In searching for a way to stay connected to a server via SSH when the server had a 10 minute timeout, I came across this Stack Overflow post:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/13390710/mac-terminals-how-to-keep-alive
The question has been closed (not removed) for being off topic. The question matches my needs and an answer has been supplied with over 50 upvotes! Wow it must be the correct answer!? But it is not. The answer is incorrect.
The original question looked like this
You can define that you want to keep the connection alive in the ssh configuration. You have to edit (create if it does not exist):
~/.ssh/config
Add these two lines to it:
ServerAliveInterval 300
ServerAliveCountMax 36
The value ServerAliveInterval
defines the interval in seconds between two noop operations that keeps to connection alive. It is 5 minutes in this case.
The value ServerAliveCountMax
defines the number of times the noop is sent. In this case the connection will be kept open for 3 hours.
However, this incorrect - The serverAliveCountMax variable doesn't specify a count of packets sent - it's just the number of times you try to connect once the server goes down. The serverAlive will run indefinitely - it will not stop after count * interval amount of seconds....
I was able to edit the answer to be correct, but this goes against the Stack Overflow mentality of best answer voting since I am forced to only edit the wrong answer, and cannot get credit for creating the correct answer, or fixing the answer in a different submission (without the comments on the incorrect answer).
Do you feel this workflow is broken? Should we be able to suggest a correct answer if an answer is incorrect - allowing voting to show it is indeed incorrect?
Note that if you click the link at the top of this post, you will see my corrected, edited answer (pending peer review).