# fwd
A port-forwarding utility.
Here's how it works:
1. Get the latest [release](https://github.com/DeCarabas/fwd/releases) of `fwd`
2. You install `fwd` on the server somewhere in your `$PATH` (like `/usr/bin/`)
3. You install `fwd` on the client (like your laptop)
4. You run `fwd` on the client to connect to the server, like so:
```bash
doty@my.laptop$ fwd some.server
```
`fwd` will connect to `some.server` via ssh, and then show you a screen listing all of the ports that the server is listening on locally.
Use the up and down arrow keys (or `j`/`k`) to select the port you're interested in and press `e` to toggle forwarding of that port.
Now, connections to that port locally will be forwarded to the remote server.
If the port is something that might be interesting to a web browser, you can press `<ENTER>` with the port selected to open a browser pointed at that port.
If something is going wrong, pressing `l` will toggle logs that might explain it.
Press `q` to quit.
## Future Improvements:
- Clipboard integration: send something from the remote end of the pipe to the host's clipboard. (Sometimes you *really* want to copy some big buffer from the remote side and your terminal just can't make that work.)
- Client heartbeats: I frequently wind up in a situation where the pipe is stalled: not broken but nothing is getting through. (This happens with my coder.com pipes all the time.)