+{% comment %}
+Copyright (C) The Arvados Authors. All rights reserved.
+
+SPDX-License-Identifier: CC-BY-SA-3.0
+{% endcomment %}
+
You may now proceed to "adding your key to the Arvados Workbench.":#workbench
h1(#login). Using SSH to log into an Arvados VM
-To see a list of virtual machines that you have access to and determine the name and login information, click on the dropdown menu icon <span class="fa fa-lg fa-user"></span> <span class="caret"></span> in the upper right corner of the top navigation menu to access the user settings menu and click on the menu item *Virtual machines* to go to the Virtual machines page. This page lists the virtual machines you can access. The *hostname* column lists the name of each available VM. The *logins* column will have a list of comma separated values of the form @you@. In this guide the hostname will be *_shell_* and the login will be *_you_*. Replace these with your hostname and login name as appropriate.
+To see a list of virtual machines that you have access to, click on the dropdown menu icon <span class="fa fa-lg fa-user"></span> <span class="caret"></span> in the upper right corner of the top navigation menu to access the user settings menu, then click on the menu item *Virtual machines* to go to the Virtual machines page.
+
+This page lists the virtual machines you can access. The *Host name* column lists the name of each available VM. The *Login name* column lists your login name on that VM. The *Command line* column provides a sample @ssh@ command line.
+At the bottom of the page there may be additional instructions for connecting your specific Arvados instance. If so, follow your site-specific instructions. If there are no site-specific instructions, you can probably connect directly with @ssh@.
+The following are generic instructions. In the examples the login will be *_you_* and the hostname will be *_shell.ClusterID.example.com_* and . Replace these with your login name and hostname as appropriate.