Please disregard this message. Due to lack of caffine I over looked a very simple (and in the document too) rule for starting gnome. for other's FYI (incase anyone else is lacking caffine or sleep) replace twm with exec gnome-session & Thanks -----Original Message----- From: Jenkins, Jeremiah [mailto:jeremiah.jenkins@xxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Thursday, June 10, 2004 1:55 PM To: 'For users of Fedora Core releases' Subject: RE: Remote Desktop (vncviewer)? (WAS: Remote X server login) I have been working for some time on getting VNC to work properly (going from windows or other linux box to linux box). I had the same problem as below, but was able to get kde to load. but, I can not get gnome to load. Anyone have any ideas why "startkde" would work but "startx" wouldn't work in the ~/.vnc/xstartup bash? I'm using version 3.3.7 Thanks in Advance Jeremiah -----Original Message----- From: Patrick Chiang [mailto:patrick@xxxxxxxxx] Sent: Thursday, June 10, 2004 12:59 PM To: For users of Fedora Core releases Subject: Re: Remote Desktop (vncviewer)? (WAS: Remote X server login) I don't know if my approach is good or not, at least it already helped me to build a successful vnc connection. I start vncserver as a normal user, and ... that's it! And later on I can use viewer.exe on a windows to connect my vncserver without problem. However default ~/.vnc/xstart bash script file only start a twm desktop for you, I manually modify that file - by umcomment the first 2 lines and comment the rest of settings. that's what I do to build my vnc environment :) HTH. Patrick å ä, 2004-06-09 20:39, Julian Underwood åéï > Does anyone know how to start vncserver on the *console* of the remote > machine? I've had it so I can login and start a few apps, then go off > to another machine and see the entire console desktop (i.e. background > picture and all), remotely via vncviewer. I forgot how I did it > though. Is this possibly achieved by starting the vncserver somehow > before the user is prompted to login? It would be cool to have > vncserver work in such a way that it would start and supposed the remote > machine is sitting on the GUI login screen, the user could then proceed > to login as if they were sitting right in front of the unit. > > I have vncserver starting as a daemon, but doesn't seem to work in this > fashion. > > Ideas? > > TIA, > > Julian > > > > On Tue, 2004-06-08 at 10:45, Ben Stringer wrote: > > On Wed, 2004-06-09 at 00:17, David Carter wrote: > > > Can anyone tell me how to enable rlogin and use Xserver remotely? > > > > Presumably you have a good reason not to use ssh, which is far more > > secure and handles the remoting of X apps very nicely, _so_... > > > > To enable rlogin, edit /etc/xinetd.d/rlogin and set disable to "no". > > Reload (or HUP) the xinetd service. > > > > To use a remote xserver, do the following: > > > > localhost$ xhost +remotehost > > localhost$ rlogin remotehost > > remotehost$ export DISPLAY=localhost:0 > > remotehost$ xclock & > > > > You should see the xclock appear on localhost's primary display. > > > > Cheers, Ben > > > > > -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list