Improve the way you work with Secure Shell
Safety First

© Lead Image © Maksym Yemelyanov, 123RF.com
Many Linux users employ Secure Shell to log in remotely and work as if on a local machine. But SSH can do even more – the application will send commands, route other TCP connections through an encrypted tunnel, and provide multiplexing support.
The man pages for the OpenSSH tool [1] read like novels. Most users know only a fraction of the options, and this article, too, is restricted to just a few features. It provides tips on SSH multiplexing, tunneling, and various configuration files.
On My Mark!
One of the oldest SSH tricks is to define a command that SSH runs at the opposite end when executed; this saves you time and typing. The output appears in the local terminal:
<heike@home:~$> ssh huhn@example.com pwd /home/huhn
[...]
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