Posts Tagged ‘sftpdrive’

New entry: WebDrive by South River Technologies

Saturday, November 22nd, 2008

WebDrive is a piece of software in the vein of SftpDrive and RedDrive, but more powerful.

Like the previously mentioned products, it maps remote SSH servers as virtual drives on the local machine, enabling seamless file read/write access.

Unlike SftpDrive, it supports other protocols beside SFTP: WebDAV, FTPS, Front Page, regular FTP and Amazon S3.

What sets it apart from RedDrive, which also supports those additional protocols? Well, the fact that WebDrive is still supported and under development by its parent company, unlike RedDrive, which has been discontinued in favor of AnyClient (an inferior solution in my opinion).

What’s that you’re asking? Ah, yes… of course there’s a downside: it’s not free, and it’s not cheap either. At $59.95, it’s considerably more expensive than SftpDrive ($39.99). Still, if you need the extra protocol support (I hear Amazon S3 is popular these days), you might feel it’s worth shelling out the extra bucks and get WebDrive.

Here’s a short, 10-step, WebDrive guide for creating a test SFTP connection to a remote server…

Tip: Using a SSH server as a storage drive in Windows

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

If you’ve ever dealt with accesing and managing files located on remote systems, you’re probably familiar with FTP. If so, you probably know that using a FTP client is not the easiest solution and does not enable a straightforward workflow. It’s also not very secure, unless you combine it with a VPN, or use FTP/SSL, complicating things even further.

SFTP uses SSH and eliminates the security problems posed by regular FTP, but it still feels and works like FTP when used with standard SFTP clients such as WinSCP.

If you use the right software, though, it can be as easy as accesing your files transparently through a mapped drive. Better yet, no additional software must be installed on the remote server, the standard SSH daemon is enough.

SftpDrive 1.7.9SftpDrive maps remote servers as virtual drives which can be accesed like a regular HDD via the assigned drive letter. You can browse using Windows Explorer or your favorite file manager. Any application can work directly with files located on the mounted server as if they were local files.

Unlike other similar programs, SftpDrive does not use .NET framework or Java, so it’s extremely fast and light on system resources.

On the downside, SftpDrive is not freeware. You can try it for 6 weeks though, so there’s plenty of time to decide if it’s worth the 39 bucks.

Red DriveRed Drive is a good freeware alternative, but it’s no longer in development. It requires .NET framework 2.0, which makes it kinda slow on some systems.

 

 

 

Step 7: review the connection parametersWebDrive is another comercial product, but it’s extremely powerful. It supports many connection protocols beside SCP, such as WebDAV and Amazon S3. It’s quite pricey though, a good 20 bucks more expensive than SftpDrive.