Versions:

  • 22.1
  • 22.0
  • 21.6
  • 21.5
  • 21.4
  • 21.3
  • 21.2.1
  • 21.2
  • 21.1.1
  • 21.1
  • 21.0
  • 20.3
  • 20.2
  • 20.1
  • 19.6
  • 19.5
  • 19.4
  • 19.3.1
  • 19.3
  • 19.2
  • 19.1
  • 19.0.2
  • 19.0.1
  • 18.7
  • 18.6
  • 18.5
  • 18.4
  • 18.3
  • 18.2
  • 18.1.1
  • 18.1
  • 18.0.1
  • 17.4
  • 17.3
  • 17.2
  • 17.1
  • 17.0
  • 16.7
  • 16.6
  • 16.5
  • 16.4.1
  • 16.4
  • 16.3
  • 16.2.1
  • 16.2
  • 16.1
  • 16.0
  • 15.8
  • 15.7.1
  • 15.6
  • 15.5
  • 15.4
  • 15.3
  • 15.2
  • 15.1
  • 15.0.2
  • 15.0
  • 14.2
  • 14.1.1
  • 14.1
  • 14.0
  • 13.4.4
  • 13.4.3
  • 13.4.2
  • 13.4.1
  • 13.4
  • 13.3.2
  • 13.3.1
  • 13.3
  • 13.2
  • 13.1.1
  • 13.0.1
  • 13.0
  • 12.3.5
  • 12.3.4
  • 12.3.3
  • 12.3.2
  • 12.2
  • 12.1
  • 12.0
  • 11.3
  • 11.2
  • 11.1
  • 11.0
  • 10.2.2
  • 10.2
  • 10.1.1
  • 10.1
  • 10.0.4
  • 10.0.3
  • 10.0.2
  • 10.0.1
  • 10.0
  • 9.4.1
  • 9.4
  • 9.3
  • 9.2
  • 9.1
  • 9.0.1
  • 9.0
  • 8.6
  • 8.4
  • 8.3
  • 8.2
  • 1.5.3
  • 1.5.2
  • portable

XPipe 22.1, published by XPipe UG (haftungsbeschränkt), is a remote infrastructure manager that aggregates SSH, PowerShell, Docker, kubectl and other command-line sessions into a single local workspace. The application functions as both a shell connection hub and a remote file manager, letting administrators open terminals, transfer files and chain commands across heterogeneous servers without installing agents on the targets. Because it wraps existing CLI tools already present on the administrator’s workstation, no extra daemons or firewall rules are required on the remote side; credentials are read from standard sources such as ~/.ssh/config, Windows Terminal profiles or cloud identity files, so existing automation scripts continue to work unchanged. Typical use cases include DevOps engineers who need to hop between development containers, staging VMs and production bare-metal, system administrators who maintain mixed Windows/Linux fleets, and site-reliability teams that troubleshoot Kubernetes pods alongside traditional SSH hosts. The program stores connection definitions in a portable vault that can be encrypted and synced, supports tabbed terminals with split-pane layouts, and offers a graphical file tree that mirrors remote filesystems for drag-and-drop uploads or downloads. After 107 incremental releases the current build adds template-based bulk imports, command snippets shared across teams, and an integrated port-forward manager that binds remote services to local loopback addresses. XPipe is categorized as a Network/Remote Administration utility and is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always providing the latest version and enabling batch installation alongside other applications.

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