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Gui Ssh Client For Mac Highsierra

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Gui Ssh Client For Mac Highsierra Average ratng: 7,1/10 9679 votes
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An SSH client is a software program which uses the secure shell protocol to connect to a remote computer.This article compares a selection of notable clients. A Secure Shell (SSH) client is software that uses the SSH cryptographic protocol to enable users to connect to other computers, primarily to transfer files and for terminal access. – Mac OS X 10.8 (Mountain Lion and Mountain Lion Server). – macOS 10.13 (High Sierra and High Sierra Server) – macOS 10.14 (Mojave and Mojave Server) The remote machine must have a running SSH service and carry its own copy of rsync. Truck is a client GUI for rsync – the same algorithm found at the heart of Dropbox, OneDrive.

Ssh client free download - FileZilla Client, Vuze BitTorrent Client, Carracho Client, and many more programs. Best Video Software for the Mac How To Run MacOS High Sierra or Another OS on Your. Sshfs-gui is a GUI wrapper for SSHFS Mount remote filesystems via SCP/SSH as a native removable Volume in the Mac OS X Finder. Open and use the remote files using your applications directly. Any other SSH client will render the remote server at whatever size the local client window is. The built-in SSH client on Windows, however, forces you to use a standard size, and it's small enough to cause problems.

Posted:
in Mac Softwareedited January 2014
Hi folks,
Being a recent 'switcher', I am finding myself scrambling to find replacements for the fav tools I used before. My newest frustration is finding a good replacement for SecureCRT for the Mac.
I need an SSH client that will save logon info for my most common servers that I SSH to, as well as keep the session alive during the times I have to step away from the desk.
I have been using the SSH command line utility built into OSX but if I have to ignore an SSH session for five minutes while I attend to other matters, then the connection is dropped and I have to re-establish it.
Any suggestions? TIA, Zeeple.

Comments

  • You don't need one. Just open a console window a use ssh from the command line.
  • Quote:

    Originally posted by Emin
    You don't need one. Just open a console window a use ssh from the command line.


    Thanks for the reply. But, as mentioned in the previous post, I currently use the SSH utility via command line and I find it lacking in the features I want. It has no keepalive. Thus if I have to walk away from the computer for a bit when I return, whatever I was connected to is now dropped, and I have to re-establich the SSH session. Pain in the rear.
    A utility such as SecureCRT, for Windows computers only, has these features and more and is truly a superior SSH client. So I am hoping that other Mac users out there have the same requirements that I do, and have found a good utility somewhere that can fill this gap.
    Thanks!
  • Quote:

    Tried ssh -o TCPKeepAlive ?
  • I would be interested in finding out a better SSH client than Terminal.
    At the moment, I click-hold on the Terminal icon in the dock and click 'Connect to server..'. Slightly easier than using the command line method.
  • Quote:

    Originally posted by Emin
    Tried ssh -o TCPKeepAlive ?


    No!! I have not tried that. However, I am trying right now. Thanks again for the prompt response!
  • Quote:

    Originally posted by Zeeple
    I need an SSH client that will save logon info for my most common servers that I SSH to


    You can use a command alias or a simple script to save the login command for each of your favorite servers, if re-typing the commands gets too complicated. In its simplest form, this just means typing the command into a text file and making the file executable. OpenSSH is a pretty decent SSH client, and the BSD environment that surrounds it offers a rich variety of ways to streamline your workflow. If I had to guess, I'd say the lack of 'sophisticated' GUI SSH clients for OS X is because the power-users that would use them prefer to leverage the CLI instead.
  • Yeah, I haven't found a GUI ssh client I like as much as the command line. Color me geeky.
    Ditto to the above comments about making a quick shell script that just fires off the appropriate username/password, but that's a slight security risk, keeping your passwords in plain text like that.
    I set up secure keys between all my ssh2 connections, but you might not have that option.
  • Well, I think I would like to use the command line too, if only I can iron out these few wrinkles and make it quicker and easier to connect to my servers.
    TCPKeepAlive: I have tried this option but it is not working for me. I have tried it via command line as such:
    ssh -o TCPKeepAlive=yes server.domain.com
    as well as placing it in /etc/ssh_config under 'Host *' But either way, the session is still dropped after a bit of inactivity.
    Alias: I have also put a few aliases in /etc/profile that allow me to reduce this:
    ssh -l barney -o TCPKeepAlive=yes host.domain.com
    to this:
    host
    but this still leaves me needing to enter the password everytime. (I know a petty grievance) which is more typing than I'd like to have to do. Is there no way to pass that via config files or command line?
    Thanks!
    Zeeple
  • Quote:

    Originally posted by Zeeple
    ..the session is still dropped after a bit of inactivity.


    I understand, that with other ssh clients (especially the one you wrote about) your sessions do stay open? In other words - is this an issue only from your Mac?
    Quote:


    but this still leaves me needing to enter the password everytime. (I know a petty grievance) which is more typing than I'd like to have to do. Is there no way to pass that via config files or command line?



    It is possible to establish trust through host keys as well as authenticate through a personal ssh key. This second method is probably better. You would have to create a key with ssh-keygen, place it on the hosts in appropriate files etc, then use ssh-agent to keep it for you while your OS X session is open allowing password-less login onto other hosts.
    However, I actually think that having to enter a password when logging in is a good thing. A little inconvenience that actually improves security.
  • Yep, this is only a problem when I use the Mac. But I think it is not an inherent difference in Operating Systems so much as it was a feature of a really good SSH client that *happened* to be written for Windows. This is the client, btw, that I am referring to:
    http://www.vandyke.com/products/securecrt/
  • Except that I've never seen that problem on my Mac.. my guess is that it happens to be something about the ssh server on the other end.
  • JellyfiSSH is a simple bookmark manager for connecting to *NIX boxes like BSD/Linux etc via Telnet or SSH 1 or 2. You can set preferences for each bookmark including the terminal colours, fonts, window size, transparency and default login. Version 4 introduces grouping which allows you to collect similar bookmarks into groups for better management - especially for large numbers of bookmarks.
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Is there a GUI ssh tunneling client for mac that supports jump servers? Mulitple hops?

I have tried:

  • coachilla
  • SSH tunnel manager
  • Tunnelblick

tunneling manually through terminal is fine, but time consuming and I have hundreds of servers I have to log into and it is much easier if I can use a client. League client not working. All the clients I have found work, but they can't handle jumping through jump host first and then server.

Does anyone know of any Mac GUI ssh tunelling clients that are capable of this?

THanks in advance.

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