I've been looking for a Linux clipboard manager to use over SSH but they all error out with for example (on running SSH in Windows Warp to access a LAN Linux box):
echo "doodah" | xclip -selection c
Error: Can't open display: (null)
Here I am trying to copy to the X-11 clipboard in order to paste elsewhere inside the Linux box -- hope that's not too confusing!
Will your (eventual) clipboard manager work over SSH for this use case?
Interesting idea. Parcellite works better for me though. It's been around forever, captures both 'select' and 'copy' and can paste with a middle click or Ctl-v with or without formatting.
Klipper is great if you're using KDE and prefer something integrated with your desktop environment. It gives you a history, popup UI, and mouse-driven selection.
ClipCapsule is more minimal and focused on a keyboard-only workflow. The idea is that you can hit something like CTRL + SHIFT + 3 and instantly move that item to the top of your clipboard stack, so the next CTRL + V pastes it. No popups, no menus,just fast switching.
It’s also built in Go and Wails, and listens for raw keyboard events (currently X11-only), so it works outside of any particular desktop environment. Still early, but it’s aimed at people who prefer keeping their hands on the keyboard.
(The exception likely being Gnome, which seems to be very set against implementing protocols allowing generic applications like this to work)
I've been looking for a Linux clipboard manager to use over SSH but they all error out with for example (on running SSH in Windows Warp to access a LAN Linux box):
Here I am trying to copy to the X-11 clipboard in order to paste elsewhere inside the Linux box -- hope that's not too confusing!Will your (eventual) clipboard manager work over SSH for this use case?
https://userbase.kde.org/Klipper
ClipCapsule is more minimal and focused on a keyboard-only workflow. The idea is that you can hit something like CTRL + SHIFT + 3 and instantly move that item to the top of your clipboard stack, so the next CTRL + V pastes it. No popups, no menus,just fast switching.
It’s also built in Go and Wails, and listens for raw keyboard events (currently X11-only), so it works outside of any particular desktop environment. Still early, but it’s aimed at people who prefer keeping their hands on the keyboard.