Remote Connections Remote Connections Remote connections are easily made by typing the &URL; in the Location Toolbar; these are actually &kioslaves1-url;. Please note that the &krusader; panel does not support all &kioslaves2-url; ⪚ http:// will not work in the panel, but will work in the viewer. Some examples: ftp://public.ftpserver.org/directory/ fish://username@hostname/ sftp://username:password@sftp.foo.org/ ftp://username@my.server.org:21/directory/ smb://username:password@server/share ftp://username@proxyusername:password@proxipassword@hostname/directory nfs://<host>:<port><url-path> webdav://www.server.com/path/ You can bookmark these &URL;'s, however, please read the Bookman section regarding securely save passwords. For connecting to multiple locations, bookmark these &URL;'s and open them one by one, or open them all together by using &panel-profiles-lnk;. To switch from one to another location, just open a &foldertabs-lnk; for each. There are three ways to start a remote connection: Type the &URL; in the Location Toolbar Select Commands New Net Connection which will pop-up a dialog that will ask for the remote site details. This dialog is handy if you are not used to type remote &URL;'s in the Location Toolbar. Leaving the password and user name fields empty will log you in as anonymous. NOTE: we are planning to rewrite this dialog window. You can bookmark a directory on a remote host and return to this directory from the bookmark button on the top corner of your panel just like in a web browser. After you log on to a remote server you can browse it just like your local hard drive with the following exceptions: You cannot execute files on remote servers. Permissions cannot always be calculated on remote servers (depends on server and access method) so you might get a "?" on the permissions columns for some files. Disk usage information is not available for most remote filesystems. To change the charset of the remote host use Commands Select Remote Charset . You can close the current Active Remote Connection by two separate methods: Manually: Add the disconnect button to the &main-toolbar-lnk; and click on it. Automatically: Change the &URL; in the &location-toolbar-lnk; . &krusader; is a file manager that supports remote connections via &kioslaves1-url;, but if you are looking for even more advanced remote connections features, ⪚ an advanced &FTP;-client we recommend you to use ⪚ &kasablanca-url; or &kftpgrabber-url;. LAN connections via fish:/ protocol (zeroconf) Remote LAN Connections (zeroconf) This section is contributed by Andrew Svet (z-vet), feedback about this chapter is appriciated. Thanks! This works on a &debian; system, so it will work on &debian; and derivatives (&kubuntu; &etc;), though it should work on other Linuxes as well. We assume that you have SSH installed, configured and working on every machine on LAN you want to connect to/from. There are plenty of very good tutorials about SSH on the net, ⪚ at linuxhomenetworking.com or just google for it. We use the default SSH port (22) for this chapter. Remember to change it if you use different one. All modifications, editing &etc; must be done as root. Let's start with installing all the packages we need: # apt-get install Everything is installed, now let's do some configuration. First, we need our services to be announced on LAN. That's why we installed avahi-daemon: it represents your machine on local network and allows other applications to publish services they provide. Avahi-daemon comes with example ssh.service configuration file found in /usr/share/doc/avahi-daemon/examples . In order to get the service to be announced on LAN we need to copy this file to /etc/avahi/services directory: # cp Now we need fish:/ protocol to be announced too, so we use an ssh.service file as a template for fish.service: # cp This file is just a copy of ssh.service, Edit the fish.service file and replace "Remote Terminal on %h" with "Fish to %h" and "_ssh._tcp" with "_fish._tcp". Here's how it looks after edit: <?xml version="1.0" standalone='no'?><!--*-nxml-*--> <!DOCTYPE service-group SYSTEM "avahi-service.dtd"> <!-- $Id: remote-connections.docbook,v 1.6 2007/05/02 18:07:28 codeknight Exp $ --> <!-- This file is part of avahi. avahi is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. avahi is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR <!-- See avahi.service(5) for more information about this configuration file --> <service-group> <name replace-wildcards="yes">FISH to %h</name> <service> <type>_fish._tcp</type> <port>22</port> </service> </service-group> Save the modified file. Now we need to create a new file _fish._tcp, open a text editor and add the next lines: Name=FISH Protocol (ssh) Type=_fish._tcp UserEntry=u PathEntry=path PasswordEntry=p And save the file /usr/share/apps/zeroconf/_fish._tcp Do the same on each machine on your LAN, then restart avahi-daemon: # /etc/init.d/ avahi-daemon Than open &krusader; and type in location-toolbar-lnk: zeroconf:/ to open the zeroconf connection. Enter the Fish Protocol directory. Inside you'll find the links to each machine that announced fish:/ on your LAN, the location-toolbar-lnk: will point to zeroconf:/_fish._tcp Double clicking on any of these machines, them will bring up the password prompt, asking you for yor ssh key passphrase (if password was set). Enter your passphrase. Congratulations: you connected to remote machine using &krusader;!