Use % rather than # for port delimiter

This commit is contained in:
Matt Johnston 2013-04-17 23:17:27 +08:00
parent 3525cabf48
commit f98eb5808b
2 changed files with 4 additions and 4 deletions

View File

@ -610,7 +610,7 @@ static void parse_hostname(const char* orighostarg) {
cli_opts.username = m_strdup(cli_opts.own_user);
}
port = strchr(cli_opts.remotehost, '#');
port = strchr(cli_opts.remotehost, '%');
if (!port) {
// legacy separator
port = strchr(cli_opts.remotehost, '/');

View File

@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ dbclient \- lightweight SSH2 client
.B dbclient
[
.I args ]
.I [user1]@host1[#port1],[user2]@host2[#port2],...
.I [user1]@host1[%port1],[user2]@host2[%port2],...
.SH DESCRIPTION
.B dbclient
@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ environments, while still being functional and secure enough for general use.
.B \-p \fIport
Connect to
.I port
on the remote host. Alternatively a port can be specified as hostname#port.
on the remote host. Alternatively a port can be specified as hostname%port.
Default is 22.
.TP
.B \-i \fIidfile
@ -126,7 +126,7 @@ Dropbear will also allow multiple "hops" to be specified, separated by commas. I
this case a connection will be made to the first host, then a TCP forwarded
connection will be made through that to the second host, and so on. Hosts other than
the final destination will not see anything other than the encrypted SSH stream.
A port for a host can be specified with a hash (eg matt@martello#44 ).
A port for a host can be specified with a hash (eg matt@martello%44 ).
This syntax can also be used with scp or rsync (specifying dbclient as the
ssh/rsh command). A file can be "bounced" through multiple SSH hops, eg