Notepad++ NppFTP alternative in linux
I know there are questions about notepad++ here but mine is a bit different. I am developing a website and with the NppFTP plugin in Notepad++ I am able to directly connect to the server that contains the site I am working on. I am able to create/edit/delete pages/content etc. Is there something similiar in Linux. Any tool that will let me edit pages directly on the server. Any help would be appreciated.
server plugins webserver websites
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I know there are questions about notepad++ here but mine is a bit different. I am developing a website and with the NppFTP plugin in Notepad++ I am able to directly connect to the server that contains the site I am working on. I am able to create/edit/delete pages/content etc. Is there something similiar in Linux. Any tool that will let me edit pages directly on the server. Any help would be appreciated.
server plugins webserver websites
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 2 days ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
add a comment |
I know there are questions about notepad++ here but mine is a bit different. I am developing a website and with the NppFTP plugin in Notepad++ I am able to directly connect to the server that contains the site I am working on. I am able to create/edit/delete pages/content etc. Is there something similiar in Linux. Any tool that will let me edit pages directly on the server. Any help would be appreciated.
server plugins webserver websites
I know there are questions about notepad++ here but mine is a bit different. I am developing a website and with the NppFTP plugin in Notepad++ I am able to directly connect to the server that contains the site I am working on. I am able to create/edit/delete pages/content etc. Is there something similiar in Linux. Any tool that will let me edit pages directly on the server. Any help would be appreciated.
server plugins webserver websites
server plugins webserver websites
asked Jul 7 '13 at 21:07
SashoSasho
2124
2124
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 2 days ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 2 days ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
Sublime text with Ftpsync plugin. https://github.com/NoxArt/SublimeText2-FTPSync or
Sublime SFTP(paid)
2 Install curlftpfs and use this to mount ftp site locally.
sudo apt-get install curlftpfs
Let's say here's the detail
My ftp User: surendra_a
My ftp password: redhat
My ftp Server: ftp2.linuxnix.com
My mount point: /ftpmount
Now create the mount point and mount ftp account data.
mkdir /ftpmount
curlftpfs -o allow_other surendra_a:redhat@ftp2.linuxnix.com /ftpmount
This way you can use any text editor.
More details here.
add a comment |
Just use nautilus to connect to the server, then you can use any program that you like to edit those files.
To connect to the server, open the file manager (Nautilus), hit CTRL+L and type in the bar the server address (somthing like ftp://ftp.server.com). A window will open asking for an user name and a password. Afterwards the remote folder will appear on the left bar and you can use any program to save or edit files in it.
add a comment |
You can use jEdit with the FTP plugin.
jEdit FTP Plugin description:
The FTP plugin plugs into jEdit's virtual filesystem to allow transparent access to
(S)FTP servers. It integrates with the filesystem browser (hence you can do things like
add favorites which point to remote servers, and such), caches remote directory listings
for improved performance, remembers passwords, and has optional support for passive-mode
FTP.
In addition, when running on Java 2 version 1.5, the FTP plugin can edit and browse files
stored on SFTP servers.
jEdit Website
add a comment |
Emacs and the Tramp extension does that and more. It supports ssh, sftp and the old insecure ftp extension. And yes, it works like editing the file locally. No need to anything extra installed.
Just open the file like this in Emacs: C-x
C-f
/user@machine:/path/to/file
But if you are serious working with a website or something like that, you should use a version control system like git or subversion. So when you want to put the data on the server, you just check it out from the repository into the server. That allows you to make lots of tests, and always back upp to previous version if it doesn't work. Even work on many different versions at the same time.
Yes, Emacs have good support for many different version controll systems too.
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
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active
oldest
votes
Sublime text with Ftpsync plugin. https://github.com/NoxArt/SublimeText2-FTPSync or
Sublime SFTP(paid)
2 Install curlftpfs and use this to mount ftp site locally.
sudo apt-get install curlftpfs
Let's say here's the detail
My ftp User: surendra_a
My ftp password: redhat
My ftp Server: ftp2.linuxnix.com
My mount point: /ftpmount
Now create the mount point and mount ftp account data.
mkdir /ftpmount
curlftpfs -o allow_other surendra_a:redhat@ftp2.linuxnix.com /ftpmount
This way you can use any text editor.
