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npm now supports Trusted Publishing with OIDC, enabling secure package publishing directly from CI/CD workflows without relying on long-lived tokens.
SHell WIth Me
lets a “host” share their terminal with a “guest” peer
on another computer.
This combines the cryptography of Magic Wormhole <http://magic-wormhole.io>
_ (via Fowl <https://github.com/meejah/fowl>
) and the terminal-sharing of
tty-share <https://tty-share.com/>
into a secure, end-to-end
encrypted, peer-to-peer terminal sharing application.
.. image:: media/logo-shell-256.png :width: 256px :align: right :alt: the ShWiM logo, the chicken head from Fowl's logo peeking out of a conch-looking shell
To install, use pip install shwim
(see longer instructions below).
This should enable you to run shwim --help
.
The Host computer runs shwim
by itself, producing a
<magic-code>
. The Guest computer runs shwim <magic-code>
.
You are now sharing a single terminal running on “host”. Beware: the guest can type, run commands, etc. so only do this with humans you would hand your local keyboard over to.
Once thetwo things happen (i.e. “shwim” on the host and “shwim ” on the
guest), there is a secure tunnel between both computers. The host will
decide a random port and run tty-share
as a server; the guest will
run tty-share
as a client.
On both computers, tty-share
will be running as a subprocess with
correct options to do networking via Magic Wormhole only. All raw-mode
terminal I/O is forwarded to this tty-share
process so things like
curses etc work as expected.
Once either side exits, the networking forwarding is done – there is no long-term credential sharing or any other network set preserved or altered on the “host” nor “guest” computers.
FAQs
Encrypted, peer-to-peer terminal sharing for two people.
We found that shwim demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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