![]() It’s a good idea to keep the screen connected while you test everything is working. Not all USB-C cables work, and we didn’t get it to work with the Apple USB-C cable. It should reboot as normal (with the screen resolution size from earlier). If all is working correctly, you will see your Raspberry Pi as a new Ethernet connection in iPadOS’s Settings app. You should see a new option, Ethernet, beneath WiFi. Click Pi4 and you will see the Pi4 USB Device settings. You’re now ready to use SSH and VNC to access Raspberry Pi from your iPad Pro. VNC Viewer is available from the App Store. Click Save and click Connect.Įnter ‘pi’ in the Username field and your password, then click Continue.Įnter 10.55.0.1 in the address field and give it a name (we called ours Raspberry Pi 4 iPad Pro). You will now see your desktop in VNC on iPad Pro. ![]() The Screens app is a better VNC solution because you can point and click the pointer directly on the screen (instead of pushing a virtual pointer around). You’ll need to adjust your VNC Server settings to use it. ![]() Open VNC Server on Raspberry Pi (click on the VNC Server icon) and click on the menu icon, then choose Options. Change the authentication from UNIX password to VNC.Ĭlick Users & Permissions and click Password. Termius tutorials password#Įnter a custom VNC password in both fields and click OK.īack in Screens, click the ‘+’ icon and choose New Screen. Click Custom and enter 10.55.0.1 in the Address field. Change the operating system to Raspberry Pi, and enter ‘pi’ in the Username field. Click on the screen icon to start a connection. There are many SSH apps from iPadOS, and we find Termius to be our favourite. Open Termius and click the Add icon (‘+’) and choose New Host. If ("".GetType().Equals($propval.Now click Save and click on the new Host to connect to it. "Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00" | Out-File putty.reg #$registry_path = "HKCU:\Software\SimonTatham\PuTTY\Sessions" $registry_path = "HKCU:\Software\SimonTatham" # Examine cmd.ps1 to ensure it doesn't do anything nasty Use the below scripts at your own risk, and be prepared to have your IT department re-image your machine and ask you uncomfortable questions about what you were doing. Warning: messing with the registry like this is a Bad Idea™, and I don't really know what I'm doing. reg file and will import cleanly if you have permission, otherwise use import.ps1 to load it. ![]() I put together the below powershell scripts for exporting and importing PuTTY settings. When I tried the other solutions I got this error: Registry editing has been disabled by your administrator. Note: These commands will not export the related SSH keys. Note: do not replace SimonTatham with your username. PowerShell: reg import putty-sessions.reg Alternative ways: cmd.exe, requires elevated command prompt: regedit /i putty-sessions.reg Only sessions (produces file putty-sessions.reg on the Desktop): reg export HKCU\Software\SimonTatham\PuTTY\Sessions (::GetFolderPath("Desktop") + "\putty-sessions.reg")Īll settings except ssh keys (produces file putty.reg on the Desktop): reg export HKCU\Software\SimonTatham (::GetFolderPath("Desktop") + "\putty.reg")ĭouble-click on the *.reg file and accept the import. Only sessions (produces file putty-sessions.reg on the Desktop): regedit /e "%USERPROFILE%\Desktop\putty-sessions.reg" HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\SimonTatham\PuTTY\SessionsĪll settings except ssh keys (produces file putty.reg on the Desktop): regedit /e "%USERPROFILE%\Desktop\putty.reg" HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\SimonTatham Export cmd.exe, requires elevated prompt due to regedit:
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