Remote edit with local editor (Linux)
Try sshfs
, a program that allows to mount a remote system accessible via ssh to a local folder.
Install it, create a mount point and execute:
sshfs user@host:remote_dir /path/to/mount_point
Now you can access the remote directory as a local one and you can use your text editor of choice. Moreover, you can use sshfs
as an on-demand video/music streaming solution (see this answer).
Example: if you want to mount the directory music
of a user called pippo
at host pluto
in a folder ./pippo_music
then execute:
sshfs pippo@pluto:music ./pippo_music
You can also mount the root of the pluto host with:
sshfs pippo@pluto:/ ./pippo_root
To automate this process, add a row in fstab
:
sshfs#pippo@pluto:/ /media/pippo_root fuse defaults 0 0
If it's Ubuntu, then you probably have the full GNOME suite installed, along with GVFS – so you can access sftp://
URLs directly in all apps.
Use Places → Connect to Server to connect that server's filesystem as if were a local one.
Do the same from command line using
gvfs-mount sftp://hostname.domain.tld/
While GVFS is specific to GNOME apps, all mounted GVFS locations are accessible by any program via /run/<user>/gvfs
(or ~/.gvfs/
in older versions).
KDE programs also support sftp://
via KIO, although they don't have the equivalent of /run/<user>/gvfs
.
Update on an old question:
KDE supports a FIle over SsH protocol called fish. Basically, you open your file as URL with the fish:// scheme referring to the file. KDE copies the file over locally to a temp file as you edit. Saves and a quit will push the file back to the remote server.
e.g.
kate fish://user@host:/path/to/file.txt
There's a wrapper for non-KDE editors (or any tools):
kioexec other-editor-or-tool fish://user@host:/path/to/file.txt
Remember that you probably have the KDE libs on your machine, even if you run GNOME desktop or something else.