Package: wnpp Severity: wishlist Owner: Mike Gabriel <mike.gabr...@das-netzwerkteam.de>
* Package name : remote-logon-service Version : 1.0.1.1 Upstream Author : Mike Gabriel <mike.gabr...@das-netzwerkteam.de> Ted Gould <t...@canonical.com> * URL : https://github.com/ArcticaProject/remote-logon-service * License : GPL-3 Programming Lang: C Description : DBus service for tracking available remote logon servers The Remote Logon DBus Service will be part of bringing Arctica Greeter (derived from Ubuntu's Unity Greeter) to Debian. The service monitors a master broker server (with sub-brokers) and obtains information about available remote desktop servers from the brokers. The service is used from within Arctica Greeter itself. Arctica Greeter provides a remote session logon feature to the user, when remote servers are available. . History: Around 2012, Canonical Ltd. developed a remote logon feature for Unity Greeter that supported FreeRDP logons. Citrix Logons were planned, too, but never finished (IIRC). The corresponding components in Ubuntu are thin-client-config-agent and remote- login-service. . The X2Go project (i.e. me) later on provieded patches for X2Go Sessinn logon support via Unity Greeter, but those patches never got upstreamed. And the UCCS remote logon concept has been discontinued ever since AFAIK. . The continuation (and improvements) of Unity Greeter's remote logon feature will be published under the name Arctica Greeter (i.e., greeter frontend for LightDM). As a UCCS-like server, the X2Go Session Broker can be used. However, in the Arcitca Project's context, we also plan to provide such a brokerage feature which then can be plugged into Arctica Greeter. . The components in Ubuntu are thin-client-config-agent and remote-login-service. The forked projects provide the continuation of those projects in a completely different name space. Thus, the named Ubuntu packages and the forked packages should be co-installable. . Most of the remote logon code has been contributed by Ted Gould from Canonical. Thanks to Ted for this awesome effort on the related components.