From: abelahc...@gmail.com
>I want to log in a remote server using xdmcp from my local machine,
>unfortunately there is no chooser in my local login (I use
>lightdm).
>How to add a remote connexion to the list in local login window?
Have you tried any of these packages?
xdm
xrdp
And take a look
Hi,
I want to log in a remote server using xdmcp from my local machine,
unfortunately there is no chooser in my local login (I use lightdm).
How to add a remote connexion to the list in local login window?
I remember 8 or 9 years ago, in the login window (may be with xdm) there
was a remote
On Sun, 5 Apr 2015 18:21:33 +0100
Abdelkader Belahcene wrote:
> Hi,
> I read in the features of lightdm
> "Supports remote login (incoming - XDMCP, VNC, outgoing - XDMCP,
> pluggable)."
>
> But I can't find where to configure it.
>
>
>
>
>
Hi,
I read in the features of lightdm
"Supports remote login (incoming - XDMCP, VNC, outgoing - XDMCP,
pluggable)."
But I can't find where to configure it.
*I want to enter from a local machine running to a remote server using
XDMCP. I did it with without problem from a th
Hi.
On Mon, May 19, 2014 at 04:18:20PM +0800, 釋淨明 wrote:
> Thank you Reco! I'm able to remote login A from B by using the default gnome
> desktop sharing and client, but the problem is if I restart A, than B won't be
> able to remote login, saying "A is closed"
t; I'm a newbie of Debian, I have installed debian with gnome on one of my
> >> machine (call it A), and i want to remote login it from another machine
> >> (call it B) who
> >> is also installed with debian & gnome, and i also want to remote login
> >> m
Thank you Reco! I'm able to remote login A from B by using the default
gnome desktop sharing and client, but the problem is if I restart A, than B
won't be able to remote login, saying "A is closed", do you know how to
solve it?
On Mon, May 19, 2014 at 3:21 PM, Reco wrot
On 5/19/14, Reco wrote:
> On Mon, May 19, 2014 at 03:10:24PM +0800, 釋淨明 wrote:
>> I'm a newbie of Debian, I have installed debian with gnome on one of my
>> machine (call it A), and i want to remote login it from another machine
>> (call it B) who
>> is also inst
Hi.
On Mon, May 19, 2014 at 03:10:24PM +0800, 釋淨明 wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> I'm a newbie of Debian, I have installed debian with gnome on one of my
> machine (call it A), and i want to remote login it from another machine (call
> it B) who
> is also installed with debian &
Dear all,
I'm a newbie of Debian, I have installed debian with gnome on one of my
machine (call it A), and i want to remote login it from another machine
(call it B) who is also installed with debian & gnome, and i also want to
remote login machine A from another machine (call it
On Mon, 30 Jan 2012 01:01:02 -0500, Rick Thomas wrote:
> How do I get the gnome3 greeter to give me a menu of hosts on the local
> network who are willing to accept an xdmcp login?
(...)
I don't know if that's still an option because gdm3 is an ongoing work
and there have been design changes as
tions" that has one option called "Remote login via
> xdmcp". When I choose that option, I get a list of hosts on the local
> network who are willing to accept logins via xdmcp.
>
> But on my "wheeze" machine, first of all there's no "Actions" dr
How do I get the gnome3 greeter to give me a menu of hosts on the local
network who are willing to accept an xdmcp login?
On my "squeeze" machines running gdm, at the login screen there is a
drop-down called "Actions" that has one option called "Remote login via
xd
I've been on holiday, so thats why I didn't reply earlier
On 13/09/10 04:11, brownh wrote:
Allan, thanks for the input. I'm about to change my location, and will
not be in a position to take any corrective action, but your points
I'll keep in mind when I return.
Alan Chandler writes:
I can g
Allan, thanks for the input. I'm about to change my location, and will
not be in a position to take any corrective action, but your points
I'll keep in mind when I return.
Alan Chandler writes:
> I can give my domain an ip-address, and I can also give subdomains
> such as www.hartley-consultants
On 12/09/10 02:49, brownh wrote:
All this is new to me, and I'll not be able to implement anything like
that before I must shortly leave.
