Monocaffe Connections Manager – set of tools to ease the management of SSH/VNC/RDP/FTP/Telnet/SSH Tunnels servers
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Supported Connections:
* SSH
* VNC
* RDP (Windows Remote Desktop)
* FTP
* Telnet
* SSH Tunnels (Using SSH options)
Features:
* GTK GUI
* Use different options for each connection
* Export to HTML
* Import from CSV's generated by OpenOffice.org Calc
* Export to ODF and HTML the list of connections
* Clustered Commands (works, but needs some work)
* Modify the console colors, transparency, etc.
* Copy/Paste from/to the console.
* Search google using selected text on the console.
* Set the terminal title to the selected text.
* Easy installation on Ubuntu.
* Fast and easy to use reference for different tasks and programs:
o Linux in general
o Bash
o Screen
o Vim
o EMacs
o More...
Install Monocaffe Connections Manager in Ubuntu
You can download .deb package from here or run the following commnd from your terminal
wget http://launchpad.net/mcm/trunk/0.9.2/+download/mcm-0.9.2_all.deb
Install this .deb package by double clicking on it or run the following command from your terminal
sudo dpkg -i mcm-0.9.2_all.deb
Screenshot
- The Connections Tree separated in groups. From here you select a connection previously created and its information will appear on (2). By double clicking the connection will proceed.
- Information about the connection selected on (1). A connect button to open a connection to the selected server. The F2 key will hide (1) and (2)
- Tabbed windows with the different connections established. To open a connection on the local machine, you can press the small "Home" button beside the tabs.
- Tabs for the different established connections. You can navigate the tabs using the Alt+# combination. When any of the checkboxes in the tabs are activated, clustered commands (5) are enabled on the selected tabs.
- Clustered commands entry. Everything typed here will be sent to the selected terminals in (4).
Why call an application written in python -or in whatever programming language- mono-something?
A *lot* of people, and certainly no serious admin, will touch a Mono-.NET application with a ten foot pole. Too bad that the name of your application will have negative consequences for the adoption of your program.
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