If you want to select a \I{rectangular selection}rectangular region
instead of selecting to the end of each line, you can do this by
-holding down Alt when you make your selection. (You can also
+holding down Alt when you make your selection. You can also
configure rectangular selection to be the default, and then holding
-down Alt gives the normal behaviour instead. See
-\k{config-rectselect} for details.)
+down Alt gives the normal behaviour instead: see
+\k{config-rectselect} for details.
+
+(In some Unix environments, Alt+drag is intercepted by the window
+manager. Shift+Alt+drag should work for rectangular selection as
+well, so you could try that instead.)
If you have a \i{middle mouse button}, then you can use it to
\I{adjusting a selection}adjust an existing selection if you
Depending on the protocol used for the current session, there may be
a submenu of \q{special commands}. These are protocol-specific
-tokens, such as a \i{\q{break} signal}, that can be sent down a
+tokens, such as a \q{break} signal, that can be sent down a
connection in addition to normal data. Their precise effect is usually
-up to the server. Currently only Telnet and SSH have special commands.
+up to the server. Currently only Telnet, SSH, and serial connections
+have special commands.
+
+The \q{break} signal can also be invoked from the keyboard with
+\i{Ctrl-Break}.
The following \I{Telnet special commands}special commands are
available in Telnet:
POSIX signals. Not honoured by all servers.
}
+With a serial connection, the only available special command is
+\I{Break, serial special command}\q{Break}.
+
\S2{using-newsession} Starting new sessions
PuTTY's system menu provides some shortcut ways to start new
does do.
You should then tick the \q{Enable X11 forwarding} box in the
-Tunnels panel (see \k{config-ssh-x11}) before starting your SSH
+X11 panel (see \k{config-ssh-x11}) before starting your SSH
session. The \i{\q{X display location}} box is blank by default, which
means that PuTTY will try to use a sensible default such as \c{:0},
which is the usual display location where your X server will be
to obtain a fix from Microsoft in order to use addresses like
\cw{127.0.0.5} - see \k{faq-alternate-localhost}.)
+For more options relating to port forwarding, see
+\k{config-ssh-portfwd}.
+
+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.
+
\H{using-rawprot} Making \i{raw TCP connections}
A lot of \I{debugging Internet protocols}Internet protocols are
For information on X11 forwarding, see \k{using-x-forwarding}.
These options are equivalent to the X11 forwarding checkbox in the
-Tunnels panel of the PuTTY configuration box (see
-\k{config-ssh-x11}).
+X11 panel of the PuTTY configuration box (see \k{config-ssh-x11}).
These options are not available in the file transfer tools PSCP and
PSFTP.
This option is not available in the file transfer tools PSCP and
PSFTP.
+\S2{using-cmdline-ncmode} \I{-nc}\c{-nc}: make a \i{remote network
+connection} in place of a remote shell or command
+
+The \c{-nc} option prevents Plink (or PuTTY) from attempting to
+start a shell or command on the remote server. Instead, it will
+instruct the remote server to open a network connection to a host
+name and port number specified by you, and treat that network
+connection as if it were the main session.
+
+You specify a host and port as an argument to the \c{-nc} option,
+with a colon separating the host name from the port number, like
+this:
+
+\c plink host1.example.com -nc host2.example.com:1234
+
+You might want to use this feature if you needed to make an SSH
+connection to a target host which you can only reach by going
+through a proxy host, and rather than using port forwarding you
+prefer to use the local proxy feature (see \k{config-proxy-type} for
+more about local proxies). In this situation you might select
+\q{Local} proxy type, set your local proxy command to be \cq{plink
+%proxyhost -nc %host:%port}, enter the target host name on the
+Session panel, and enter the directly reachable proxy host name on
+the Proxy panel.
+
+This feature is only available in SSH protocol version 2 (since the
+version 1 protocol assumes you will always want to run a shell). It
+is not available in the file transfer tools PSCP and PSFTP. It is
+available in PuTTY itself, although it is unlikely to be very useful
+in any tool other than Plink. Also, \c{-nc} uses the same server
+functionality as port forwarding, so it will not work if your server
+administrator has disabled port forwarding.
+
+(The option is named \c{-nc} after the Unix program
+\W{http://www.vulnwatch.org/netcat/}\c{nc}, short for \q{netcat}.
+The command \cq{plink host1 -nc host2:port} is very similar in
+functionality to \cq{plink host1 nc host2 port}, which invokes
+\c{nc} on the server and tells it to connect to the specified
+destination. However, Plink's built-in \c{-nc} option does not
+depend on the \c{nc} program being installed on the server.)
+
\S2{using-cmdline-compress} \I{-C-upper}\c{-C}: enable \i{compression}
The \c{-C} option enables compression of the data sent across the
\i{Internet protocol version}
The \c{-4} and \c{-6} options force PuTTY to use the older Internet
-protocol \i{IPv4} or the newer \i{IPv6}.
+protocol \i{IPv4} or the newer \i{IPv6} for most outgoing
+connections.
These options are equivalent to selecting your preferred Internet
protocol version as \q{IPv4} or \q{IPv6} in the Connection panel of
authentication} box in the Auth panel of the PuTTY configuration box
(see \k{config-ssh-privkey}).
+\S2{using-cmdline-loghost} \i\c{-loghost}: specify a \i{logical host
+name}
+
+This option overrides PuTTY's normal SSH host key caching policy by
+telling it the name of the host you expect your connection to end up
+at (in cases where this differs from the location PuTTY thinks it's
+connecting to). It can be a plain host name, or a host name followed
+by a colon and a port number. See \k{config-loghost} for more detail
+on this.
+
\S2{using-cmdline-pgpfp} \i\c{-pgpfp}: display \i{PGP key fingerprint}s
This option causes the PuTTY tools not to run as normal, but instead