![]() A number of Mac OS X applications support tabbed terminals, such as, and the X11 apps such as. Some users are happy with these solutions, but none of them worked for me: • iTerm is too unresponsive--it feels like typing in a lagged SSH session when I'm actually on localhost!• GLTerm is not currently in development and is now quite dated.• X11 apps are fast, but they don't behave the same as Carbon appsFinally, I came across which is a Java based terminal emulator packaged as a native Mac app. It supports a number of important features: • Tabs!• Faster than iTerm, but a bit slower than Terminal.• Automatic logging of the session.• Drag and drop from the Finder.• A Find feature to search the current session.This is worth a look if you want a tabbed terminal application. I've found screen to be essential. Here's how I use it (note ^ means hold the 'ctrl' key down when typing the next letter; ^m is the same as hitting 'return'): 1. ^a:captions always%w^m 3. ^ac^ac^ac^ac^ac 4. An Ethernet Terminal for Attachment to Your IBM Power9, Power8, Power7, i5, iSeries, AS/400 & zSeries Mainframe over TCP/IP PLEASE NOTE: The ET2000 is no longer manufactured and is only available as a refurbished unit on an 'as available' basis.The CLI AG6601TPZ TermPro Zero and AG7000TPZ TermPro Zero Thin Client Terminals are the current new replacements for the ET2000. Mac: You have a ton of excellent Terminal emulators on Mac, but if you’re looking for something that works a little differently than the rest, HyperTerm is worth a look. Mac OS X includes a. ^a0^aA^ufoo^mssh foo^m 5. ^an^aA^ubar^mssh bar^m 6. ^an^aA^ubiff^mssh biff^m 7. ^an^aA^ubaz^mssh baz^m 8. ^an^aA^uquux^mssh quux^m 9. ^ad This may seem like a lot of work, just to get started. What I've done here is (1) started a screen session, (2) set a caption line at the bottom which will always show what 'tab' I'm in, (3) started five shells in separate tabs, (4-8) named each for a different machine [foo, bar, biff, baz, quux] and logged in to each using ssh, and (9) disconnected the session. But the beauty thing is, I don't need to repeat this process ever, unless the machine I started the screen session on goes down. Mendengarkan radio ofline windows 10. So 1-9 should be done on a server or desktop machine that stays up. (You can rlogin/ssh first from a remote machine, of course.) To reconnect to the 5-tab session, log in to the server, type 'screen -rA' and be amazed! All the tabs are live; none of the ssh sessions are gone. If you start programs in different tabs (e.g., try running 'top' in the active tab) before disconnecting, they will still be running when you reconnect! ![]() Now open a new terminal or log in to the server from a terminal on another machine (while keeping one eye on the session you just recovered), type 'screen -drA' and be even more amazed! The existing session disconnects, and you're reconnected in the new terminal. Everything is still live and working. What is even more cool is that, if your remote login is disconnected due to a network outage, the screen session normally disconnects cleanly and you can reconnect when the net comes back using 'screen -rA' again. This feature has saved me many times.
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