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Commented on SSH Can Do That? Productivity Tips for Working with Remote Servers
Being a Windows user at work, I renamed putty.exe to ssh.exe and copied it into the system32 directory. Then install pageant, make sure your domainname(s) are prepended, and that putty automatically uses your username, and you can access your servers...
Comment Threads
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kustodian commented on
SSH Can Do That? Productivity Tips for Working with Remote Servers
Great article, so many useful tips for.
One small suggestion. I wouldn't recommend enabling ForwardAgent in your .ssh/config, since that could be a security risk if you connect to a malicious host. I would suggest that you use ssh -A when you need it, or enable ForwardAgent just for specific hosts.
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Smylers commented on
SSH Can Do That? Productivity Tips for Working with Remote Servers
enable ForwardAgent just for specific hosts
Good point. Thanks for suggesting this.
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BillThom21 commented on
SSH Can Do That? Productivity Tips for Working with Remote Servers
I actually use WebDrive to do this, if anyone still happens to be looking for a reasonably-priced option. It is a bit less expensive than Expandrive (which I will admit I have never tried). But I've always had success with Webdrive and have been using it for years. www.webdrive.com
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David Cantrell commented on
SSH Can Do That? Productivity Tips for Working with Remote Servers
For persistent connections I find it better to use the
%C
token inControlPath
. It produces a shorter string, so will help get around some path length restrictions. Also, that really ought not to be a path in a world-readable place like/tmp
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Smylers commented on
SSH Can Do That? Productivity Tips for Working with Remote Servers
Both good ideas.
%C
didn't exist when I wrote the above.On a laptop only used by me, I was using
/tmp/
(it avoids need to know your username to put in the config), but for shared computers it isn't a good idea.
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