Connecting to a new host is as quick as opening Quicksilver CMD-Space and then typing in enough characters of the host to be unique, and finally pressing enter. If the part that sucks for you is typing in a long and complex ssh command, but you don't mind opening Terminal, and for some reason you don't want to use any of the previous answers' approaches, then you can also use aliases or functions. Add something like this to shell dotfile. The only advantage I can see over other approaches is that in zsh at least, and I think bash you can use command completion to see all your servers to connect to.
If all of the aliases start with the same thing, like 'connect. Disclaimer: you might need to do some shell customization to get that working, but I believe it will work by default in zsh and probably in bash as well. I also have a custom port to connect to. Asked By: misha. I then just use the tab-completion of zsh which comes with tab-completion for many commands, including ssh.
What's your favorite tool or method for quickly logging in to the hosts that you need to access via ssh? Sure, doing the clicky thing with the mouse and finding 'a' server among a list takes more time than whacking it into the command line.
But iTerm does have keyboard shortcuts. I've got over a hundred servers to look after: remembering all of their names is not going to happen, let alone trying to recall which servers belong in my JDE farm, and which ones are my BOM application cluster. That, plus a complete host file is my method.
First as mentioned in several previous answers I configure my. I have an alias or function which lists all the hosts in my. Now, for screen. Since running screen on my local machine means I lose all my sessions when I take my laptop home for the night, and one of the great benefits of screen is having persistent sessions I don't run screen locally.
Instead I log into a remote server and run screen on that server let's call it "jumper" since it serves as a "jumping off point" and from there log into the other machines I'm working with. I DON'T put them all in my. I usually want some subset, so I have a screen session with one subset and another screen session with another screen subset. Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group.
Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more. How can I manage a list of frequently accessed hosts? Ask Question. Asked 11 years, 11 months ago. Active 1 month ago. Viewed 4k times. The 'ganymed' library was easy to use but lacks some sophistication. In my simple non-exhaustive and non-formal test the jcraft product came out best. If you have time then these other products are worth testing but be careful of the IBM licence.
Yegor Bugayenko. Try jcabi-ssh , which is a very simple and convenient wrapper of JSch. You showed up just in time for the waffles! And this tiny ad:. Can I make a couple of suggestions? Can there be a way of loading in your custom icon image centered to the default icon rather than "top-left"?
Obviously we still want it to set up the axis via top-left. Can we load different custom icons per icon rather than the same one for all? Only reason I ask these things is that for "iNav" style themes it would make it REALLY easy to lay them out, in the builders current state Its still hit and miss due to the current way of loading images and with larger images it can be WAY off! Also, is there a way of using Iconoclasm to set out the Dock?
Great program though, made a heap of things A LOT easier for me! Originally Posted by Entombed Sh4dw. Originally Posted by bjbinc.
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