Add the WinXPSP2 alternate-localhost problem to the FAQ.
[u/mdw/putty] / doc / using.but
1 \versionid $Id: using.but,v 1.28 2004/08/19 12:58:14 jacob Exp $
2
3 \C{using} Using PuTTY
4
5 This chapter provides a general introduction to some more advanced
6 features of PuTTY. For extreme detail and reference purposes,
7 \k{config} is likely to contain more information.
8
9 \H{using-session} During your session
10
11 A lot of PuTTY's complexity and features are in the configuration
12 panel. Once you have worked your way through that and started
13 a session, things should be reasonably simple after that.
14 Nevertheless, there are a few more useful features available.
15
16 \S{using-selection} Copying and pasting text
17
18 \I{copy and paste}Often in a PuTTY session you will find text on
19 your terminal screen which you want to type in again. Like most
20 other terminal emulators, PuTTY allows you to copy and paste the
21 text rather than having to type it again. Also, copy and paste uses
22 the \I{Windows clipboard}Windows \i{clipboard}, so that you can
23 paste (for example) URLs into a web browser, or paste from a word
24 processor or spreadsheet into your terminal session.
25
26 PuTTY's copy and paste works entirely with the \i{mouse}. In order
27 to copy text to the clipboard, you just click the \i{left mouse
28 button} in the terminal window, and drag to \I{selecting text}select
29 text. When you let go of the button, the text is \e{automatically}
30 copied to the clipboard. You do not need to press Ctrl-C or
31 Ctrl-Ins; in fact, if you do press Ctrl-C, PuTTY will send a Ctrl-C
32 character down your session to the server where it will probably
33 cause a process to be interrupted.
34
35 Pasting is done using the right button (or the middle mouse button,
36 if you have a three-button mouse and have set it up; see
37 \k{config-mouse}). (Pressing \i{Shift-Ins}, or selecting \q{Paste}
38 from the Ctrl+right-click context menu, have the same effect.) When
39 you click the \i{right mouse button}, PuTTY will read whatever is in
40 the Windows clipboard and paste it into your session, \e{exactly} as
41 if it had been typed at the keyboard. (Therefore, be careful of
42 pasting formatted text into an editor that does automatic indenting;
43 you may find that the spaces pasted from the clipboard plus the
44 spaces added by the editor add up to too many spaces and ruin the
45 formatting. There is nothing PuTTY can do about this.)
46
47 If you \i{double-click} the left mouse button, PuTTY will select a
48 whole word. If you double-click, hold down the second click, and
49 drag the mouse, PuTTY will select a sequence of whole words. (You
50 can adjust precisely what PuTTY considers to be part of a word; see
51 \k{config-charclasses}.) If you \e{triple}-click, or
52 \i{triple-click} and drag, then PuTTY will select a whole line or
53 sequence of lines.
54
55 If you want to select a \I{rectangular selection}rectangular region
56 instead of selecting to the end of each line, you can do this by
57 holding down Alt when you make your selection. (You can also
58 configure rectangular selection to be the default, and then holding
59 down Alt gives the normal behaviour instead. See
60 \k{config-rectselect} for details.)
61
62 If you have a \i{middle mouse button}, then you can use it to
63 \I{adjusting a selection}adjust an existing selection if you
64 selected something slightly wrong. (If you have configured the
65 middle mouse button to paste, then the right mouse button does this
66 instead.) Click the button on the screen, and you can pick up the
67 nearest end of the selection and drag it to somewhere else.
68
69 It's possible for the server to ask to handle mouse clicks in the
70 PuTTY window itself. If this happens, the mouse cursor will turn
71 into an arrow, and using the mouse to copy and paste will only work if
72 you hold down Shift. See \k{config-features-mouse} and
73 \k{config-mouseshift} for details of this feature and how to configure
74 it.
75
76 \S{using-scrollback} \I{scrollback}Scrolling the screen back
77
78 PuTTY keeps track of text that has scrolled up off the top of the
79 terminal. So if something appears on the screen that you want to
80 read, but it scrolls too fast and it's gone by the time you try to
81 look for it, you can use the scrollbar on the right side of the
82 window to look back up the session \i{history} and find it again.
