1. whether your IP is persistent (ie you can reuse the same socket)
2. your SSH keep alive settings
3. and how quickly your OS can wake up it’s network stack
If the socket persists, then it should be possible to allow SSH to survive longer periods of network inactivity given the right keep alive settings.
When I used to work with on prem systems, I’d run non-standard ssh keep alive so I could bounce network switches without losing access to servers sat in between.
1. whether your IP is persistent (ie you can reuse the same socket)
2. your SSH keep alive settings
3. and how quickly your OS can wake up it’s network stack
If the socket persists, then it should be possible to allow SSH to survive longer periods of network inactivity given the right keep alive settings.
When I used to work with on prem systems, I’d run non-standard ssh keep alive so I could bounce network switches without losing access to servers sat in between.