This open source and freely available tool is written to run in the BASH shell and allows for management and connection to computers via SSH and SSHFS via key file(s) and/or password(s) without compromising security. It also requires zero system configuration file changes, uses standard well known libraries, is easily removed, and even portable.
More information: https://www.cyberws.com/bash/connect2ssh/
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This is a very easy utility to install. You simply need to put the file connect2ssh on your system and turn on executable permissions like chmod 700 or 755. It is suggested you place the file in either /home/YOUR_USER/bin/ or /usr/local/bin/ depending on who you want using this program. Once that step has been done simply run the command from the commandline.
Now run the utility which will setup the necessary files and database (SQLite3)
shell> connect2ssh
To bring up a list of commands:
shell> connect2ssh help
What? You want to remove Connect2SSH? Why!? :-(
- Remove the connect2ssh file itself; where ever you installed it. If necessary use whereis or find commands to locate the file.
- Now delete the directory /home/YOUR_USER/.config/connect2ssh - it may be necesssary to remove /.config/connect2ssh from other users' home directories. It depends on if other users ran the command.
- Done. Now reinstall it right? ;-)
It is recommended you see the help section for a complete list of commands. Still once you have added your hosts (nodes) into Connect2SSH along with attached accounts you may quickly connect to them using shortcut commands.
For example let's say you want to connect to account 28.
To launch a standard SSH session:
shell> connect2ssh go 28
To launch a SSH session with X support:
shell> connect2ssh go 28 x
To mount an account with SSHFS:
shell> connect2ssh go 28 fs
It should be noted all the above commands will automatically insert the port and IP/hostname as entered in the host (node) record. This includes appending any defined key file. This eliminates the need for you to type all that information into the command line. You'll quickly memorize common account numbers and wonder how you lived without Connect2SSH.
By using your favorite text editor open "~/.config/connect2ssh/config” and set the variable DB_FILE_PATH to the new SQLite directory with filename. Then save, close, and rerun the connect2ssh command. Also you should note permissions matter so make sure your user can read and write changes to the new location. If things go wrong you can restore from a backup or simply delete the config file and connect2ssh should regenerate it.
Example:
DB_FILE_PATH=”/opt/sqlite/c2s.db”
Absolutely! You could put the Connect2SSH database on a remote system if desired. You could use syncthing (see how to move the SQLite database), use rsync, use the simple cp command, etc. You could share the same database among multiple machines or even users. This page will not get into the complex world of syncing but yes it is possible with various solutions and methods.
You could encrypt the SQLite database if desired. Of course to use Connect2SSH you would have to decrypt the data. This is an involved process and beyond the scope of this page, however one simple method is to use gpg.
~/.config/connect2ssh/ or another way to put it [user’s home directory]/.config/connect2ssh/
Of course! However becareful when modifying the database as you could render the data useless to this tool. It is highly recommended you backup the database file before making changes or even viewing it. If the database becomes corrupted and you don’t have a backup then delete the database file and Connect2SSH will generate a new one. Of course you’ll lose your data in this case.
It is the nohangup output file so SSHFS connections aren’t terminated when started by Connect2SSH. It is harmless. You may delete it but it will just come back when you generate new SSHFS connections. In most situations it should remain completely empty. Yes output could be redirected to /dev/null but a file was chosen just in case of troubleshooting and again it is just a simple file so it isn’t taxing your system.