Showing 5 open source projects for "linux ssh"

View related business solutions
  • Cut Data Warehouse Costs up to 54% with BigQuery Icon
    Cut Data Warehouse Costs up to 54% with BigQuery

    Migrate from Snowflake, Databricks, or Redshift with free migration tools. Exabyte scale without the Exabyte price.

    BigQuery delivers up to 54% lower TCO than cloud alternatives. Migrate from legacy or competing warehouses using free BigQuery Migration Service with automated SQL translation. Get serverless scale with no infrastructure to manage, compressed storage, and flexible pricing—pay per query or commit for deeper discounts. New customers get $300 in free credit.
    Try BigQuery Free
  • Run Any Workload on Compute Engine VMs Icon
    Run Any Workload on Compute Engine VMs

    From dev environments to AI training, choose preset or custom VMs with 1–96 vCPUs and industry-leading 99.95% uptime SLA.

    Compute Engine delivers high-performance virtual machines for web apps, databases, containers, and AI workloads. Choose from general-purpose, compute-optimized, or GPU/TPU-accelerated machine types—or build custom VMs to match your exact specs. With live migration and automatic failover, your workloads stay online. New customers get $300 in free credits.
    Try Compute Engine
  • 1
    Fail2Ban

    Fail2Ban

    Daemon to ban hosts that cause multiple authentication errors

    Fail2Ban scans log files and bans IPs that show the malicious signs -- too many password failures, seeking for exploits, etc. Generally Fail2Ban is then used to update firewall rules to reject the IP addresses for a specified amount of time, although any arbitrary other action (e.g. sending an email) could also be configured. Out of the box Fail2Ban comes with filters for various services (apache, courier, ssh, etc). Fail2Ban is able to reduce the rate of incorrect authentications attempts...
    Downloads: 14 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    privacyidea

    privacyidea

    two factor authentication management system

    privacyIDEA is a management and authentication system for two factor authentication. You can use OTP tokens, OTP cards, SMS, Smartphone Apps to incorparte the second factor. It can even manage SSH keys and supports Offline OTP. The latest version can manage and enroll user certificates. Its modular design makes it easily enhancable. It runs on Linux. Applications and workflows can be connected to privacyIDEA hence enabling two factor authentication in your system logon, web applications, SSL VPNs, firewalls and many more. ...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 3
    OrgLDAP is an extensible LDAP user management application supporting groups, *NIX (POSIX, Shadow), Samba and other account types, SSH public keys and sudo roles. It includes a reusable extensible library and a web-based front-end.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 4
    SSHCE brings list of hosts from LDAP server (based on given ldap filter) and sends command to selected hosts through ssh protocol.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • AI-generated apps that pass security review Icon
    AI-generated apps that pass security review

    Stop waiting on engineering. Build production-ready internal tools with AI—on your company data, in your cloud.

    Retool lets you generate dashboards, admin panels, and workflows directly on your data. Type something like “Build me a revenue dashboard on my Stripe data” and get a working app with security, permissions, and compliance built in from day one. Whether on our cloud or self-hosted, create the internal software your team needs without compromising enterprise standards or control.
    Try Retool free
  • 5
    Key Manager is designed to allow distribution and management of SSH keys in a way that scales beyond manually copying public keys to remote hosts. This approaches Single-Sign-On functionality, if limited to ssh access from a single host.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next
MongoDB Logo MongoDB