More details here.
add a comment |
Sublime text with Ftpsync plugin. https://github.com/NoxArt/SublimeText2-FTPSync or
Sublime SFTP(paid)
2 Install curlftpfs and use this to mount ftp site locally.
sudo apt-get install curlftpfs
Let's say here's the detail
My ftp User: surendra_a
My ftp password: redhat
My ftp Server: ftp2.linuxnix.com
My mount point: /ftpmount
Now create the mount point and mount ftp account data.
mkdir /ftpmount
curlftpfs -o allow_other surendra_a:redhat@ftp2.linuxnix.com /ftpmount
This way you can use any text editor.
More details here.
add a comment |
Sublime text with Ftpsync plugin. https://github.com/NoxArt/SublimeText2-FTPSync or
Sublime SFTP(paid)
2 Install curlftpfs and use this to mount ftp site locally.
sudo apt-get install curlftpfs
Let's say here's the detail
My ftp User: surendra_a
My ftp password: redhat
My ftp Server: ftp2.linuxnix.com
My mount point: /ftpmount
Now create the mount point and mount ftp account data.
mkdir /ftpmount
curlftpfs -o allow_other surendra_a:redhat@ftp2.linuxnix.com /ftpmount
This way you can use any text editor.
More details here.
Sublime text with Ftpsync plugin. https://github.com/NoxArt/SublimeText2-FTPSync or
Sublime SFTP(paid)
2 Install curlftpfs and use this to mount ftp site locally.
sudo apt-get install curlftpfs
Let's say here's the detail
My ftp User: surendra_a
My ftp password: redhat
My ftp Server: ftp2.linuxnix.com
My mount point: /ftpmount
Now create the mount point and mount ftp account data.
mkdir /ftpmount
curlftpfs -o allow_other surendra_a:redhat@ftp2.linuxnix.com /ftpmount
This way you can use any text editor.
More details here.
answered Jul 7 '13 at 22:03
jahid65jahid65
1,619195
1,619195
add a comment |
add a comment |
Just use nautilus to connect to the server, then you can use any program that you like to edit those files.
To connect to the server, open the file manager (Nautilus), hit CTRL+L and type in the bar the server address (somthing like ftp://ftp.server.com). A window will open asking for an user name and a password. Afterwards the remote folder will appear on the left bar and you can use any program to save or edit files in it.
add a comment |
Just use nautilus to connect to the server, then you can use any program that you like to edit those files.
To connect to the server, open the file manager (Nautilus), hit CTRL+L and type in the bar the server address (somthing like ftp://ftp.server.com). A window will open asking for an user name and a password. Afterwards the remote folder will appear on the left bar and you can use any program to save or edit files in it.
add a comment |
Just use nautilus to connect to the server, then you can use any program that you like to edit those files.
To connect to the server, open the file manager (Nautilus), hit CTRL+L and type in the bar the server address (somthing like ftp://ftp.server.com). A window will open asking for an user name and a password. Afterwards the remote folder will appear on the left bar and you can use any program to save or edit files in it.
Just use nautilus to connect to the server, then you can use any program that you like to edit those files.
To connect to the server, open the file manager (Nautilus), hit CTRL+L and type in the bar the server address (somthing like ftp://ftp.server.com). A window will open asking for an user name and a password. Afterwards the remote folder will appear on the left bar and you can use any program to save or edit files in it.
answered Jul 7 '13 at 22:15
Javier RiveraJavier Rivera
29.9k977101
29.9k977101
add a comment |
add a comment |
You can use jEdit with the FTP plugin.
jEdit FTP Plugin description:
The FTP plugin plugs into jEdit's virtual filesystem to allow transparent access to
(S)FTP servers. It integrates with the filesystem browser (hence you can do things like
add favorites which point to remote servers, and such), caches remote directory listings
for improved performance, remembers passwords, and has optional support for passive-mode
FTP.
