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| gnome-keyring 0.6.0 | GPL/LGPL | Keyring and password manager for the GNOME desktop |
| gnome-keyring is a program that keep password and other secrets for users. It is run as a damon in the session, similar to ssh-agent, and other applications can locate it by an environment variable. The program can manage several keyrings, each with its own master password, and there is also a session keyring which is never stored to disk, but forgotten when the session ends. | ||
| keychain 2.6.2 | GPL | Keychain manages ssh-agent to minimise passphrase entry for ssh |
| Keychain is a manager for OpenSSH, ssh.com, Sun SSH and GnuPG agents. It acts as a front-end to the agents, allowing you to easily have one long-running agent process per system, rather than per login session. This dramatically reduces the number of times you need to enter your passphrase from once per new login session to once every time your local machine is rebooted. Run keychain once manually per user, after which keychain will run (quietly) every time you log in (from a profile script). Hint: If you get tired of keychain, delete ~/.keychain | ||
| openssh-askpass-common 4.3p2 | BSD | OpenSSH X11 passphrase common scripts |
| OpenSSH X11 passphrase common scripts | ||
| openssh-askpass-gnome 4.3p2 | BSD | OpenSSH GNOME passphrase dialog |
| Ssh (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and for executing commands in a remote machine. It is intended to replace rlogin and rsh, and provide secure encrypted communications between two untrusted hosts over an insecure network. X11 connections and arbitrary TCP/IP ports can also be forwarded over the secure channel. OpenSSH is OpenBSD's rework of the last free version of SSH, bringing it up to date in terms of security and features, as well as removing all patented algorithms to separate libraries (OpenSSL). This package contains the GNOME passphrase dialog. | ||
| openssh-askpass 4.3p2 | BSD | OpenSSH X11 passphrase dialog |
| Ssh (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and for
executing commands in a remote machine. It is intended to replace
rlogin and rsh, and provide secure encrypted communications between
two untrusted hosts over an insecure network. X11 connections and
arbitrary TCP/IP ports can also be forwarded over the secure channel.
OpenSSH is OpenBSD's rework of the last free version of SSH, bringing it
up to date in terms of security and features, as well as removing all
patented algorithms to separate libraries (OpenSSL).
This package contains Jim Knoble's | ||
| openssh-clients 4.3p2 | BSD | OpenSSH Secure Shell protocol clients |
| Ssh (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and for executing commands in a remote machine. It is intended to replace rlogin and rsh, and provide secure encrypted communications between two untrusted hosts over an insecure network. X11 connections and arbitrary TCP/IP ports can also be forwarded over the secure channel. OpenSSH is OpenBSD's rework of the last free version of SSH, bringing it up to date in terms of security and features, as well as removing all patented algorithms to separate libraries (OpenSSL). This package includes the clients necessary to make encrypted connections to SSH servers. | ||
| openssh 4.3p2 | BSD | OpenSSH free Secure Shell (SSH) implementation |
| Ssh (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and for executing commands in a remote machine. It is intended to replace rlogin and rsh, and provide secure encrypted communications between two untrusted hosts over an insecure network. X11 connections and arbitrary TCP/IP ports can also be forwarded over the secure channel. OpenSSH is OpenBSD's rework of the last free version of SSH, bringing it up to date in terms of security and features, as well as removing all patented algorithms to separate libraries (OpenSSL). This package includes the core files necessary for both the OpenSSH client and server. To make this package useful, you should also install openssh-clients, openssh-server, or both. You can build openssh with some conditional build swithes; (ie. use with rpm --rebuild): --with[out] skey smartcard support (disabled) --with[out] krb5 kerberos support (enabled) --with[out] watchdog watchdog support (disabled) --with[out] x11askpass X11 ask pass support (enabled) --with[out] gnomeaskpass Gnome ask pass support (enabled) --with[out] ldap OpenLDAP support (disabled) --with[out] sftplog sftp logging support (disabled) --with[out] chroot chroot support (disabled) | ||
| rfb 0.6.1 | GPL | Rfb is a set of rfb enabled tools and applications |
| The heXoNet RFB Software package includes many different projects. The goal of this package is to provide a comprehensive collection of rfb enabled tools and applications. One application, x0rfbserver, was (and maybe still is) the only complete remote control solution for the X Window System. | ||
| rsh 0.17 | BSD | Clients for remote access commands (rsh, rlogin, rcp). |
| The rsh package contains a set of programs which allow users to run commmands on remote machines, login to other machines and copy files between machines (rsh, rlogin and rcp). All three of these commands use rhosts style authentication. This package contains the clients needed for all of these services. The rsh package should be installed to enable remote access to other machines. | ||
| telnet-client-krb5 1.4.3 | MIT | A telnet-client with kerberos support |
| Telnet is a popular protocol for logging into remote systems over the Internet. The telnet package provides a command line telnet client. Install the telnet package if you want to telnet to remote machines. This version supports kerberos authentication. | ||
| tightvnc-doc 1.2.9 | GPL | Complete documentation for VNC |
| This package contains HTML documentation about VNC (Virtual Network Computing) programs. Install the vnc-doc package if you want extensive online documentation about VNC. | ||
| tightvnc 1.2.9 | GPL | Remote graphical access |
| VNC allows you to access to a remote graphical display through the network. The enhanced version of VNC, called TightVNC (grown from the VNC Tight Encoder project), is optimized to work over slow network connections such as low-speed modem links. While original VNC may be very slow when your connection is not fast enough, with TightVNC you can work remotely almost in real time in most environments. Besides bandwidth optimizations, TightVNC also includes many other improvements, optimizations and bugfixes over VNC. Note that TightVNC is free, cross-platform and compatible with the standard VNC. | ||
There is sufficient light for those who desire to see,
and there is sufficient darkness for those of contrary disposition.
— Blaise Pascal, Pensees 149
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