fish
JörgWalter
trouble@garni.ch
2002-06-23
1.1.1
Allows you to access another computer's files using a simple
SSH shell account and standard &UNIX; utilities on
the remote side. This way, no server software is needed and you gain
access to that computer's files as if they were local (or on
NFS, since it is slower than local access). It uses
the same protocol as MidnightCommander's
#sh VFS handler.
Fish should work with any roughly POSIX compatible
&UNIX; based remote computer. It uses the shell commands
cat, chgrp,
chmod, chown,
cp, dd,
env, expr,
grep, ls,
mkdir, mv,
rm, rmdir,
sed,
and wc. Fish starts
/bin/sh as its shell and expects it to be a
Bourne shell (or compatible, like bash).
If the sed and
file commands are available, as well as a
/etc/apache/magic file with &MIME; type
signatures, these will be used to guess &MIME; types.
If Perl is available on the remote
machine, it will be used instead. Then only env and
/bin/sh are needed. Using
Perl has the additional benefit of being
faster.
Fish may even work on &Windows; machines, if tools like
Cygwin are installed. All the above
utilities must be in the system PATH, and the initial
shell must be able to process the command echo
FISH:;/bin/sh correctly.