83
84 As well as using the scrollbar, you can also page the scrollback up
85 and down by pressing \i{Shift-PgUp} and \i{Shift-PgDn}. You can
86 scroll a line at a time using \i{Ctrl-PgUp} and \i{Ctrl-PgDn}. These
87 are still available if you configure the scrollbar to be invisible.
88
89 By default the last 200 lines scrolled off the top are
90 preserved for you to look at. You can increase (or decrease) this
91 value using the configuration box; see \k{config-scrollback}.
92
93 \S{using-sysmenu} The \i{System menu}
94
95 If you click the left mouse button on the icon in the top left
96 corner of PuTTY's terminal window, or click the right mouse button
97 on the title bar, you will see the standard Windows system menu
98 containing items like Minimise, Move, Size and Close.
99
100 PuTTY's system menu contains extra program features in addition to
101 the Windows standard options. These extra menu commands are
102 described below.
103
104 (These options are also available in a context menu brought up
105 by holding Ctrl and clicking with the right mouse button anywhere
106 in the PuTTY window.)
107
108 \S2{using-eventlog} The PuTTY \i{Event Log}
109
110 If you choose \q{Event Log} from the system menu, a small window
111 will pop up in which PuTTY logs significant events during the
112 connection. Most of the events in the log will probably take place
113 during session startup, but a few can occur at any point in the
114 session, and one or two occur right at the end.
115
116 You can use the mouse to select one or more lines of the Event Log,
117 and hit the Copy button to copy them to the \i{clipboard}. If you
118 are reporting a bug, it's often useful to paste the contents of the
119 Event Log into your bug report.
120
121 \S2{using-specials} \ii{Special commands}
122
123 Depending on the protocol used for the current session, there may be
124 a submenu of \q{special commands}. These are protocol-specific
125 tokens, such as a \i{\q{break} signal}, that can be sent down a
126 connection in addition to normal data. Currently only Telnet and SSH
127 have special commands.
128
129 \# FIXME: possibly the full list of special commands should be
130 \# given here, if only so that it can be sensibly indexed and
131 \# someone looking up (e.g.) AYT can find out how to send one?
132
133 \S2{using-newsession} Starting new sessions
134
135 PuTTY's system menu provides some shortcut ways to start new
136 sessions:
137
138 \b Selecting \i{\q{New Session}} will start a completely new
139 instance of PuTTY, and bring up the configuration box as normal.
140
141 \b Selecting \i{\q{Duplicate Session}} will start a session with
142 precisely the same options as your current one - connecting to the
143 same host using the same protocol, with all the same terminal
144 settings and everything.
145
146 \b The \i{\q{Saved Sessions} submenu} gives you quick access to any
147 sets of stored session details you have previously saved. See
148 \k{config-saving} for details of how to create saved sessions.
149
150 \S2{using-changesettings} \I{settings, changing}Changing your
151 session settings
152
153 If you select \i{\q{Change Settings}} from the system menu, PuTTY will
154 display a cut-down version of its initial configuration box. This
155 allows you to adjust most properties of your current session. You
156 can change the terminal size, the font, the actions of various
157 keypresses, the colours, and so on.
158
159 Some of the options that are available in the main configuration box
160 are not shown in the cut-down Change Settings box. These are usually
161 options which don't make sense to change in the middle of a session
162 (for example, you can't switch from SSH to Telnet in mid-session).
163
164 \S2{using-copyall} \i{Copy All to Clipboard}
165
166 This system menu option provides a convenient way to copy the whole
167 contents of the terminal screen (up to the last nonempty line) and
168 scrollback to the \i{clipboard} in one go.
169
170 \S2{reset-terminal} \I{scrollback, clearing}Clearing and
171 \I{terminal, resetting}resetting the terminal
172
173 The \i{\q{Clear Scrollback}} option on the system menu tells PuTTY
174 to discard all the lines of text that have been kept after they
175 scrolled off the top of the screen. This might be useful, for
176 example, if you displayed sensitive information and wanted to make
177 sure nobody could look over your shoulder and see it. (Note that
178 this only prevents a casual user from using the scrollbar to view
179 the information; the text is not guaranteed not to still be in
180 PuTTY's memory.)
181
182 The \i{\q{Reset Terminal}} option causes a full reset of the
183 terminal emulation. A VT-series terminal is a complex piece of
184 software and can easily get into a state where all the text printed
185 becomes unreadable. (This can happen, for example, if you
186 accidentally output a binary file to your terminal.) If this
187 happens, selecting Reset Terminal should sort it out.
