

I am happy to pay again for CyberDuck, and I very much appreciate your effort. Please also add "Execute" to the command-click menu and to the Go menu. Please fix this feature to work as expected, OR add support for executing a shell script when connected via SSH. But I would have liked to stay in CyberDuck.Ĭan CyberDuck execute a script or application during a SSH session? I am loving CyberDuck as a ssh client, and my expectations are growing. So I left CyberDuck, launched iTerm, opened a terminal window, logged in, cd to the correct directory and typed. cleanup.sh: No such file or directoryīash: line 1: cleanup.sh: command not found

Pulled the Go menu to "Send Command." and entered "./cleanup.sh" in the dialog box. Then I clicked once on that script (cleanup.sh) and tried to execute it. I am mostly using it for SSH connections.Īfter connecting to my server via SSH, then uploading a shell script, I got info & added "execute" permissions for Owner (744). Place your cursor into a tag, then hit “Command+Shift+B” to find the matching tag and highlight the text in between.Hello, Thanks for CyberDuck. Download the Select Balanced (HT|X)ML Tags.tmMacro (I just saved the link as a. There’s nothing like quickly being able to find the matching tag to make your development go faster. Finally, the one thing I still miss about EditPad (Notepad++) is HTML Tag matching. Now any subsequent files you open using Cyberduck will be added as tabs in the current TextMate project. ” to open the entire directory as a project. ” to go up one directory and then type “mate.

This will open a terminal window at the temporary location where the file you are editing is. Once the file is open, type ctrl+shift+o.

Open up any file in TextMate by double-clicking it. Connect to your web server via Cyberduck. Also, under Browser, tick the “Double click opens file in external editor” checkbox. Fire up Cyberduck and in the preferences under Editor, make sure external editor is set to TextMate. It’s a straightforward set of text instructions that worked great for me, but I figured I could spruce it up with screenshots and my own tweaks so all my friends could use it too. Then last week I stumbled upon a tutorial involving Cyberduck and Textmate and using the two in concert to accomplish exactly what I’d been using EditPad Pro for on Windows. TextMate is my favorite code editor in OSX, but it’s missing the FTP tool. I got used to the tool, but could never find a good equivalent for the Mac. With EditPad Pro, you can ftp to your production web server, list all of the files and easily edit any of them in place (code highlighting and all). I’ve been using EditPad Pro for web development on a Windows PC because it has an integrated FTP tool.
