moshi-best-practices
Use when preparing or verifying a host for Moshi remote coding. Trigger this for SSH or preferably Mosh readiness, non-interactive shell PATH issues, tmux defaults, creating a tmux project session rooted at a chosen directory, adapting shell or tmux behavior with the `MOSHI_CLIENT` env signal, installing Moshi agent hooks for Claude Code or Codex CLI, or offering the optional `moshi DIR` shell helper.
Install
Use with your agent
Install the moshi-best-practices skill, then use it as build context. Run: npx skills add https://github.com/rjyo/moshi-skill --skill moshi-best-practices. Then read the installed skill.md and follow its guidance to build or refactor my project.
Moshi Best Practices
Use this skill to make any host feel easy to use from Moshi.
Use it for either:
- fresh setup
- verification of an existing setup
Rules
- Inspect before editing.
- Prefer direct config edits over platform-specific setup scripts.
- Verify every outcome after changing it.
- For
moshi DIR, use a shell function namedmoshi, not a literal alias. Aliases cannot take arguments safely.
1. Host Readiness
Target outcome:
- preferred transport is Mosh plus tmux; fallback is SSH plus tmux
- the host has a working SSH entry point
tmuxis installedmosh-serveris installed when the user wants Mosh, otherwise SSH plus tmux is acceptable- both resolve in the current shell and in the login shell's non-interactive mode
- at least one tmux session exists so the Moshi selector can appear.
Inspect with a small set of real checks. Keep OS-specific mechanics minimal, but do not skip verification.
Useful checks:
command -v tmux || true
command -v mosh-server || true
tmux list-sessions 2>/dev/null || true
LOGIN_SHELL="${SHELL:-/bin/sh}"
"$LOGIN_SHELL" -c 'command -v tmux'
"$LOGIN_SHELL" -c 'command -v mosh-server'
Useful macOS-specific checks when relevant:
dscl . -read "/Users/$USER" UserShell
systemsetup -getremotelogin || true
Verify after changes:
command -v tmux
tmux list-sessions
"$LOGIN_SHELL" -c 'command -v tmux'
"$LOGIN_SHELL" -c 'command -v mosh-server' || true
Then ask the user to reconnect from Moshi. Expected result: the tmux selector appears, and the transport can use Mosh instead of plain SSH when configured.
2. tmux Environment
Use these defaults unless the user wants something different:
set -g history-limit 100000
set -g mouse on
set -g set-titles on
set -g set-titles-string "#I: #W"
set -g base-index 1
setw -g pane-base-index 1
set -g renumber-windows on
Workflow:
- inspect the existing tmux config
- update overlapping settings instead of appending duplicates
- reload tmux after editing
3. MOSHI_CLIENT Signal
MOSHI_CLIENT=1 is an opt-in environment variable the Moshi iOS client exports
into the remote shell so rc files, prompts, and tmux configs can detect a
Moshi-launched session and adapt. The user enables it in the app under
Settings → Integrations → Export ENV (off by default). When on, it is set
identically on both the Mosh path (via mosh-server -l MOSHI_CLIENT=1) and the
SSH fallback (via an injected export at shell start).
The main use case is protecting Moshi's swipe-to-change-window gesture, which
relies on reading the tmux status bar. A populated status-left /
status-right from a custom theme can break detection. Conditionally clearing
them when MOSHI_CLIENT is set keeps local themes intact while keeping Moshi
detection reliable. Other uses: narrower prompts, dropping nerd-font glyphs,
different key bindings.
Shell (in the user's rc file):
if [ -n "$MOSHI_CLIENT" ]; then
# running under Moshi — trim prompts, skip heavy glyphs, etc.
fi
tmux (in ~/.tmux.conf):
# propagate the variable into tmux sessions attached by this shell
set-option -ga update-environment " MOSHI_CLIENT"
# clear status regions for Moshi clients so swipe detection stays clean
if-shell '[ -n "$MOSHI_CLIENT" ]' {
set -g status-left ''
set -g status-right ''
}
After editing, reload tmux (tmux source-file ~/.tmux.conf).