188
189 \S2{using-fullscreen} \ii{Full screen} mode
190
191 If you find the title bar on a maximised window to be ugly or
192 distracting, you can select Full Screen mode to maximise PuTTY
193 \q{even more}. When you select this, PuTTY will expand to fill the
194 whole screen and its borders, title bar and scrollbar will
195 disappear. (You can configure the scrollbar not to disappear in
196 full-screen mode if you want to keep it; see \k{config-scrollback}.)
197
198 When you are in full-screen mode, you can still access the system
199 menu if you click the left mouse button in the \e{extreme} top left
200 corner of the screen.
201
202 \H{using-logging} Creating a \i{log file} of your \I{session
203 log}session
204
205 For some purposes you may find you want to log everything that
206 appears on your screen. You can do this using the \i{\q{Logging}
207 panel} in the configuration box.
208
209 To begin a session log, select \q{Change Settings} from the system
210 menu and go to the Logging panel. Enter a log file name, and select
211 a logging mode. (You can log all session output including the
212 terminal control sequences, or you can just log the printable text.
213 It depends what you want the log for.) Click \q{Apply} and your log
214 will be started. Later on, you can go back to the Logging panel and
215 select \q{Logging turned off completely} to stop logging; then PuTTY
216 will close the log file and you can safely read it.
217
218 See \k{config-logging} for more details and options.
219
220 \H{using-translation} Altering your \i{character set} configuration
221
222 If you find that special characters (\i{accented characters}, for
223 example) are not being displayed correctly in your PuTTY session, it
224 may be that PuTTY is interpreting the characters sent by the server
225 according to the wrong \e{character set}. There are a lot of
226 different character sets available, so it's entirely possible for
227 this to happen.
228
229 If you click \q{Change Settings} and look at the \i{\q{Translation}
230 panel}, you should see a large number of character sets which you
231 can select. Now all you need is to find out which of them you want!
232
233 \H{using-x-forwarding} Using \i{X11 forwarding} in SSH
234
235 The SSH protocol has the ability to securely forward X Window System
236 applications over your encrypted SSH connection, so that you can run
237 an application on the SSH server machine and have it put its windows
238 up on your local machine without sending any X network traffic in
239 the clear.
240
241 In order to use this feature, you will need an X display server for
242 your Windows machine, such as X-Win32 or Exceed. This will probably
243 install itself as display number 0 on your local machine; if it
244 doesn't, the manual for the \i{X server} should tell you what it
245 does do.
246
247 You should then tick the \q{Enable X11 forwarding} box in the
248 Tunnels panel (see \k{config-ssh-x11}) before starting your SSH
249 session. The \q{X display location} box reads \c{localhost:0} by
250 default, which is the usual display location where your X server
251 will be installed. If that needs changing, then change it.
252
253 Now you should be able to log in to the SSH server as normal. To
254 check that X forwarding has been successfully negotiated during
255 connection startup, you can check the PuTTY Event Log (see
256 \k{using-eventlog}). It should say something like this:
257
258 \c 2001-12-05 17:22:01 Requesting X11 forwarding
259 \c 2001-12-05 17:22:02 X11 forwarding enabled
260
261 If the remote system is Unix or Unix-like, you should also be able
262 to see that the \i{\c{DISPLAY} environment variable} has been set to
263 point at display 10 or above on the SSH server machine itself:
264
265 \c fred@unixbox:~$ echo $DISPLAY
266 \c unixbox:10.0
267
268 If this works, you should then be able to run X applications in the
269 remote session and have them display their windows on your PC.
270
271 Note that if your PC X server requires authentication to connect,
272 then PuTTY cannot currently support it. If this is a problem for
273 you, you should mail the PuTTY authors \#{FIXME} and give details
274 (see \k{feedback}).
275
276 For more options relating to X11 forwarding, see \k{config-ssh-x11}.
277
278 \H{using-port-forwarding} Using \i{port forwarding} in SSH
279
280 The SSH protocol has the ability to forward arbitrary network
281 connections over your encrypted SSH connection, to avoid the network
282 traffic being sent in clear. For example, you could use this to
283 connect from your home computer to a POP-3 server on a remote
284 machine without your POP-3 password being visible to network
285 sniffers.
