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2 yr. ago

  • I remember the first time I had to scroll. Oh boy that was a while ago

  • Playing divinity 2 at the moment and this hits. Quercus should have armour.

  • I use those tools already and have been administering Linux/bsd/docker for years. What's new for me is using it as a desktop. The existence of scp, ssh etc dont solve this problem and while I find it interesting to learn how other admins are essentially making their own central console out of these components, it is a bit much seeing commenters insist that this is the same thing, or suggesting that anyone who wants a central console for their remote systems must be somehow incompetent. Sysadmins can have different workflow and tooling preferences.

  • I will check this out - thank you.

  • Tmux is awesome. We've somehow fallen into using screen at work, I think just old habits. So yes, on the other side of the ssh connections there's usually a series of screen sessions for us to join. Should try to move onto tmux - it is nicer.

  • Portx, tabby and guacamole are my contenders so far. Guac would be needed for the graphical stuff - it's sort of like a jump server running in a docker container that you would vpn into I guess? Neat concept.

  • That looks pretty good, cheers. Another comment mentioned Tabby, also cross platform.

    Both PortX and Tabby seem a whole lot nicer than winsshterm. Shout out to guacamole for a dockerised jump sever solution.

  • I've explained this at length?

    Single app with unified hierarchy for all systems sorted by work, home, client, prod, staging. Within each you can choose to use SSH or VNC or RDP or SFTP or scp. When copying files there's a side by side GUI so you can browse easily. I have done this using various apps in windows for 20 years and couldn't imagine tracking all those servers/routers/devices without a central console.

    It is obviously not the same as manually making all these connections and using different apps for each of them and backing them up with git.

  • It absolutely isn't the same, but I appreciate learning that this is how many linux admins manage their connections.

  • tabby looks neat. already has an mcp plugin - impressive.

  • This looks seriously impressive - and with a docker. Nice. Thank you.

  • This looks great - thanks!

  • I think I'm starting to see this workflow. I can use git to manage the files, then use bitwarden secrets for the keys if I want them backed up too. And once all the shortcuts are setup it can be made portable by syncing to another place with syncthing. Have to setup each link for each host with each app separately.

    Still think it seems like manually managing bookmarks using vim and storing them outside of the web browser.

  • Yeah seems like Remmina is it. Termius looks nice but the price doesn't make sense.

    Surprising that not many Linux sysadmins want a central console with folders for SSH, file copy and remote desktop connections.

  • I dunno. The folders keep things sorted between work and home. And within work each client. And within there the prod and staging systems are separated. I guess I could make separate scripts for each host but that's kind of what I want the manager for. Also not sure how this covers the right click, copy files workflow of scp or sftp.

  • It is $120 per year for a single user. And to be fair I didn't specify a budget.

    Curious though if you use terminus and think that it's worth it? It looks slick but it costs more than my IDE.

  • I meant for Linux. I am not brave enough to ask for windows app recommendations on Lemmy in the Linux community

  • A graphical interface to store and sort the remote connections. I have 20+ remote systems I need to maintain and apps like this provide tabbed experience like a browser to connect to them.

  • nah just two finger scroll. like going down from page 1 to page 2 with a touchpad