My company uses a certain product which forces me to use a jumphost / ssh proxy. When connecting to a server I have to type "ssh myuser@technicaluser@targethost@jumphost" everytime. I tried to simplify this by editing my ssh_config and putting this into the file: Host targethost ProxyJump technicaluser@jumphost These lines are recognized but don't work like intended because all that changes is that ssh now asks for the password of the technicaluser (for which I don't have a password due to security design). When I run the ssh command with the three at signs this works fine, all I'm prompted for is the password of myuser. I tried to find out more about the working solution but didn't even find a name for this. What is this syntax called and what would be the equivalent for ssh_config ? (I want to use ssh_config because I would prefer having to type less and having a setup that works for all other applications that make use of ssh too (git, ansible, ...) If you are interested in more details I have an open answer on Stack Exchange which contains log files (https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/413285/hardwire-jump-host-in-ssh-config) _______________________________________________ openssh-unix-dev mailing list openssh-unix-dev@xxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.mindrot.org/mailman/listinfo/openssh-unix-dev