If you are constantly needing to SSH into multiple servers, it can real daunting to remember all the different usernames, hostnames, IP addresses, and even sometimes custom private keys to connect to them. It's actually extremely easy to create command line shortcuts to solve this problem. There's two major ways to do it, and we'll discuss the pros and cons of each.

Method 1: Using SSH Config

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SSH on *NIX machines, such as Linux or Mac, have default shortcut functionality right out of the box. It's very straight forward to setup, too. For those two reasons, this is my preferred way of setting up SSH shortcuts. The first step is to navigate to your .ssh folder:

cd ~/.ssh

Following this, you'll need to create a file called config. Here's how to do it with Vim:

vim config

From here, you can now create shortcuts. You can specify the hostname, username, port, and the private key. For a full list of options, please visit the official docs. Here's an example of how to structure the file:

Host scotch

HostName scotch.io

User nick

Host example2

HostName example.com

User root

Host example3

HostName 64.233.160.0

User userxyz123

Port 56000

Host droplet1

HostName www.progressiverobot.com

User ec2-user

IdentityFile /path/to/special/privatekey/droplet1.pem

Now, you can simply SSH into any of these servers with these simple commands:

ssh scotch

ssh example2

ssh example3

ssh droplet1

If this isn't working for you, trying changing the permissions of the config file like this:

chmod 600 ~/.ssh/config

Method 2: Create aliases for your shell

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This method involves creating an alias for your shell (or terminal). You can use this for creating any type of shortcut you want, but a lot of people use them for SSH shortcuts. To set this up, you'll need to navigate to your .bash_aliases file (or some people do this in .bashrc or .bash_profile). The following command will create the .bash_aliases file if it doesn't exist or just edit it if it already does using Vim.

vim ~/.bash_aliases

Here you can add as many shortcuts as you want. Here's how to add the same SSH shortcuts from above:

alias scotch='ssh [email protected]'

alias example2='ssh [email protected]'

alias example3='ssh [email protected] -p 56000'

alias droplet1='ssh [email protected] -i /path/to/special/privatekey/droplet1.pem'

After you add those and save the file, you'll need to "reboot" the aliases file with:

source ~/.bash_aliases

Once that is completed, you can now SSH into all of those same boxes by just typing the following:

scotch

example2

example3

droplet1

This method provides additional flexibility that the first method might not be able to provide, but it really comes down to a matter of preference for most use cases.