But the whole situation strikes me as odd. Surely innumerable people
rely on a web hosting service to provide email services as well, and
yet it would seem n
on Sun, 12 Sep 2010 00:08:07 -0400, brownh
<87hbhva9js@teufel.historicalmaterialism.info> attacked their terminal with
+Morgan Gangwere <0.fracta...@gmail.com> writes:
+
+> on Sat, 11 Sep 2010 15:38:04 -0400, brownh
+> <871v90ax5v@teufel.historicalmaterialism.info> attacked their
+> termina
Morgan Gangwere <0.fracta...@gmail.com> writes:
> on Sat, 11 Sep 2010 15:38:04 -0400, brownh
> <871v90ax5v@teufel.historicalmaterialism.info> attacked their
> terminal with [snip]
>
> Random Blithering Curiosity... Is the gateway a NAPT?
NAT loopback is not enabled on my router. Not sure this
David Jardine writes:
> I'm afraid I've forgotten - or didn't read - earlier details. Have
> you got a public IP address?
My router does. It seems it has a dynamic address assigned to it by my
ISP. I guess this is what you mean by a public IP address.
> Can you ping the domain name from outsid
On 9/11/2010 9:49 PM, brownh wrote:
David Jardine writes:
Connection closed by 216.239.138.216
Haines, I have the feeling you've got this all wrong. Your site is
being hosted and any connection to it goes to the webhoster's site.
All your local hosts are unconnected to this site. You are
David Jardine writes:
>> > Connection closed by 216.239.138.216
>
> Haines, I have the feeling you've got this all wrong. Your site is
> being hosted and any connection to it goes to the webhoster's site.
> All your local hosts are unconnected to this site. You are trying
> to log into your
> > Connection closed by 216.239.138.216
Haines, I have the feeling you've got this all wrong. Your site is
being hosted and any connection to it goes to the webhoster's site.
All your local hosts are unconnected to this site. You are trying
to log into your site on the webhoster's server.
brownh wrote:
>At present, I have three or four hosts on a LAN, and I can ssh from
>each one to the others. The problem arises because of what I want to
>do in the immediate future. One of the hosts on the LAN is a laptop,
>and I'll be taking it into the field and would like to ssh from it via
>In
Wow, I certainly managed to be obscure! I tried to help David out a
bit, and here respond to your uncertainty.
Claudius Hubig writes:
> I’m sorry I have to ask again. You are trying to connect to a host
> "historicalmaterialism.info" and login as user "haines"? Why and how
> do you differentiate
on Sat, 11 Sep 2010 15:38:04 -0400, brownh
<871v90ax5v@teufel.historicalmaterialism.info> attacked their terminal with
[snip]
Random Blithering Curiosity... Is the gateway a NAPT?
I had this problem for a while where I would be fine on the inside, then as
soon as I went to the outside, I'd ge
On Sat, Sep 11, 2010 at 03:38:04PM -0400, brownh wrote:
> Sorry that I didn't make myself clear. I've got two situations: a) my
> present sitution in which I communicate between hosts on my local LAN,
> b) a future situation (to which I'd like to arrive in a day or so) of
> taking a laptop into the
Sorry that I didn't make myself clear. I've got two situations: a) my
present sitution in which I communicate between hosts on my local LAN,
b) a future situation (to which I'd like to arrive in a day or so) of
taking a laptop into the field and using ssh to access a home-base
host on the LAN.
In
On Sat, Sep 11, 2010 at 12:57:53PM -0400, brownh wrote:
> David Jardine writes:
>
> > That ALL: LOCAL entry is there by default. I don't know much about
> > this myself, but
>
> That would explain its presence on my lenny box, but my newly
> installed sqeeze box has nothing uncommented in that
brownh wrote:
>Claudius, thank you for troubling with my problem.
>
>The problem, again: I have no trouble logging a client host
>(bro...@teufel) [you are not old enough to remember Fritz and Rainer]
>with a server host (hai...@engels) over the LAN, but not over the
>Internet,
I’m sorry I have to
David Jardine writes:
> That ALL: LOCAL entry is there by default. I don't know much about
> this myself, but
That would explain its presence on my lenny box, but my newly
installed sqeeze box has nothing uncommented in that file. So I guess
squeeze changed the default.
>From the manual, ALL:L
On Sat, Sep 11, 2010 at 10:00:12AM -0400, brownh wrote:
> David Jardine writes:
>
> > Have you got /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny configured to allow
> > access from outside your local network?
>
> David, good question. I had understood /etc/hosts.allow only as a way
> to define a selecti
David Jardine writes:
> Have you got /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny configured to allow
> access from outside your local network?
David, good question. I had understood /etc/hosts.allow only as a way
to define a selection, and so left it empty for the server, for it
should allow any host
On Sat, Sep 11, 2010 at 07:15:53AM -0400, brownh wrote:
> Claudius, thank you for troubling with my problem.
