Op zaterdag 17 november 2018 17:14:09 CET schreef L A Walsh:
On 11/16/2018 2:22 PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
Hi,
on my laptop I use a script that launches several lines like this to
connect to my home server: exec ssh -L 127.0.0.1:60000:192.168.X.Y:80 -N user@host &
It works fine. The problem is killing that connection. What I do is "killall ssh", but perhaps there is another way I have not thought about? I mean, kill that ssh session and not another?
Many ways, but if you lose the 'exec' and '&', you could launch a new terminal with each ssh session. When you want to close that one session, close the terminal holding it open.
And use f.e. yakuake ( a dropdown terminal ) and open ( and close ) a new tab for each session, easily see what is going on and close a session by closing the tab. AFAIK konsole has some similar features.
Now there are plenty of alternative ways -- could have a launch writte in shell or whatever that would keep track of which ones were running or not. Then you could select the session you want to kill from a menu in that script.
You could just close that connection (control-d in the remote terminal session)...
Etc, etc...boils down to how much work one is willing to put in to set it up and what type of overhead you can handle.
-l
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