Curious what folks are using to organise their remote connections? I liked WinSSHTerm and have tried replacing it with Remote Desktop Manager, but it seems a bit broken (fonts look terrible in a terminal, sftp doesn’t work, RDP sort of works, but it’s not great).

RDP is not a must. Folders, ssh, key auth, sftp and scp are the main things I’m looking for. Currently considering Remmina but though I would check if ppl have strong views on this topic before trying the next app.

I’m using cinnamon with mint 22.

  • utopiah@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    19 hours ago

    Folders, ssh, key auth, sftp and scp are the main things I’m looking for.

    suggesting that anyone who wants a central console for their remote systems must be somehow incompetent

    IMHO that’s exactly what ~/.ssh/config using its Include directive as shown in https://lemmy.ml/post/29858248/18510482

           Include
                   Include the specified configuration file(s).  Multiple
                   pathnames may be specified and each pathname may contain
                   glob(7) wildcards, tokens as described in the “TOKENS”
                   section, environment variables as described in the
                   “ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES” section and, for user
                   configurations, shell-like~references to user home
                   directories.  Wildcards will be expanded and processed in
                   lexical order.  Files without absolute paths are assumed
                   to be in ~/.ssh if included in a user configuration file
                   or /etc/ssh if included from the system configuration
                   file.  Include directive may appear inside a Match or Host
                   block to perform conditional inclusion.
    

    from https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man5/ssh_config.5.html

    So what I think people are highlighting is not that your need is wrong, rather that you rather than going back to fundamentals (e.g. lower command-line or even configuration here level stuff) you are looking for more complex and specialize tools. That tends to be reasonable in the Windows world where people are often looking for GUI but in Linux, started from Unix and thus CLI, this is a process that will often lead to disappointment. I believe people who are saying things perceived negatively here are pointing out, maybe poorly, a cultural difference that will be problematic in the future, thus why they are insisting.