>
> The problem, again: I have no trouble logging a client host
> (bro...@teufel) [you are not old enough to remember Fritz and Rainer]
> with a server host (hai...@engels) over the LAN, bu
Claudius, thank you for troubling with my problem.
The problem, again: I have no trouble logging a client host
(bro...@teufel) [you are not old enough to remember Fritz and Rainer]
with a server host (hai...@engels) over the LAN, but not over the
Internet, the client user account (bro...@historica
Claudius Hubig wrote:
>Could you post the file /etc/ssh/sshd_config from the server and the
>files /etc/ssh/ssh_config and ~/.config from the client? You could
I’m sorry, I meant to write ~/.ssh/config.
>also try running ssh with -vv which usually outputs more information.
Best regards,
Claudi
brownh wrote:
>Sorry for a FAQ, but I searched around without sucess. I'm runing
>debian a local LAN and can ssh between the hosts without a
>problem. However, I intend to use one host remotely (a laptop that I
>want to use to access my home machine). I do not have password
>encryption set up. My
Sorry for a FAQ, but I searched around without sucess. I'm runing
debian a local LAN and can ssh between the hosts without a
problem. However, I intend to use one host remotely (a laptop that I
want to use to access my home machine). I do not have password
encryption set up. My LAN is three machine
On 2009-09-03 06:08, Nico Schottelius wrote:
Ron Johnson [Thu, Sep 03, 2009 at 05:39:07AM -0500]:
On 2009-09-03 05:02, Nico Schottelius wrote:
- login fails for root (who is not in ldap) and ldap users
- I cannot login locally as root!
I thought you said you couldn't *remotely* log in as root
Ron Johnson [Thu, Sep 03, 2009 at 05:39:07AM -0500]:
> On 2009-09-03 05:02, Nico Schottelius wrote:
> >- login fails for root (who is not in ldap) and ldap users
> >
> >- I cannot login locally as root!
>
> I thought you said you couldn't *remotely* log in as root.
It fails for *both* ways until
On 2009-09-03 05:02, Nico Schottelius wrote:
Hello!
As I reported in Bug 541188 [0], the ssh login to nodes with
ldap enabled for passwd, group and netgroup stops to work after some time.
Steve Langasek recommended to write it to this mailinglist.
Anyone a good hint what could be the reason fo
Hello!
As I reported in Bug 541188 [0], the ssh login to nodes with
ldap enabled for passwd, group and netgroup stops to work after some time.
Steve Langasek recommended to write it to this mailinglist.
Anyone a good hint what could be the reason for it?
For now I removed "[UNAVAIL=return]" fro
Dear Users
We have an Linux 7.2 server that has running Frame Relay links with an
network element . As the network element is locted at the far site , we need
to be able to have remote access to this network element right from the
Linux server remote login . Please be informed that we have
On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 06:48:37PM +0200, Micha Feigin wrote:
> I'm trying to setup xdmcp login on one of my servers.
>
> This server has two network interfaces (actually 4, but two active).
>
> I'm trying to log in to X using xdmcp (enabled via gdm config) from two
> clients, one connected direc
I'm trying to setup xdmcp login on one of my servers.
This server has two network interfaces (actually 4, but two active).
I'm trying to log in to X using xdmcp (enabled via gdm config) from two
clients, one connected directly via gigabit ethernet and the other over 100mb
network via an intermidi
Serena Cantor wrote:
> Should I install ssh and nfs and read their manuals?
> Thanks!
I use krusader, sftp protocol for quickly copying couple of files across
different machines. It gives a nice two pane graphical user interface which
is very easy to work with. For more complicated stuff (ex :- m
Thanks! I intend to remote login from Linux(client) to Linux(server) and run
commands on the
server and transfer files between server and client.
--- KS <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Serena Cantor wrote:
> > Should I install ssh and nfs and read their manuals?
> > Thanks!
&g
* Serena Cantor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2007 Sep 23 21:28 -0500]:
> Should I install ssh and nfs and read their manuals?
> Thanks!
sshfs and fuse.
You're welcome.
- Nate >>
--
Wireless | Amateur Radio Station N0NB | Successfully Microsoft
Amateur radio exams; ham radio; Linux info @
hell, or do you *really* just
> need to transfer files?
>
> Typically, though, the ssh package will be what you want. In
> addition to remote login shells via /usr/bin/ssh, it offers remote
> copy via /usr/bin/scp. sftp should be in there, too.
>
> And then there are th
transfer files?
Typically, though, the ssh package will be what you want. In
addition to remote login shells via /usr/bin/ssh, it offers remote
copy via /usr/bin/scp. sftp should be in there, too.