286
287 In order to use port forwarding to connect from your local machine
288 to a port on a remote server, you need to:
289
290 \b Choose a port number on your local machine where PuTTY should
291 listen for incoming connections. There are likely to be plenty of
292 unused port numbers above 3000. (You can also use a local loopback
293 address here; see below for more details.)
294
295 \b Now, before you start your SSH connection, go to the Tunnels
296 panel (see \k{config-ssh-portfwd}). Make sure the \q{Local} radio
297 button is set. Enter the local port number into the \q{Source port}
298 box. Enter the destination host name and port number into the
299 \q{Destination} box, separated by a colon (for example,
300 \c{popserver.example.com:110} to connect to a POP-3 server).
301
302 \b Now click the \q{Add} button. The details of your port forwarding
303 should appear in the list box.
304
305 Now start your session and log in. (Port forwarding will not be
306 enabled until after you have logged in; otherwise it would be easy
307 to perform completely anonymous network attacks, and gain access to
308 anyone's virtual private network). To check that PuTTY has set up
309 the port forwarding correctly, you can look at the PuTTY Event Log
310 (see \k{using-eventlog}). It should say something like this:
311
312 \c 2001-12-05 17:22:10 Local port 3110 forwarding to
313 \c popserver.example.com:110
314
315 Now if you connect to the source port number on your local PC, you
316 should find that it answers you exactly as if it were the service
317 running on the destination machine. So in this example, you could
318 then configure an e-mail client to use \c{localhost:3110} as a POP-3
319 server instead of \c{popserver.example.com:110}. (Of course, the
320 forwarding will stop happening when your PuTTY session closes down.)
321
322 You can also forward ports in the other direction: arrange for a
323 particular port number on the \e{server} machine to be forwarded
324 back to your PC as a connection to a service on your PC or near it.
325 To do this, just select the \q{Remote} radio button instead of the
326 \q{Local} one. The \q{Source port} box will now specify a port
327 number on the \e{server} (note that most servers will not allow you
328 to use port numbers under 1024 for this purpose).
329
330 An alternative way to forward local connections to remote hosts is
331 to use \I{dynamic port forwarding}dynamic \I{SOCKS} proxying. For
332 this, you will need to select the \q{Dynamic} radio button instead
333 of \q{Local}, and then you should not enter anything into the
334 \q{Destination} box (it will be ignored). This will cause PuTTY to
335 listen on the port you have specified, and provide a SOCKS proxy
336 service to any programs which connect to that port. So, in
337 particular, you can forward other PuTTY connections through it by
338 setting up the Proxy control panel (see \k{config-proxy} for
339 details).
340
341 The source port for a forwarded connection usually does not accept
342 connections from any machine except the SSH client or server machine
343 itself (for local and remote forwardings respectively). There are
344 controls in the Tunnels panel to change this:
345
346 \b The \q{Local ports accept connections from other hosts} option
347 allows you to set up local-to-remote port forwardings (including
348 dynamic port forwardings) in such a way that machines other than
349 your client PC can connect to the forwarded port.
350
351 \b The \q{Remote ports do the same} option does the same thing for
352 remote-to-local port forwardings (so that machines other than the
353 SSH server machine can connect to the forwarded port.) Note that
354 this feature is only available in the SSH 2 protocol, and not all
355 SSH 2 servers support it (OpenSSH 3.0 does not, for example).
356
357 You can also specify an \i{IP address} to listen on. Typically a
358 Windows machine can be asked to listen on any single IP address in
359 the \cw{127.*.*.*} range, and all of these are loopback addresses
360 available only to the local machine. So if you forward (for example)
361 \c{127.0.0.5:79} to a remote machine's \cw{finger} port, then you
362 should be able to run commands such as \c{finger fred@127.0.0.5}.
363 This can be useful if the program connecting to the forwarded port
364 doesn't allow you to change the port number it uses. This feature is
365 available for local-to-remote forwarded ports; SSH1 is unable to
366 support it for remote-to-local ports, while SSH2 can support it in
367 theory but servers will not necessarily cooperate.
