber mode

       -Z     enable on-the-fly compression if available, silently fallback to no compression if not

       --zstd force on-the-fly  compression  of  output  file  using  zstd,  the  resulting  file  will  have  a
              '.ttyrec.zst' extension

       --max-flush-time S
              specify  the maximum number of seconds after which we'll force zstd to flush its output buffers to
              ensure that even somewhat quiet sessions gets regularly written out to disk, default is 15

       -l, --level LEVEL
              set compression level, must be between 1 and 19 for zstd, default is 3

       -n, --count-bytes
              count the number of bytes out and print it on termination (experimental)

       -t, --lock-timeout S
              lock session on input timeout after S seconds

       --warn-before-lock S
              warn S seconds before locking (see --lock-timeout)

       -k, --kill-timeout S
              kill session on input timeout after S seconds

       --warn-before-kill S
              warn S seconds before killing (see --kill-timeout)

       -C, --no-cheatcodes
              disable cheat-codes (see below), this is the default

       -c, --cheatcodes
              enable cheat-codes (see below)

       -p, --no-openpty
              don't use openpty() even when it's available

       -T, --term MODE
              MODE can be either 'never' (never allocate a pseudotty, even if stdin is a tty, and use  pipes  to
              handle  stdout/stderr instead), 'always' (always allocate a pseudotty, even if stdin is not a tty)
              or 'auto' (default, allocate a pseudotty if stdin is a tty, uses pipes otherwise)

       -v, --verbose
              verbose (debug) mode, use twice for more verbosity

       -V, --version
              show version information

       -e, --shell-cmd CMD
              enables legacy compatibility mode and specifies the command to be run under the user's $SHELL -c

EXAMPLES

       Run some shell commands in legacy mode:
              ttyrec -e 'for i in a b c; do echo $i; done' outfile.ttyrec

       Run some shell commands in normal mode:
              ttyrec -f /tmp/normal.ttyrec -- sh -c 'for i in a b c; do echo $i; done'

       Connect to a remote machine interactively:
              ttyrec -t 60 -k 300 -- ssh remoteserver

       Execute a local script remotely with the default remote shell:
              ttyrec -- ssh remoteserver < script.sh

       Record a screen session:
              ttyrec screen

FOOTNOTES

   Handled signals:
       SIGUSR1
              close current ttyrec file and reopen a new one (log rotation)

       SIGURG lock session

       SIGUSR2
              unlock session

   Cheat-codes (magic keystrokes combinations):
       ^L^L^L^L^L^L^L^L
              lock your session (that's 8 CTRL+L's)

       ^K^I^L^L^K^I^L^L
              kill your session

   Remark about session lock and session kill:
              If we don't have a tty, we can't lock, so -t will be ignored, whereas -k will be  applied  without
              warning, as there's no tty to output a warning to.

ttyrec v1.1.5.0                                     June 2019                                          TTYREC(1)