And then there are the old cleartext standbys ftp, rlogin and rsh.
- --
Ron Johnson, Jr.
Jefferson
Serena Cantor wrote:
Should I install ssh and nfs and read their manuals?
Thanks!
Tonight's top picks. What will you watch tonight? Preview the hottest shows on
Yahoo! TV.
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Jus
Serena Cantor wrote:
> Should I install ssh and nfs and read their manuals?
> Thanks!
>
ssh can be an option and nfs can be another. Specify what you mean by
"remote login and copy files"? Remote login can be done by various
methods. What are the client and remote server r
Should I install ssh and nfs and read their manuals?
Thanks!
Tonight's top picks. What will you watch tonight? Preview the hottest shows on
Yahoo! TV.
http://tv.yahoo.com/
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Hi,
at login I can choose from KDM under "Remote Login"
other hosts in our network (all running Debian Etch).
When I choose a host, however, its login manager
is not started but the screen returns to the list with
hosts.
What setting are required on the remote hosts to allow
a re
Amish Rughoonundon wrote:
Hi,
I would like to do something only when i remote login to my debian
box. I would like to run export DISPLAY=[client ip]:0.0 but i don't
want linux to do this if I login on the box itself. Thanks
Amish
I take it you log in using ssh? If so, try ssh -X or s
What about ssh -X [EMAIL PROTECTED]
this enables x11 forwarding for session
Kegan Holtzhausen
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Hi,
I would like to do something only when i remote login to my debian box. I
would like to run export DISPLAY=[client ip]:0.0 but i don't want linux to
do this if I login on the box itself. Thanks
Amish
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe
On Fri, Oct 12, 2001 at 01:06:28AM -0400, dman wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 11, 2001 at 01:22:06PM +0800, haheho wrote:
> | Few days ago, I installed debian 2.2 r3.
> | But, I can not telnet to that computer from another computer.
> | Could anyone help? Tell me how should I do! Please!
>
> Don't use telne
On Thu, Oct 11, 2001 at 01:22:06PM +0800, haheho wrote:
| Hi,
|
| I am new to debian and linux.
| Few days ago, I installed debian 2.2 r3.
| But, I can not telnet to that computer from another computer.
| Could anyone help? Tell me how should I do! Please!
|
| Below is my install step for remote
Hi,
I am new to debian and linux.
Few days ago, I installed debian 2.2 r3.
But, I can not telnet to that computer from another computer.
Could anyone help? Tell me how should I do! Please!
Below is my install step for remote log in,
1. apt-get install telnet
2. apt-get install xinetd,and content
On Sat, 30 Jun 2001 17:59:30 +0200, Daniel Lutz wrote:
>
> Hello
>
> I'm trying to start an X server so that it gets its login screen
> from a remote machine running gdm. But I haven't yet managed to
> make it work.
>
> The following machines are used:
> asterix (192.168.1.1), Debian GNU/Linux u
On Sat, Jun 30, 2001 at 05:59:30PM +0200, Daniel Lutz wrote:
| Hello
|
| I'm trying to start an X server so that it gets its login screen
| from a remote machine running gdm. But I haven't yet managed to
| make it work.
|
| The following machines are used:
| asterix (192.168.1.1), Debian GNU/Linu
Hello
I'm trying to start an X server so that it gets its login screen
from a remote machine running gdm. But I haven't yet managed to
make it work.
The following machines are used:
asterix (192.168.1.1), Debian GNU/Linux unstable, gdm
obelix (192.168.1.2), Debian GNU/Linux potato, X server
On
> "James" == James D Freels <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
James> stty: standard input: Invalid argument
Could you look in the login scripts (/etc/profile, ~/.profile) for the
command which causes this error and post it here?
--
G. ``Iggy'' Geens - ICQ: #64109250
Home: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> - Wo
When I perform a remote login using rsh or ssh to some of my Debian/Linux
machines (but not all), I get the following error message to the console:
stty: standard input: Invalid argument
How can I fix the machine configuration so that it does not have this problem
and the error message will
will trillich wrote:
>
> we're lucky that webster and his cronies didn't get their
> wish to start a whole new langauge after the u.s. split
> off from the u.k...
>
> if you wanna discuss bonehead spellings, how about
> calliope?
> enough?
> women?
> once?
