But with winscp you can have several sessions opened at once or close the first session and reuse the window for another. When storing the opened session I did install winscp on a new install and then imported the registry settings as described in the link i provided
Kendall Karnival Nudes: The Internet EXPLODES! - Truth or Fiction
However, when i ran winscp, my previous sessions wouldn't show up.
When you're using scp you're technically not logged in, since your shell on the remote side was not spawned as such
To trace such things you'd need to utilize process accounting, a package called psacct can provide you with the level of logging if that's what you're after. To configure your session, start winscp, and then use the login dialog that opens It can be invoked also later to open additional sessions Login dialog also shows automatically on startup and when the last session is closed, by default.
You can switch this option in your winscp preferences Options > preferences > storage > automatic ini file or custom ini file to save all the logins in an ini file instead. I want to open winscp gui and have it open a stored session automatically, need it for a windows shortcut to a stored session I was hoping this could be done using a commandline option.
Although you can configure a session manually every time you connect, more convenient is to store your frequently used session configurations into a site list
To store session configuration use save button on the login dialog. So if you have an invalid stored session in putty with the same name as your winscp stored site, the open in putty function won't work, as it tries to open that invalid site. Winscp then still starts on the monitor, making its window invisible On windows 10, go to settings > system > display and check that you recognize all monitors listed there.
In the save session as site dialog you specify the name of a site for your session configuration You will get the dialog either after clicking the save button on the login dialog