Free XSHELL is preferred.
Putty has stopped maintaining itself a long time ago, and many things are poorly supported.
SecureCRT is relatively expensive, so please support the genuine version if you don’t plan to buy it. . . .
I used SSH Secure Shell Slient once, but it didn’t fit my intuition, so I uninstalled it. . . .
One more thing, many people insist on Putty, it is just a habit. Ease of use is king. Xshell has a special software package that supports direct upload and download of files, which is very convenient.
If you are not a fan of copyright, it is recommended to use SecureCRT. It is very powerful. I have been using it for several years. During this period, I also changed to PuTTY, Xshell, and SSH Secure Shell Slient, but I feel that they are not as powerful as SecureCRT.
The SecureCRT interface is very nice, and I can easily use the sz, rz commands to transfer files to and from my terminal.
My main configuration for using SecureCRT is as follows:
1. Session Options --> In Terminal, check the Sending String option under Anti-idle, and enter a few spaces in the following input box. The purpose is to prevent the operation from being disconnected after you stop the operation for a few minutes. After setting, the client will automatically send a few spaces to the server every five minutes to keep the connection alive.
2. Session Options --> Terminal --> In the Emulation interface, select Linux from the Terminal drop-down bar under Emulation, and check ANSI color, which will allow your files and folders to display various colors supported by Linux. It’s easy to tell
3. In Session Options --> Terminal --> Appearance, adjust the Normal Font under Fonts to Consolas 14pt, and set the Character Encoding below to UTF-8 to prevent Chinese garbled characters.
Just use the default configuration for the rest, and my operation interface is as follows:
Recommend free xshell
Securecrt is chargeable and those who have cracked it are afraid to use it
Also try to download putty from the official version. Don’t use the so-called Chinese version easily. I have already reported similar backdoors
Free XSHELL is preferred.
Putty has stopped maintaining itself a long time ago, and many things are poorly supported.
SecureCRT is relatively expensive, so please support the genuine version if you don’t plan to buy it. . . .
I used SSH Secure Shell Slient once, but it didn’t fit my intuition, so I uninstalled it. . . .
One more thing, many people insist on Putty, it is just a habit. Ease of use is king. Xshell has a special software package that supports direct upload and download of files, which is very convenient.
If you are not a fan of copyright, it is recommended to use SecureCRT. It is very powerful. I have been using it for several years. During this period, I also changed to PuTTY, Xshell, and SSH Secure Shell Slient, but I feel that they are not as powerful as SecureCRT.
The SecureCRT interface is very nice, and I can easily use the sz, rz commands to transfer files to and from my terminal.
My main configuration for using SecureCRT is as follows:
1. Session Options --> In Terminal, check the Sending String option under Anti-idle, and enter a few spaces in the following input box. The purpose is to prevent the operation from being disconnected after you stop the operation for a few minutes. After setting, the client will automatically send a few spaces to the server every five minutes to keep the connection alive.
2. Session Options --> Terminal --> In the Emulation interface, select Linux from the Terminal drop-down bar under Emulation, and check ANSI color, which will allow your files and folders to display various colors supported by Linux. It’s easy to tell
3. In Session Options --> Terminal --> Appearance, adjust the Normal Font under Fonts to Consolas 14pt, and set the Character Encoding below to UTF-8 to prevent Chinese garbled characters.
Just use the default configuration for the rest, and my operation interface is as follows:
xshell is easier to use.
It is better to operate directly under Linux. You have to use Putty.
Just like: "Many people insist on Putty, it is just a habit"
Xshell4
+Xftp4
Recommend free xshell
Securecrt is chargeable and those who have cracked it are afraid to use it
Also try to download putty from the official version. Don’t use the so-called Chinese version easily. I have already reported similar backdoors
You can try mobaxterm
http://cyberduck.io
Putty is difficult to use, and there is really no particularly easy-to-use SSH client under Windows
XShell can run perfectly with Wine under Linux. However, non-UTF-8 SSH is not supported when running with Wine under Linux