[TriLUG] How do I connect to a remote X client?

Marty Ferguson marty at rtmx.net
Wed Jun 9 09:15:58 EDT 2004


In the past, GLOBAL offered courses where XNEST was part
of the  curriculum, but must of the instructors have been
shitcanned and the courses have probably been dropped.

http://www.xfree86.org/current/Xnest.1.html

The sour grapes leave such a taste in my mouth.
M

-----Original Message-----
From: trilug-bounces at trilug.org [mailto:trilug-bounces at trilug.org]On
Behalf Of sholton at mindspring.com
Sent: Tuesday, June 08, 2004 3:42 PM
To: Triangle Linux Users Group discussion list
Subject: Re: [TriLUG] How do I connect to a remote X client?


Ryan Leathers <ryan.leathers at globalknowledge.com> writes:
> How can I connect to a remote X client? 

Lets start here.  We need to get our terminology straight.
Perhaps the answers will show themselves.

A "client" is an application which wants to draw boxes on glass.
A "server" is an application which services a client, and does the
glass-drawing.  The server runs on the box in front of you, the 
client runs somewhere else.

Generally, you don't "connect to" a client, but rather the client
connects to you.

There's an application (XDM) which manages a display for a host.
It does things like put up an X-based "Login/Password" screen 
and allows you to choose your desktop manager. 

The client which connects to this is called XDMc and the daemon 
which runs this client is XDMcd.

Am I on the right track for what you're looking to do?

> Can I run a Gnome display from
> some remote host in a window inside my default display?  Can I do it in
> a virtual console?

It seems like you want an XDMc on your local box to display the
XDM logon for a remote box, either inside an X-window of a 
local X display, or by creating a seperate X-display on a different
virtual console of the local box.  Is this near right?

I'd never seen a remote X console run in a window, except through
VNC (which you say you don't want to do). I've seen the latter done.
If you did this, you'd be able to do something like ALT-F9 and
have a Gnome desktop from another box; starting x-load (for example)
within that Gnome would show you the load on the remote host..

If I'm understanding you right, you want to investigate XDMcp 
   http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/XDMCP-HOWTO/


Sent: Jun 8, 2004 1:26 PM
To: Triangle Linux Users Group discussion list <trilug at trilug.org>
Subject: Re: [TriLUG] How do I connect to a remote X client?

Let me add one more thing...

I can open a virtual console, log in, and type something like
X :2 -indirect 123.123.123.123 and get a chooser.  I know this gets me
from point A to point B, but it won't do when it comes time to script
this.  How can I get to point B in a script?

Thanks,

Ryan


On Tue, 2004-06-08 at 13:12, Ryan Leathers wrote:
> How can I connect to a remote X client?  Can I run a Gnome display from
> some remote host in a window inside my default display?  Can I do it in
> a virtual console?
> 
> I think I'm groping in the right area but it hasn't dawned on me how to
> do this.
> 
> I have a PC which starts up in runlevel 5 and runs gnome.  I want it to
> do this every time it boots - this part works fine today.  I want to be
> able to connect to some remote host and run full screen (or nearly full
> screen) while retaining the ability to toggle between the two displays. 
> Since I know I will get some well intended suggestions which won't be
> the least bit helpful, here is a list of things I don't want help with:
>  
> I do NOT want to run chooser to do this - I always want my local X on my
> default display when I boot.
> I do not want to tunnel individual x apps through ssh.
> I do not want to use VNC instead.
> 
> FYI, once I understand how to do this I will want to script up a VPN
> client connection followed by an X connection to a remote host.  I know
> how to handle the VPN part already.
> 
> -- 
> Ryan Leathers <ryan.leathers at globalknowledge.com>
> Global Knowledge
-- 
Ryan Leathers <ryan.leathers at globalknowledge.com>
Global Knowledge

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-- 
Steve Holton
sholton at mindspring.com
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