Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Comparison of SSH servers
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
An SSH server is a software program which uses the Secure Shell protocol to accept connections from remote computers. SFTP/SCP file transfers and remote terminal connections are popular use cases for an SSH server.
General
Remove ads
Platform
Summarize
Perspective
The operating systems or virtual machines the SSH servers are designed to run on without emulation; there are several possibilities:
- No indicates that it does not exist or was never released.
- Partial indicates that while it works, the server lacks important functionality compared to versions for other OSs but may still be under development.
- Beta indicates that while a version is fully functional and has been released, it is still in development (e.g. for stability).
- Yes indicates that it has been officially released in a fully functional, stable version.
- Dropped indicates that while the server works, new versions are no longer being released for the indicated OS; the number in parentheses is the last known stable version which was officially released for that OS.
- Included indicates that the server comes pre-packaged with or has been integrated into the operating system.
The list is not exhaustive, but rather reflects the most common platforms today.
- iPhone, iPod Touch. Unless otherwise noted, iPhone refers to non-jailbroken devices.
- OpenSSH and Dropbear are available as optware packages installed by PreWare (maintained by WebOS Internals).
- Lsh supports only one BSD platform officially, FreeBSD.[citation needed]
- Also known as OpenBSD Secure Shell.
- Most Linux distributions have OpenSSH as an official package, but a few do not.
- Only for jailbroken devices.
Remove ads
Features
Remove ads
See also
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads
