![]() It will optionally report and graph bandwidth used over an individual ssh connection. It automatically lists (under Profiles) ssh hosts on your local network if they are running avahi/bonjour and sshd, and will even connect to all of them at once with a single click. So, my answer is "yes", because iTerm2 is very ssh-aware. On OSes that come out-of-the box with ssh (ie macOS, Linux, OpenBSD and FreeBSD), client software that re-implements the ssh layer is rightly viewed with suspicion, and software that is simply "ssh aware" is more common. On Windows, in the old days, SSH wasn't built-in, and clients like Putty had to implement their own ssh layer. I guess that depends on how you define "SSH client" from a user perspective. ![]() But is it really an SSH client? Isn't it just a (very nice) replacement for Apple Terminal? ![]()
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January 2023
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