In addition, when running on Java 2 version 1.5, the FTP plugin can edit and browse files
stored on SFTP servers.
jEdit Website
add a comment |
You can use jEdit with the FTP plugin.
jEdit FTP Plugin description:
The FTP plugin plugs into jEdit's virtual filesystem to allow transparent access to
(S)FTP servers. It integrates with the filesystem browser (hence you can do things like
add favorites which point to remote servers, and such), caches remote directory listings
for improved performance, remembers passwords, and has optional support for passive-mode
FTP.
In addition, when running on Java 2 version 1.5, the FTP plugin can edit and browse files
stored on SFTP servers.
jEdit Website
add a comment |
You can use jEdit with the FTP plugin.
jEdit FTP Plugin description:
The FTP plugin plugs into jEdit's virtual filesystem to allow transparent access to
(S)FTP servers. It integrates with the filesystem browser (hence you can do things like
add favorites which point to remote servers, and such), caches remote directory listings
for improved performance, remembers passwords, and has optional support for passive-mode
FTP.
In addition, when running on Java 2 version 1.5, the FTP plugin can edit and browse files
stored on SFTP servers.
jEdit Website
You can use jEdit with the FTP plugin.
jEdit FTP Plugin description:
The FTP plugin plugs into jEdit's virtual filesystem to allow transparent access to
(S)FTP servers. It integrates with the filesystem browser (hence you can do things like
add favorites which point to remote servers, and such), caches remote directory listings
for improved performance, remembers passwords, and has optional support for passive-mode
FTP.
In addition, when running on Java 2 version 1.5, the FTP plugin can edit and browse files
stored on SFTP servers.
jEdit Website
edited Mar 11 '17 at 19:02
Community♦
1
1
answered Jul 7 '13 at 22:23
rahulesrahules
3421313
3421313
add a comment |
add a comment |
Emacs and the Tramp extension does that and more. It supports ssh, sftp and the old insecure ftp extension. And yes, it works like editing the file locally. No need to anything extra installed.
Just open the file like this in Emacs: C-x
C-f
/user@machine:/path/to/file
But if you are serious working with a website or something like that, you should use a version control system like git or subversion. So when you want to put the data on the server, you just check it out from the repository into the server. That allows you to make lots of tests, and always back upp to previous version if it doesn't work. Even work on many different versions at the same time.
Yes, Emacs have good support for many different version controll systems too.
add a comment |
Emacs and the Tramp extension does that and more. It supports ssh, sftp and the old insecure ftp extension. And yes, it works like editing the file locally. No need to anything extra installed.
Just open the file like this in Emacs: C-x
C-f
/user@machine:/path/to/file
But if you are serious working with a website or something like that, you should use a version control system like git or subversion. So when you want to put the data on the server, you just check it out from the repository into the server. That allows you to make lots of tests, and always back upp to previous version if it doesn't work. Even work on many different versions at the same time.
Yes, Emacs have good support for many different version controll systems too.
add a comment |
Emacs and the Tramp extension does that and more. It supports ssh, sftp and the old insecure ftp extension. And yes, it works like editing the file locally. No need to anything extra installed.
Just open the file like this in Emacs: C-x
C-f
/user@machine:/path/to/file
But if you are serious working with a website or something like that, you should use a version control system like git or subversion. So when you want to put the data on the server, you just check it out from the repository into the server. That allows you to make lots of tests, and always back upp to previous version if it doesn't work. Even work on many different versions at the same time.
Yes, Emacs have good support for many different version controll systems too.
Emacs and the Tramp extension does that and more. It supports ssh, sftp and the old insecure ftp extension. And yes, it works like editing the file locally. No need to anything extra installed.
Just open the file like this in Emacs: C-x
C-f
/user@machine:/path/to/file
But if you are serious working with a website or something like that, you should use a version control system like git or subversion. So when you want to put the data on the server, you just check it out from the repository into the server. That allows you to make lots of tests, and always back upp to previous version if it doesn't work. Even work on many different versions at the same time.
Yes, Emacs have good support for many different version controll systems too.
edited Jul 8 '13 at 20:21
answered Jul 8 '13 at 20:11
AndersAnders
1,363712
1,363712
add a comment |
add a comment |
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