368
369 (Note that if you're using Windows XP Service Pack 2, you may need
370 to obtain a fix from Microsoft in order to use addresses like
371 \cw{127.0.0.5} - see \k{faq-alternate-localhost}.)
372
373 \H{using-rawprot} Making \i{raw TCP connections}
374
375 A lot of \I{debugging Internet protocols}Internet protocols are
376 composed of commands and responses in plain text. For example,
377 \i{SMTP} (the protocol used to transfer e-mail), \i{NNTP} (the
378 protocol used to transfer Usenet news), and \i{HTTP} (the protocol
379 used to serve Web pages) all consist of commands in readable plain
380 text.
381
382 Sometimes it can be useful to connect directly to one of these
383 services and speak the protocol \q{by hand}, by typing protocol
384 commands and watching the responses. On Unix machines, you can do
385 this using the system's \c{telnet} command to connect to the right
386 port number. For example, \c{telnet mailserver.example.com 25} might
387 enable you to talk directly to the SMTP service running on a mail
388 server.
389
390 Although the Unix \c{telnet} program provides this functionality,
391 the protocol being used is not really Telnet. Really there is no
392 actual protocol at all; the bytes sent down the connection are
393 exactly the ones you type, and the bytes shown on the screen are
394 exactly the ones sent by the server. Unix \c{telnet} will attempt to
395 detect or guess whether the service it is talking to is a real
396 Telnet service or not; PuTTY prefers to be told for certain.
397
398 In order to make a debugging connection to a service of this type,
399 you simply select the fourth protocol name, \I{\q{Raw}
400 protocol}\q{Raw}, from the \q{Protocol} buttons in the \q{Session}
401 configuration panel. (See \k{config-hostname}.) You can then enter a
402 host name and a port number, and make the connection.
403
404 \H{using-cmdline} The PuTTY command line
405
406 PuTTY can be made to do various things without user intervention by
407 supplying \i{command-line arguments} (e.g., from a \i{command prompt
408 window}, or a \i{Windows shortcut}).
409
410 \S{using-cmdline-session} Starting a session from the command line
411
412 \I\c{-ssh}\I\c{-telnet}\I\c{-rlogin}\I\c{-raw}These options allow
413 you to bypass the configuration window and launch straight into a
414 session.
415
416 To start a connection to a server called \c{host}:
417
418 \c putty.exe [-ssh | -telnet | -rlogin | -raw] [user@]host
419
420 If this syntax is used, settings are taken from the Default Settings
421 (see \k{config-saving}); \c{user} overrides these settings if
422 supplied. Also, you can specify a protocol, which will override the
423 default protocol (see \k{using-cmdline-protocol}).
424
425 For telnet sessions, the following alternative syntax is supported
426 (this makes PuTTY suitable for use as a URL handler for \i{telnet
427 URLs} in web browsers):
428
429 \c putty.exe telnet://host[:port]/
430
431 In order to start an existing saved session called \c{sessionname},
432 use the \c{-load} option (described in \k{using-cmdline-load}).
433
434 \c putty.exe -load "session name"
435
436 \S{using-cleanup} \i\c{-cleanup}
437
438 If invoked with the \c{-cleanup} option, rather than running as
439 normal, PuTTY will remove its registry entries and random seed file
440 from the local machine (after confirming with the user).
441
442 \S{using-general-opts} Standard command-line options
443
444 PuTTY and its associated tools support a range of command-line
445 options, most of which are consistent across all the tools. This
446 section lists the available options in all tools. Options which are
447 specific to a particular tool are covered in the chapter about that
448 tool.
449
450 \S2{using-cmdline-load} \i\c{-load}: load a saved session
451
452 \I{saved sessions, loading from command line}The \c{-load} option
453 causes PuTTY to load configuration details out of a saved session.
454 If these details include a host name, then this option is all you
455 need to make PuTTY start a session.
456
457 You need double quotes around the session name if it contains spaces.
458
459 If you want to create a Windows shortcut to start a PuTTY saved
460 session, this is the option you should use: your shortcut should
461 call something like
462
463 \c d:\path\to\putty.exe -load "my session"
464
465 (Note that PuTTY itself supports an alternative form of this option,
466 for backwards compatibility. If you execute \c{putty @sessionname}
467 it will have the same effect as \c{putty -load "sessionname"}. With
468 the \c{@} form, no double quotes are required, and the \c{@} sign
469 must be the very first thing on the command line. This form of the
470 option is deprecated.)
