This section describes how to get an encrypted connection to a
      remote MySQL server with SSH. The information was provided by
      David Carlson <dcarlson@mplcomm.com>.
- Install an SSH client on your Windows machine. For a comparison of SSH clients, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_SSH_clients. 
- Start your Windows SSH client. Set - Host_Name =. Set- yourmysqlserver_URL_or_IP- userid=to log in to your server. This- your_userid- useridvalue might not be the same as the user name of your MySQL account.
- Set up port forwarding. Either do a remote forward (Set - local_port: 3306,- remote_host:,- yourmysqlservername_or_ip- remote_port: 3306) or a local forward (Set- port: 3306,- host: localhost,- remote port: 3306).
- Save everything, otherwise you must redo it the next time. 
- Log in to your server with the SSH session you just created. 
- On your Windows machine, start some ODBC application (such as Access). 
- Create a new file in Windows and link to MySQL using the ODBC driver the same way you normally do, except type in - localhostfor the MySQL host server, not- yourmysqlservername.
At this point, you should have an ODBC connection to MySQL, encrypted using SSH.