Difference between revisions of "Introduction to Linux in HPC/SSH Connections"
Introduction to Linux in HPC/SSH Connections
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{{Note|'''Exercises in Terminal: no exercises in this section'''}} | {{Note|'''Exercises in Terminal: no exercises in this section'''}} | ||
− | + | {{Tutorial Navigation | |
− | + | | previous = [[Introduction_to_Linux_in_HPC/System_configuration | System configuration files ]] | |
− | + | | main = [[Introduction_to_Linux_in_HPC | Overview ]] | |
+ | | next = [[Introduction_to_Linux_in_HPC/SSH_Graphics_File_Transfer | SSH: Graphics and File Transfer]] | ||
+ | }} |
Revision as of 14:09, 17 November 2020
HPC.NRW | |
---|---|
Other HPC Courses | |
1. | Gprof Tutorial |
2. | OpenMP in Small Bites |
Introduction to Linux in HPC | |
1. | Background and History |
2. | The Command Line |
3. | Directory structure |
4. | Files |
5. | Text display and search |
6. | Users and permissions |
7. | Processes |
8. | The vim text editor |
9. | Shell scripting |
10. | Environment variables |
11. | System configuration |
12. | SSH Connections |
13. | SSH: Graphics and File Transfer |
14. | Various tips |
Video
Quiz
Info: | Verify the fingerprint of remote host, before the first login. User the SSH public key authentication for login. Never use an empty passphrase for the SSH keys. Use strong passphrase to generate the SSH keys. Keep your private SSH key as top secret. Create, configure and use different SSH keys for different remote hosts. If no X11 application is required, disable X11 forwarding. Otherwise, only enable the untrusted X11 forwarding. |
Warning: | lots of tips are given, no warning. |