471
472 \S2{using-cmdline-protocol} Selecting a protocol: \c{-ssh},
473 \c{-telnet}, \c{-rlogin}, \c{-raw}
474
475 To choose which protocol you want to connect with, you can use one
476 of these options:
477
478 \b \i\c{-ssh} selects the SSH protocol.
479
480 \b \i\c{-telnet} selects the Telnet protocol.
481
482 \b \i\c{-rlogin} selects the Rlogin protocol.
483
484 \b \i\c{-raw} selects the raw protocol.
485
486 These options are not available in the file transfer tools PSCP and
487 PSFTP (which only work with the SSH protocol).
488
489 These options are equivalent to the \i{protocol selection} buttons
490 in the Session panel of the PuTTY configuration box (see
491 \k{config-hostname}).
492
493 \S2{using-cmdline-v} \i\c{-v}: increase verbosity
494
495 \I{verbose mode}Most of the PuTTY tools can be made to tell you more
496 about what they are doing by supplying the \c{-v} option. If you are
497 having trouble when making a connection, or you're simply curious,
498 you can turn this switch on and hope to find out more about what is
499 happening.
500
501 \S2{using-cmdline-l} \i\c{-l}: specify a \i{login name}
502
503 You can specify the user name to log in as on the remote server
504 using the \c{-l} option. For example, \c{plink login.example.com -l
505 fred}.
506
507 These options are equivalent to the username selection box in the
508 Connection panel of the PuTTY configuration box (see
509 \k{config-username}).
510
511 \S2{using-cmdline-portfwd} \I{-L-upper}\c{-L}, \I{-R-upper}\c{-R}
512 and \I{-D-upper}\c{-D}: set up \i{port forwardings}
513
514 As well as setting up port forwardings in the PuTTY configuration
515 (see \k{config-ssh-portfwd}), you can also set up forwardings on the
516 command line. The command-line options work just like the ones in
517 Unix \c{ssh} programs.
518
519 To forward a local port (say 5110) to a remote destination (say
520 \cw{popserver.example.com} port 110), you can write something like
521 one of these:
522
523 \c putty -L 5110:popserver.example.com:110 -load mysession
524 \c plink mysession -L 5110:popserver.example.com:110
525
526 To forward a remote port to a local destination, just use the \c{-R}
527 option instead of \c{-L}:
528
529 \c putty -R 5023:mytelnetserver.myhouse.org:23 -load mysession
530 \c plink mysession -R 5023:mytelnetserver.myhouse.org:23
531
532 To specify an IP address for the listening end of the tunnel,
533 prepend it to the argument:
534
535 \c plink -L 127.0.0.5:23:localhost:23 myhost
536
537 To set up SOCKS-based dynamic port forwarding on a local port, use
538 the \c{-D} option. For this one you only have to pass the port
539 number:
540
541 \c putty -D 4096 -load mysession
542
543 For general information on port forwarding, see
544 \k{using-port-forwarding}.
545
546 These options are not available in the file transfer tools PSCP and
547 PSFTP.
548
549 \S2{using-cmdline-m} \i\c{-m}: read a remote command or script from
550 a file
551
552 The \i\c{-m} option performs a similar function to the \q{Remote
553 command} box in the SSH panel of the PuTTY configuration box (see
554 \k{config-command}). However, the \c{-m} option expects to be given
555 a local file name, and it will read a command from that file. On
556 most Unix systems, you can even put multiple lines in this file and
557 execute more than one command in sequence, or a whole shell script;
558 but this will not work on all servers (and is known not to work
559 with certain \q{embedded} servers such as routers).
560
561 This option is not available in the file transfer tools PSCP and
562 PSFTP.
563
564 \S2{using-cmdline-p} \I{-P-upper}\c{-P}: specify a \i{port number}
565
566 The \c{-P} option is used to specify the port number to connect to. If
567 you have a Telnet server running on port 9696 of a machine instead of
568 port 23, for example:
569
570 \c putty -telnet -P 9696 host.name
571 \c plink -telnet -P 9696 host.name
572
573 (Note that this option is more useful in Plink than in PuTTY,
574 because in PuTTY you can write \c{putty -telnet host.name 9696} in
575 any case.)
