X-Git-Url: https://git.distorted.org.uk/u/mdw/putty/blobdiff_plain/60860bc3697233687834d4efd4f1fe616f2fb9fb..881da16842e210236b12a040a19bf480de3a5a92:/doc/config.but diff --git a/doc/config.but b/doc/config.but index 16d15899..dbf5e2b7 100644 --- a/doc/config.but +++ b/doc/config.but @@ -1716,6 +1716,54 @@ IPv6 address available, and fall back to IPv4 if not.) If you need to force PuTTY to use a particular protocol, you can explicitly set this to \q{IPv4} or \q{IPv6}. +\S{config-loghost} \I{logical host name}\q{Logical name of remote host} + +\cfg{winhelp-topic}{connection.loghost} + +This allows you to tell PuTTY that the host it will really end up +connecting to is different from where it thinks it is making a +network connection. + +You might use this, for instance, if you had set up an SSH port +forwarding in one PuTTY session so that connections to some +arbitrary port (say, \cw{localhost} port 10022) were forwarded to a +second machine's SSH port (say, \cw{foovax} port 22), and then +started a second PuTTY connecting to the forwarded port. + +In normal usage, the second PuTTY will access the host key cache +under the host name and port it actually connected to (i.e. +\cw{localhost} port 10022 in this example). Using the logical host +name option, however, you can configure the second PuTTY to cache +the host key under the name of the host \e{you} know that it's +\e{really} going to end up talking to (here \c{foovax}). + +This can be useful if you expect to connect to the same actual +server through many different channels (perhaps because your port +forwarding arrangements keep changing): by consistently setting the +logical host name, you can arrange that PuTTY will not keep asking +you to reconfirm its host key. Conversely, if you expect to use the +same local port number for port forwardings to lots of different +servers, you probably didn't want any particular server's host key +cached under that local port number. + +If you just enter a host name for this option, PuTTY will cache the +SSH host key under the default SSH port for that host, irrespective +of the port you really connected to (since the typical scenario is +like the above example: you connect to a silly real port number and +your connection ends up forwarded to the normal port-22 SSH server +of some other machine). To override this, you can append a port +number to the logical host name, separated by a colon. E.g. entering +\cq{foovax:2200} as the logical host name will cause the host key to +be cached as if you had connected to port 2200 of \c{foovax}. + +If you provide a host name using this option, it is also displayed +in other locations which contain the remote host name, such as the +default window title and the default SSH password prompt. This +reflects the fact that this is the host you're \e{really} connecting +to, which is more important than the mere means you happen to be +using to contact that host. (This applies even if you're using a +protocol other than SSH.) + \H{config-data} The Data panel The Data panel allows you to configure various pieces of data which @@ -2757,6 +2805,12 @@ that forwarding remain open. Similarly, changes to global settings such as \q{Local ports accept connections from other hosts} only take effect on new forwardings. +If the connection you are forwarding over SSH is itself a second SSH +connection made by another copy of PuTTY, you might find the +\q{logical host name} configuration option useful to warn PuTTY of +which host key it should be expecting. See \k{config-loghost} for +details of this. + \S{config-ssh-portfwd-localhost} Controlling the visibility of forwarded ports