A curated list of SSH applications, libraries, and resources for developers and system administrators.
Awesome SSH is a curated list of resources related to the Secure Shell (SSH) protocol. It compiles applications, libraries, tutorials, and tools for secure remote access, file transfer, automation, and server management. The list helps developers and sysadmins discover and evaluate SSH-related software and best practices.
System administrators, DevOps engineers, security professionals, and developers who work with remote servers, automation, or secure communication protocols.
It saves time by providing a vetted, organized collection of SSH tools and resources, eliminating the need to search scattered sources. As an open-source list, it benefits from community contributions and stays up-to-date with the ecosystem.
:computer: A curated list of SSH resources.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Covers a wide range of SSH-related apps, libraries, tutorials, and security guidelines across over 15 categories, from config tools to honeypots, as detailed in the extensive table of contents.
Open to contributions following specific guidelines, ensuring the list stays relevant and incorporates new tools, as noted in the README's contribution section.
Includes SSH client and server libraries for multiple programming languages like C/C++, Go, Java, JavaScript, Python, and Ruby, facilitating integration into diverse development environments.
Clearly categorized into apps, libraries, and resources with sub-sections, making it easy to navigate and find tools for specific use cases, such as automation or security.
Merely lists tools without reviews, rankings, or guidance on which options are best suited for different scenarios, leaving users to vet each independently.
Relies on community contributions for updates; some links or tools may become outdated or unmaintained over time, as there's no automated freshness check.
Acts as a reference hub with links but doesn't provide comprehensive tutorials or in-depth analysis, requiring users to seek external resources for learning.