

#Iterm2 ssh install
Image support You can install packages to a remote Linux/OSX host and then have images catted back out via your terminal.Even if the host is Linux but iTerm is running locally on OSX. Mouse support Yes, you can send mouse clicks and drags to Emacs (24 or later) and have Emacs respond.Full rollover key support Any key chord can be made to spit out an escape sequence through the terminal, and with some Emacs Lisp code you can receive the escape sequence and map it to a key, a key chord and then use it as a binding.

ITerm2 has some notable features, namely: Minute font-adjustments are a bit clunky (albeit less clunky than the font-face rendering and customization in Emacs itself).Emoji support is limited (it’s there, but it’s limited).It doesn’t support complicated key bindings, which makes it hard to get the and keys working in Emacs.Advantages over Terminal.app While OSX's default Terminal.app is fairly feature-rich, it comes with limitations. If you use OSX on a regular basis but prefer to interact with Emacs running somewhere else, iTerm2’s features will get you as close as possible to feeling as if you were running the Emacs GUI on your local machine. It is donationware and is under the GPL v2 license. ITerm2 is a feature-rich terminal emulation replacement for Terminal.app on OSX machines.
