![]() ![]() If you’re not familiar with SSH tunneling, all you need to know for the purposes of setting this up is that SSH allows you to send your traffic destined for certain ports over the SSH connection to your local machine (possibly to an alternate port). Once you’ve done so, click on the “rmate” link in the preference’s descriptive text to open the rmate script in a TextMate window. ![]() Just verify that the “Accept rmate connections” checkbox is checked, “Access for” is set to “local clients” and note the port number (52698 be default) or set it to one of your choosing. ![]() ![]() As far as TextMate’s concerned, our rmate is local. That’s just fine, because we want to encrypt our file editing activity via SSH tunnel, anyway. On the current TM2 alpha, the default is to enable rmate for local clients, as shown here. Here’s how to get it working using SSH tunneling. This is a nifty little script that will let you edit files on a remote server through your running instance of TextMate 2. Other interesting Windows alternatives to TextMate are Notepad++, Sublime Text, VSCodium and Vim. If that doesnt suit you, our users have ranked more than 100 alternatives to TextMate and loads of them are available for Windows so hopefully you can find a suitable replacement. One really cool thing that was added to TM2 is the rmate script. The best Windows alternative is Visual Studio Code, which is free. I heard TextMate 2 will be released tomorrow and decided to try it out. ![]()
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