<article lang="&language;" id="fish"> <title >fish</title> <articleinfo> <authorgroup> <author >&Joerg.Walter; &Joerg.Walter.mail;</author> <othercredit role="translator" ><firstname >Malcolm</firstname ><surname >Hunter</surname ><affiliation ><address ><email >malcolm.hunter@gmx.co.uk</email ></address ></affiliation ><contrib >Conversion to British English</contrib ></othercredit > </authorgroup> <date >2002-06-23</date> <releaseinfo >1.1.1</releaseinfo> </articleinfo> <para >Allows you to access another computer's files using a simple <acronym >SSH</acronym > 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 <acronym >NFS</acronym >, since it is slower than local access). It uses the same protocol as <application >MidnightCommander</application >'s #sh <acronym >VFS</acronym > handler.</para> <para >Fish should work with any roughly <acronym >POSIX</acronym > compatible &UNIX; based remote computer. It uses the shell commands <command >cat</command >, <command >chgrp</command >, <command >chmod</command >, <command >chown</command >, <command >cp</command >, <command >dd</command >, <command >env</command >, <command >expr</command >, <command >grep</command >, <command >ls</command >, <command >mkdir</command >, <command >mv</command >, <command >rm</command >, <command >rmdir</command >, <command >sed</command >, and <command >wc</command >. Fish starts <command >/bin/sh</command > as its shell and expects it to be a Bourne shell (or compatible, like <command >bash</command >). If the <command >sed</command > and <command >file</command > commands are available, as well as a <filename >/etc/apache/magic</filename > file with &MIME; type signatures, these will be used to guess &MIME; types. </para> <para >If <application >Perl</application > is available on the remote machine, it will be used instead. Then only <command >env</command > and <command >/bin/sh</command > are needed. Using <application >Perl</application > has the additional benefit of being faster.</para> <para >Fish may even work on &Windows; machines, if tools like <application >Cygwin</application > are installed. All the above utilities must be in the system <envar >PATH</envar >, and the initial shell must be able to process the command <command >echo FISH:;/bin/sh</command > correctly.</para> </article>