576
577 This option is equivalent to the port number control in the Session
578 panel of the PuTTY configuration box (see \k{config-hostname}).
579
580 \S2{using-cmdline-pw} \i\c{-pw}: specify a \i{password}
581
582 A simple way to automate a remote login is to supply your password
583 on the command line. This is \e{not recommended} for reasons of
584 security. If you possibly can, we recommend you set up public-key
585 authentication instead. See \k{pubkey} for details.
586
587 Note that the \c{-pw} option only works when you are using the SSH
588 protocol. Due to fundamental limitations of Telnet and Rlogin, these
589 protocols do not support automated password authentication.
590
591 \S2{using-cmdline-agent} \I{-A-upper}\c{-A} and \i\c{-a}: control \i{agent
592 forwarding}
593
594 The \c{-A} option turns on SSH agent forwarding, and \c{-a} turns it
595 off. These options are only meaningful if you are using SSH.
596
597 See \k{pageant} for general information on \i{Pageant}, and
598 \k{pageant-forward} for information on agent forwarding. Note that
599 there is a security risk involved with enabling this option; see
600 \k{pageant-security} for details.
601
602 These options are equivalent to the agent forwarding checkbox in the
603 Auth panel of the PuTTY configuration box (see \k{config-ssh-agentfwd}).
604
605 These options are not available in the file transfer tools PSCP and
606 PSFTP.
607
608 \S2{using-cmdline-x11} \I{-X-upper}\c{-X} and \i\c{-x}: control \i{X11
609 forwarding}
610
611 The \c{-X} option turns on X11 forwarding in SSH, and \c{-x} turns
612 it off. These options are only meaningful if you are using SSH.
613
614 For information on X11 forwarding, see \k{using-x-forwarding}.
615
616 These options are equivalent to the X11 forwarding checkbox in the
617 Tunnels panel of the PuTTY configuration box (see
618 \k{config-ssh-x11}).
619
620 These options are not available in the file transfer tools PSCP and
621 PSFTP.
622
623 \S2{using-cmdline-pty} \i\c{-t} and \I{-T-upper}\c{-T}: control
624 \i{pseudo-terminal allocation}
625
626 The \c{-t} option ensures PuTTY attempts to allocate a
627 pseudo-terminal at the server, and \c{-T} stops it from allocating
628 one. These options are only meaningful if you are using SSH.
629
630 These options are equivalent to the \q{Don't allocate a
631 pseudo-terminal} checkbox in the SSH panel of the PuTTY
632 configuration box (see \k{config-ssh-pty}).
633
634 These options are not available in the file transfer tools PSCP and
635 PSFTP.
636
637 \S2{using-cmdline-compress} \I{-C-upper}\c{-C}: enable \i{compression}
638
639 The \c{-C} option enables compression of the data sent across the
640 network. This option is only meaningful if you are using SSH.
641
642 This option is equivalent to the \q{Enable compression} checkbox in
643 the SSH panel of the PuTTY configuration box (see
644 \k{config-ssh-comp}).
645
646 \S2{using-cmdline-sshprot} \i\c{-1} and \i\c{-2}: specify an \i{SSH
647 protocol version}
648
649 The \c{-1} and \c{-2} options force PuTTY to use version \I{SSH1}1
650 or version \I{SSH2}2 of the SSH protocol. These options are only
651 meaningful if you are using SSH.
652
653 These options are equivalent to selecting your preferred SSH
654 protocol version as \q{1 only} or \q{2 only} in the SSH panel of the
655 PuTTY configuration box (see \k{config-ssh-prot}).
656
657 \S2{using-cmdline-identity} \i\c{-i}: specify an SSH \i{private key}
658
659 The \c{-i} option allows you to specify the name of a private key
660 file in \c{*.PPK} format which PuTTY will use to authenticate with the
661 server. This option is only meaningful if you are using SSH.
662
663 For general information on \i{public-key authentication}, see
664 \k{pubkey}.
665
666 This option is equivalent to the \q{Private key file for
667 authentication} box in the Auth panel of the PuTTY configuration box
668 (see \k{config-ssh-privkey}).