Verify, after the user toggles the setting on and reconnects from Moshi:
echo "$MOSHI_CLIENT" # expect: 1
tmux show-environment | grep MOSHI_CLIENT # expect a value in new sessions
If echo prints nothing, the toggle is off in the app — confirm with the user
before editing host configs. The variable only appears in sessions opened
after the toggle was flipped.
4. tmux Project Session
When creating a new session:
- read the current working directory
- ask one concise question: should the session start from here?
- if the answer is no, ask for the directory
- default the session name to the directory basename
- create the session detached
- use the chosen directory for every initial window with
tmux ... -c <dir>
Recommended windows:
agentreviewtestsserversmisc
Create the session detached and root every initial window at the chosen directory.
Then ask the user to reconnect in Moshi. Expected result: the session is visible in the tmux selector.
5. Optional moshi DIR Helper
Do not install this silently. Ask the user first if they want it.
If yes:
- install a shell function named
moshiin the correct startup file for the active shell - make it accept a directory argument, defaulting to
$PWD - name the tmux session from the directory basename
- create the standard detached session layout only if the session does not already exist
- attach to the session afterward
Use the exact function from references/moshi-shell-function.md.
6. Agent Hooks
Moshi has switched to a new hook system: moshi-hook (singular), a portable
Go daemon. Unlike the old fire-and-forget moshi-hooks CLI, the daemon holds a
persistent WebSocket to Moshi, so approvals are bidirectional — users can
approve or deny tool calls directly from the iOS Live Activity or the Apple
Watch, and the answer round-trips back to the agent without leaving the
terminal. It also covers Claude Code, Codex CLI, and OpenCode from a single
install.
Use moshi-hook, not hand-written config, unless the user explicitly wants
manual edits.
Install via the Homebrew tap, then pair and install hooks:
brew tap rjyo/moshi
brew install moshi-hook
moshi-hook pair --token <YOUR_TOKEN> # token comes from the Moshi mobile app
moshi-hook install # writes hook configs for installed agents
brew services start moshi-hook # keeps the daemon alive across reboots
On macOS, moshi-hook pair uses Keychain by default. If pairing over SSH fails
because Keychain is locked or unavailable, prefer one of these explicit paths:
security unlock-keychain ~/Library/Keychains/login.keychain-db
moshi-hook pair --token <YOUR_TOKEN>
For headless hosts where Keychain access is undesirable or unreliable:
moshi-hook pair --token <YOUR_TOKEN> --store file
--store file writes the host secrets to ~/.config/moshi/secrets.json with
0600 permissions and remembers the store choice for future serve, status,
usage --sync, and pair commands. Do not use it silently; call out that this
stores secrets outside Keychain.
moshi-hook install is non-destructive — it writes Moshi entries into
~/.claude/settings.json, ~/.codex/config.toml, and
.opencode/plugins/moshi-hooks.ts, leaving any user-owned hooks alone.
Verify:
moshi-hook status # pairing state, socket path, WS connection
moshi-hook logs -f # tail the daemon log
Then run a short real agent task and confirm Moshi receives a push notification or Live Activity update, and that approving from the Live Activity / Watch unblocks the agent.
For full CLI reference (every subcommand, flag, env var, and path), see
app-hook/docs/usage.md in the monorepo, or the mirrored copy in the
rjyo/homebrew-moshi tap.
Legacy: moshi-hooks (Bun CLI)
The previous Bun-based CLI still works for older agent versions and for
environments where Homebrew is unavailable. It is fire-and-forget — no
bidirectional approvals, no Live Activity / Watch round-trip — but it remains
a valid fallback. Do not mix the two on the same host: if moshi-hook is
installed and paired, prefer it.
bunx moshi-hooks setup
bunx moshi-hooks token <YOUR_TOKEN>
Optional integrations:
bunx moshi-hooks setup --local
bunx moshi-hooks setup .
bunx moshi-hooks setup --codex
bunx moshi-hooks setup --opencode