SSH, The Secure Shell: The Definitive Guide

If you've managed Linux/Unix machines recently you are probably familiar with SSH, or secure shell. It replaces popular commands such as telnet, rsh, rlogin, and ftp with secure and encrypted applications that do the same thing. If you login to remote machines or transfer confidential data over the Internet you cannot afford not to know about SSH.

This book by Daniel J. Barrett, Richard E. Silverman and Robert G. Byrnes, is, as it is titled, the definitive guide to SSH. It not only covers the various clients and servers available for SSH (and operating systems), it covers many different applications and uses of SSH. From connection tunneling to SOCKS proxies to automated batch jobs, any administrator will find novel and new uses for SSH in this book.

Having received this book to review from O'Reilly, I read it cover to cover. I do not suggest you do this (if you value your sanity). It is by no means designed to be that kind of book. However, this book is invaluable as a reference to SSH where few other books exist. The organization is straight-forward and lends itself to reviewing specific functions without having to mine the entire volume to get the knowledge you seek.

If you administer systems you can't afford not to know about SSH, and this book is the best one around to learn it.

From Ravings of John C. A. Bambenek

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Article Author: John Bambenek

John Bambenek is a freelance columnist and author. He is the author of Illinois Deserves Better and is an information security professional, part of the Internet Storm Center and a courseware author and certification grader for the GIAC family of security certifications. …

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  • SSH, the Secure Shell: The Definitive Guide SSH, the Secure Shell: The Definitive Guide

    Are you serious about network security? Then check out SSH, the Secure Shell, which provides key-based authentication and transparent encryption for your network connections. It's reliable, robust, and ...

Article comments

  • 1 - Richard E. Silverman

    Jul 19, 2005 at 2:31 am

    Thanks for the positive review of our book. However, there are three authors, not just one as you cite at the top of the page. We'd appreciate it if you'd cite all of us:

    Daniel J. Barrett
    Richard E. Silverman
    Robert G. Byrnes

    Thanks!

  • 2 - Temple Stark

    Jul 19, 2005 at 2:47 pm

    Thanks for visiting. If you are talking about the link to Amazon, that must be how it is listed in Amazon, or how it comes across. That text is provided by them.

    Sorry.

  • 3 - Pat Cummings

    Jul 19, 2005 at 3:49 pm

    I have edited the body of the review to include the authors' names, since Amazon does not list them.

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