PuTTY

This article is about the remote shell client. For the type of material, see Putty.
PuTTY

PuTTY nightly build (rev. 7864) running under Wine in KDE v3.5.9 on Gentoo Linux
Developer(s) Simon Tatham
Initial release November 19, 1998[1]
Stable release 0.64 / February 28, 2015
Written in C
Operating system Windows and Linux
Type Terminal emulator
License MIT license
Website www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty

PuTTY (/ˈpʌti/[2]) is a free and open-source terminal emulator, serial console and network file transfer application. It supports several network protocols, including SCP, SSH, Telnet, rlogin, and raw socket connection. It can also connect to a serial port (since version 0.59). The name "PuTTY" has no definitive meaning.[3]

PuTTY was originally written for Microsoft Windows, but it has been ported to various other operating systems. Official ports are available for some Unix-like platforms, with work-in-progress ports to Classic Mac OS and Mac OS X, and unofficial ports have been contributed to platforms such as Symbian[4][5] and Windows Mobile.

PuTTY was written and is maintained primarily by Simon Tatham and is currently beta software.

Features

PuTTY supports many variations on the secure remote terminal, and provides user control over the SSH encryption key and protocol version, alternate ciphers such as 3DES, Arcfour, Blowfish, and DES, and Public-key authentication. It also can emulate control sequences from xterm, VT102 or ECMA-48 terminal emulation, and allows local, remote, or dynamic port forwarding with SSH (including X11 forwarding). The network communication layer supports IPv6, and the SSH protocol supports the zlib@openssh.com delayed compression scheme. It can also be used with local serial port connections.

PuTTY comes bundled with command-line SCP and SFTP clients, called "pscp" and "psftp" respectively.

History

PuTTY's development dates back to late 1998,[1] and it has been a usable SSH-2 client since October 2000.[6][7]

Components

PuTTY consists of several components:

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Revision 1 in PuTTY SVN
  2. Putty FAQ – Pronunciation
  3. "PuTTY FAQ". [PuTTY is] the name of a popular SSH and Telnet client. Any other meaning is in the eye of the beholder. It's been rumoured that ‘PuTTY’ is the antonym of ‘getty’, or that it's the stuff that makes your Windows useful, or that it's a kind of plutonium Teletype. We couldn't possibly comment on such allegations. though "tty" is the name for a terminal in the Unix tradition, usually held to be short for Teletype, and putty is material for sealing glass in window frames, and may refer to Microsoft Windows lacking a built in SSH client.
  4. PuTTY for Symbian OS
  5. Forum Nokia Wiki – PuTTY for Symbian OS
  6. PuTTY FAQ: Does PuTTY support SSH-2?
  7. PuTTY Change Log

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to PuTTY.