> Short: BebboSSH – SSH2 suite (client/server, sftp) with modern ciphers
Sweet.
> It will work on an unaccelerated Amiga but establishing the connection takes
about one minute.
Is latency good once the connection is established? Speed tests in the kB/s seem promising, but for interactive use that seems like the determining factor.
Also, slightly meta: What is this web ... app(?)? Looks like a git frontend?
At 40kbps I don't think the latency can be great. Having done SSH over 64kbps when I overran my mobile data subscription, my experience is that modern SSH clients expect more than that to run smoothly.
> Also, slightly meta: What is this web ... app(?)? Looks like a git frontend?
Looking at the source, this seems like a custom-built git frontend, served by a bespoke web server called BEJY (by the same author) it seems.
I gave it a go (A1200+AmiTCP 4.3), doesn't seem to work unfortunately and I can't seem to find any issue tracker on the website.
3.RAM Disk:bebbossh> bebbossh user@10.0.0.1
[2025.11.26-09:10:01.280] [INFO ] can't open `envarc:.ssh/ssh_config`
[2025.11.26-09:10:01.640] [ERROR] can't read 4 uint8_t header, got 0
[2025.11.26-09:10:01.647] [ERROR] can't read SSH_MSG_KEX_ECDH_REPLY
ERROR: 16 - tcp read failed
Well, what's in envarc:.ssh/ssh_config ? :-)
> Short: BebboSSH – SSH2 suite (client/server, sftp) with modern ciphers
Sweet.
> It will work on an unaccelerated Amiga but establishing the connection takes about one minute.
Is latency good once the connection is established? Speed tests in the kB/s seem promising, but for interactive use that seems like the determining factor.
Also, slightly meta: What is this web ... app(?)? Looks like a git frontend?
At 40kbps I don't think the latency can be great. Having done SSH over 64kbps when I overran my mobile data subscription, my experience is that modern SSH clients expect more than that to run smoothly.
> Also, slightly meta: What is this web ... app(?)? Looks like a git frontend?
Looking at the source, this seems like a custom-built git frontend, served by a bespoke web server called BEJY (by the same author) it seems.