
- Royal tsx sort connections for mac#
- Royal tsx sort connections serial#
- Royal tsx sort connections full#
- Royal tsx sort connections windows#
Royal TS/TSX stores all your connections and configuration in a 'phonebook' file which can easily be migrated or even sync'ed between workstations. I have folders for each customer, then a folder for each site within the customer folder which really helps.
Royal tsx sort connections serial#
Serial: Yes, even Hardware Serial over USB is a click away for those serial console moments that blindside you on an idle Tuesday afternoon.Īn all-in-one Tool, one screen, one set of configs! The organisation of connections allows you to create folders and move connections into folders so finding that connection is logical. Hyper-V: Instance control, data and connections. VMWare: List instances, control on and off, connect to the console and more. VNC: For your GUI based connections to Windows, Mac, Linux, IP KVM's and more.įile Transfer: Over FTP, SFTP, SCP and more. TeamViewer: For anyone that still uses it.
Royal tsx sort connections windows#
RDP: for connecting to windows workstations and servers. You can clearly see the TAB's showing connections to multiple servers with varying connection types.įile Transfer whether FTP, SFTP, SCP can be a bind to manage but no longer
Royal tsx sort connections full#
Telnet, SSH: With full control over credentials, session, scripting, emulation and much more.
Royal tsx sort connections for mac#
Now that was a good few years ago and today Royal TS for Windows and Royal TSX for Mac are well polished and comprehensive toolsets with connectivity options to just about everything you could ever want. The first beta could connect to SSH, Telnet and RDP and I quickly found time to add all my regular connections and never looked back. Royal TSX even in its early stages was a well thought out tool that instantly made its way to my quick launch bar. Now I can have my SSH clients in Tabs instead of separate xterm windows and I can name the tabs so its clear to see. I can even automate the login by scripting so I no longer have to waste time looking up passwords and leaving sessions open way longer than needed just because I have to lookup passwords. It was a work in progress but I loved it. Each tool has its own qwerks and issues but we learn to live with them in order to get the job done.Ī few years ago now I was looking for a better SSH client because in my job when I have many SSH windows open its easy to loose track of which is which and I downloaded the first beta of Royal TSX (For Mac). Anyone who spends their days connecting to different systems and servers will know that the tools generally available are system specific Windows desktop = Microsoft RDP Client, Linux box = Native SSH or Telnet, FTP Server = FileZilla, Cute or WinSCP and the list goes on. I've looked at integrating FreeRDP into CoRD but there is no client implementation documentation (or much useful documentation at all) which makes it tough for someone with no RDP development experience.There are some tools that you work with so often that they become invaluable. RoyalTSX is essentially what I'd like CoRD to be, aside from the additional protocol support. Supports full screen mode, has an option to auto-hide the side pane, yadda yadda. You can set it to auto-reconnect when you resize the window which is a nice alternative to stretching the content or dealing with scrollbars. The auto-screen resizing doesn't work but it's a GUI and doesn't require XQuartz to run.Īfter using RoyalTSX for a little while I gotta say that with a little tweaking it's the best RDP option I've used. I just downloaded their public beta and the RDP plugin is based on FreeRDP. There's also RoyalTSX which I haven't tried personally, just remembered seeing it mentioned in the Mac RDP client discussions before.
