Pony SSH is a Visual Studio Code plugin which offers extremely fast file editing and remote filesystem watching via SSH.
Pony SSH makes editing files over SSH fast and painless. It features:
- Blazingly fast remote SSH editing
- Automatic remote filesystem watching; changes to your remote filesystem are reflected locally automatically
- Encrypted local caching for extremely fast and secure file access
Pony SSH requires an SSH server with Python >= 2.7 installed. Almost all Linux/Unix/OSX systems meet the requirements.
Simply add a new ponyssh.hosts
section to your Settings.json
file, describing each remote system you would like to connect to.
For example:
"ponyssh.hosts": {
"my-host": {
"host": "my-host.example.com",
"username": "my-login",
"password": true
},
"another-host": {
"host": "another-host.example.com",
"username": "my-login",
"agent": true
}
}
Each host can be configured with the following options:
host
- (Required) Hostname or IP address to connect to.username
- (Required) Username for authentication.port
- Remote port to connect to. Default:22
path
- Default path to open when connecting to this host. Default:~
(home dir)password
- Specify your password, or set totrue
(without quotes) to prompt you for your password each time you connect. Note: Storing passwords in plaintext in your Settings file is insecure.agent
- Specify which SSH agent to use for connection, or entertrue
(without quotes) to use a sensible default. (see below)privateKey
- Your private key for authentication.privateKeyFile
- Specify a file containing your private key for authentication. eg:~/.ssh/id_rsa
.passphrase
- Enter a passphrase for decrypting your private key. If left blank, Pony SSH will prompt you for a passphrase if needed. Set totrue
to force Pony SSH to always prompt for the passphrase. Note: Storing passphrases in plaintext in your Settings file is insecure.python
- Specify the full path to your python installation on your remote host. Default: Your system default python installationshell
- Specify a shell to use when executing remote commands. Include any command line arguments needed to pass your shell a command to execute. Each command to execute will get appended to your shell string. eg:sh -c
orsudo sh -c
. Default:sh -c
In most cases, you can set the agent
field to true
, and let Pony SSH pick a sensible default value for you. On Windows, Pony SSH will auto-select Pageant, and on Linux/Unix/OSX systems it will select $SSH_AUTH_SOCK
.
You can manually configure Pony SSH to use Pageant on Windows by setting your agent
to pageant
. Alternately, you can specify the path to your SSH auth socket, or the environment variable in which your SSH auth socket can be found. eg: /foo/bar/my-socket
, or $SSH_AUTH_SOCK
.
Authentication using an SSH agent, opening /var/www
by default:
"ponyssh.hosts": {
"example-agent-auth": {
"host": "example.com",
"username": "my-login",
"agent": true,
"path": "/var/www"
}
}
Ask for a password each time you connect:
"ponyssh.hosts": {
"example-password-ask": {
"host": "example.com",
"username": "my-login",
"password": true
}
}
Load a private key from a file:
"ponyssh.hosts": {
"example-private-key": {
"host": "example.com",
"username": "my-login",
"privateKeyFile": "~/.ssh/my_key"
}
}
Connect to a host and use sudo
:
"ponyssh.hosts": {
"example-sudo": {
"host": "example.com",
"username": "my-login",
"agent": true,
"shell": "sudo sh -c"
}
}
(Note: This setup assumes your user is allowed to sudo without a password)
After adding a host to your settings.json
file, Pony SSH is ready to use! To open a remote folder:
- Open the Command Palette (
⌘
+shift
+P
on OSX, orCtrl
+shift
+P
on Windows) - Run the command "
Pony SSH: Open Remote Folder
" - Select the remote host you would like to use (based on your configured list in
settings.json
) - Enter the remote path you would like to enter, or leave it blank to open the default folder.