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I use SSH in a terminal window many times during a day.

I remember reading about a way to reuse a single connection so that the TCP and SSH handshaking don't have to happen every time I establish another request to the same host.

Can someone point me to a link or describe how to establish a shared ssh connection so that subsequent connections to the same host will connect quickly?

Thanks.

2 Answers 2

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Answering my own question. Improving SSH (OpenSSH) connection speed with shared connections describes using the "ControlPath" configuration setting.

UPDATE: For connections that are opened and closed often add a setting like ControlPersist 4h to your ~/.ssh/config. See this post about SSH productivity tips.

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If you want to keep the terminal opened, the easiest way is producing I/O ("tail -f" or "while [ -d . ]; cat /etc/loadavg; sleep 3; done").

If you want to improve the connection handshake one way I use is adding "UseDNS no" on your sshd_config.

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  • 1
    Oh, and remove unused authentications (gssapi-with-mic is very slow). You can also check what is your bootlenech with "ssh -v" Jun 15, 2011 at 18:51
  • To deal with (frustrating yet frequent) ssh disconnects due to forced timeouts, inactivity, etc: after login (ssh {hostname}), immediately run a screen session (ie, screen -S working-on-XYZ bash -l). Also, I set my remote ~/.screenrc to include something like: caption always '%3n %H: %t // %c:%s', which may force the ssh session to 'keep alive' (due to the ticking clock running remotely, displaying locally). In any case, if my ssh is disconnected for any reason, I can still log back in again at any time and reconnect to my screen session (screen ls / screen -r working-on-XYZ).
    – michael
    Sep 26, 2012 at 16:00

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