0.4. Our Approach
This book is organized by concept rather than syntax. We begin with
an overview and progressively lead you deeper into the functionality
of SSH. So we might introduce a topic in
Chapter 1, "Introduction to SSH", show its basic use in
Chapter 2, "Basic Client Use", and reveal advanced uses in
Chapter 7, "Advanced Client Use". If you would prefer the whole story at once,
Appendix B, "SSH Quick Reference" presents all commands and their options
in one location.
We focus strongly on
three levels of server configuration, which
we call compile-time, serverwide, and per-account configuration.
Compile-time
configuration (
Chapter 4, "Installation and Compile-Time Configuration") means selecting
appropriate options when you build the SSH clients and servers.
serverwide configuration (
Chapter 5, "Serverwide Configuration") applies when the SSH server is run and is
generally done by system administrators, while
per-account
configuration (
Chapter 8, "Per-Account Server Configuration") can be done any time by
end users. It's vitally important for system administrators to
understand the relationships and differences among these three
levels. Otherwise, SSH may seem like a morass of random behaviors.
Although the bulk of material focuses on Unix implementations of SSH,
you don't have to be a Unix user to understand it. Fans of
Windows and Macintosh may stick to the later chapters devoted to
their platforms, but a lot of the meaty details are in the Unix
chapters so we recommend reading them, at least for reference.
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0.3. Reading This Book | | 0.5. Which Chapters Are for You? |