Remote X?

Gromitigo gromitigo at gmail.com
Mon Mar 27 01:49:46 UTC 2006


Thank you for the very detailed response!
After a couple of conversations, I think i'll just use the remote
desktop that comes with it (i was unaware it was there when I wrote
in).
It'll be a fileserver.  Old PC, won't have monitor, keyboard, etc.
Knowthing that, do you have any suggestions?  For instance, to do
certain things at startup?  Not sure what script gets run when you
boot...when you log in to X, does it run you .bash file?

On 3/26/06, Alan McKinnon <alan at linuxholdings.co.za> wrote:
> On Sunday 26 March 2006 18:43, Gromitigo wrote:
> > Is there a way to view the desktop over the network like VNC?
> > I'm wanting to set up a ubuntu server but it won't have a monitor,
> > keyboard, etc.
> > The maching I'll be using to connect from is running WinXP.
> > I need a way to get to the GUI, telneting to the command line to do
> > things on the server isn't an option for what I need it to do.
>
> You have three options:
>
> 1. Export the entire desktop to the XP machine using VNC. There are a
> whole range of clients and servers to choose from on both Linux and
> XP. With this method you get a Window on the XP box and inside this
> window is an Ubuntu desktop, complete with all running apps, menus,
> panels, etc. You connect from the Windows machine using VNC and away
> you go.
>
> 2. Run individual apps on the Ubuntu machine, and instead of them
> being displayed on it's local screen using the local keyboard and
> mouse, the app displays on the XP machine. This is called X
> forwarding and is a built in feature of X (the gui portion of Linux).
> To do this you need to have an X-server running on the Windows
> machine - CygWin is one choice, there are others. This method runs
> one Linux app in a Windows window as opposed to the entire desktop.
> Using PuTty on the Windows machine, you connect to the Ubuntu machine
> and login. Then start the Ubuntu app and send it's display to the
> Windows machine.
>
> 3. Terminal server. Unless oyu need many clients, this is probably
> overdone for your needs.
>
> Which of these options suits your needs best?
>
> --
> Alan McKinnon
> alan at linuxholdings dot co dot za
> +27 82, double three seven, one nine three five
>
> --
> ubuntu-users mailing list
> ubuntu-users at lists.ubuntu.com
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>




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