Re: Apple equivalent of Putty ?

2009-03-27 Thread David Moyle
ssage - From: "Steven Knowles" To: "WAMUG Mailing List" Sent: Friday, 27 March, 2009 1:43:02 AM GMT +08:00 Beijing / Chongqing / Hong Kong / Urumqi Subject: Apple equivalent of Putty ? I'm trying help an IT guy, a Windows guy, do some testing of speeds when it comes to me

Re: Apple equivalent of Putty ?

2009-03-27 Thread Steven Knowles
Thanks Paul, Glenn, Alexander, and Daniel for your help - I'll pass all comments to the Windows IT guy. Cheers, Steven On 27/03/2009, at 3:28 AM, Paul Mulroney wrote: Hi Steven, On 27/03/2009, at 5:01 AM, WAMUG Mailing List wrote: I'm trying help an IT guy, a Windows guy, do some testing

Re: Apple equivalent of Putty ?

2009-03-26 Thread Paul Mulroney
Hi Steven, On 27/03/2009, at 5:01 AM, WAMUG Mailing List wrote: I'm trying help an IT guy, a Windows guy, do some testing of speeds when it comes to me accessing a particular server. To do whatever he needs me to do, something to with ssh connections, and something about needing to redirect lo

Re: Apple equivalent of Putty ?

2009-03-26 Thread Glenn Nicholas
Putty is an emulator for Unix commands - e.g  ssh, telnet and rlogin. ssh runs native from 'Terminal', or you may find it easier to use a GUI such as Fugu: http://rsug.itd.umich.edu/software/fugu/ Terminal isn't really an application, it just provides access to underlying Unix based commands in t

Re: Apple equivalent of Putty ?

2009-03-26 Thread Alexander Hartner
You can (should) use terminal. To use sag you need to have a user account and the address of the server: Example: ssh -l username hostaddress ssh -l root 192.168.56.43 Hope this helps Sent from my iPhone On 26 Mar 2009, at 16:43, Steven Knowles wrote: I'm trying help an IT guy, a Windows

Re: Apple equivalent of Putty ?

2009-03-26 Thread Daniel Kerr
On 27/3/09 1:43 AM, "Steven Knowles" wrote: > I'm trying help an IT guy, a Windows guy, do some testing of speeds > when it comes to me accessing a particular server. > > To do whatever he needs me to do, something to with ssh connections, > and something about needing to redirect local ports to

Apple equivalent of Putty ?

2009-03-26 Thread Steven Knowles
I'm trying help an IT guy, a Windows guy, do some testing of speeds when it comes to me accessing a particular server. To do whatever he needs me to do, something to with ssh connections, and something about needing to redirect local ports to server, he would use Putty in the Windows world.