
Define
Putty is a terminal emulator application which can act as a client for the SSH, Telnet, rlogin, and raw TCP computing protocols.
The name "Putty" has no definitive meaning [1], even though 'tty' is the name for the terminal in the Unix tradition, usually held to be a teletype short.
Putty was originally written for Microsoft Windows, but many have been ported to other operating systems.
Port official is available to some Unix-like platforms, with work-in-progress ports to Classic Mac OS and Mac OS X, and the official does not have to contribute to platforms such as Symbian [2] [3] and Windows Mobile.
Putty is written and maintained primarily by Simon Tatham and software beta at this time.
Licensed under the MIT License, Putty free and open source software.

Feature
*The universe and nature are used to save preferences.
*Control through SSH encryption key and protocol version.
*Command-line SCP and SFTP clients, called "pscp" and "psftp" respectively.
*Control over port forwarding with SSH (local, remote or dynamic port forwarding), including a built-in handling of X11 forwarding. Emulates most xterm, VT102 control sequences, as well as many other ECMA-48 terminal emulation.
* IPv6 support.
* Supports 3DES, AES, Arcfour, Blowfish, DES. Public-key authentication support.
* Support for local serial port connection.
* Simply the executable does not require installation.
No comments:
Post a Comment