The Inside Man Mac OS
adminMay 24 2021
The Inside Man Mac OS
From the Finder:
Finder -> Go -> Go to Folder...
and enter
which is tildaslash.ssh
If you want to use the Terminal, then you would
You can use something like TextEdit, TextWrangler, Smultron to edit the file. If using the terminal you can use nano, vi, vim, emacs to edit the file.
The only problem with some of these editors is finding an explicit line. As I seem to recall, the known_host file message gives a line number. Since the lines in the known_hosts file are very long, a lot of these editors line wrap so just counting visible lines is not accurate.
Message was edited by: BobHarris
Finder -> Go -> Go to Folder...
and enter
which is tildaslash.ssh
If you want to use the Terminal, then you would
You can use something like TextEdit, TextWrangler, Smultron to edit the file. If using the terminal you can use nano, vi, vim, emacs to edit the file.
The only problem with some of these editors is finding an explicit line. As I seem to recall, the known_host file message gives a line number. Since the lines in the known_hosts file are very long, a lot of these editors line wrap so just counting visible lines is not accurate.
Message was edited by: BobHarris
For Apple News, Rumors, Reviews, Prices, and Deals, trust AppleInsider. Serving Apple product enthusiasts since 1997. The macOS file system is designed for Mac computers, where both users and software have access to the file system. Users access the file system directly through the Finder, which presents a user-oriented view of the file system by hiding or renaming some files and directories.
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Jan 11, 2009 1:43 PM
The Inside Man Mac OS