>
On Fri, Nov 10, 2000 at 01:37:02PM +1100, Damon Muller wrote:
> Quoth Moritz Schulte,
> on the laptop, run `ssh-keygen', leaving the password blank[1]. That
> should create a file called `~/.ssh/identity.pub'. Copy that file to the
> desktop (eg., scp ~/.ssh/identity.pub desktop:/tmp), and add the
On Fri, Nov 10, 2000 at 01:37:02PM +1100, Damon Muller wrote:
> Quoth Moritz Schulte,
> > SSH (Secure SHell) is a very nice telnet replacement, which uses
> > encryption and keys. Try apt-get install ssh...
>
> I'll second this and add something to it.
>
> If you have ssh running on both the la
Quoth Moritz Schulte,
> SSH (Secure SHell) is a very nice telnet replacement, which uses
> encryption and keys. Try apt-get install ssh...
I'll second this and add something to it.
If you have ssh running on both the laptop and desktop, you can set up
ssh to use public key verification, so you d
Andrew Dwight Dixon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> How can I set up these machines so that I can log into the desktop
> from my laptop so I can get rid of the large monitor on top of my
> desk?
SSH (Secure SHell) is a very nice telnet replacement, which uses
encryption and keys. Try apt-get instal
Hi All,
I have a small network at my home consisting of an old desktop machine
and my laptop. I use the desktop for IP Masquerading and a few other
things. My questionis this. How can I set up these machines so that
I can log into the desktop from my laptop so I can get rid of the large
monitor
On Sun, Sep 26, 1999 at 11:01:43AM -0700, j way wrote:
> Hi, again.
> I tried the suggestions provided(& tnx) but without change. My login
> looks like this at the remote terminal:
>
> Debian GNU/Linux 2.1 Struggles ttyS1
> Struggles login: jway
> Password: (keyed in)
> (time passes.)
> Login
Hi, again.
I tried the suggestions provided(& tnx) but without change. My login
looks like this at the remote terminal:
Debian GNU/Linux 2.1 Struggles ttyS1
Struggles login: jway
Password: (keyed in)
(time passes.)
Login timed out after 60 seconds.
Any more suggestions? Thanks. -John.
On Sat, Sep 25, 1999 at 08:04:13AM -0700, j way wrote:
> Hi, login from ttyS1 is rejected while the same username & password are
> accepted
> on the main console. Is there some further permission required to
> enable?
> Thanks for any help, John.
Well, you can't login as root on ttyS1 unless you
On Sat, 25 Sep 1999, j way wrote:
> Hi, login from ttyS1 is rejected while the same username &
> password are accepted on the main console. Is there some
> further permission required to enable?
You may need to edit the file /etc/login.access. See the man
page login.access(5).
--
Jean Pierre
Hi, login from ttyS1 is rejected while the same username & password are
accepted
on the main console. Is there some further permission required to
enable?
Thanks for any help, John.
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Gordon Henderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Theres lots of excellent reasons to want to do it though. Eg. I want to
>copy a file to a dozen other Linux boxes and now I have to use scp which
>is a lot slower than rcp. Recently I had to move 20GB's of data from one
>
On Fri, Jul 09, 1999 at 11:54:32PM +0100, Gordon Henderson wrote:
> to use ssh which encrypted everything and ran really really slow. I was
> not impressed when I found out that the powers that be behind Debian had
Does "scp -c none" do much for performance?
--
Mark Brown mailto:[EMAIL PROTECT
On Fri, 9 Jul 1999, Mark Brown wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 09, 1999 at 06:53:13PM +0200, Rudy Broersma wrote:
>
> > But in RedHat 6.0 this doesn't work at all... Now,,, anybody got any ideas?
>
> ssh? su? In general, there's no really good reason to log in as root
> directly other than on the console
On Fri, Jul 09, 1999 at 06:53:13PM +0200, Rudy Broersma wrote:
> But in RedHat 6.0 this doesn't work at all... Now,,, anybody got any ideas?
ssh? su? In general, there's no really good reason to log in as root
directly other than on the console.
--
Mark Brown mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Tryi
>>
>> But in RedHat 6.0 this doesn't work at all... Now,,, anybody got any ideas?
>
>Security issues aside ... you can add these lines to /etc/securetty:
>0
>1
>2
>3
>4
>5
>6
>7
>8
>9
>Yes, that's 0..9 each on its own line. Why? I got this advice by
On newer kernels ( I bet that Redhat 6.0 ha
On Fri, Jul 09, 1999 at 06:53:13PM +0200, Rudy Broersma wrote:
>
> Since I updated my RedHat 5.2 box to RedHat 6.0, I got some problems.
>
> For example, in RH 5.2 I edited /etc/securetty and aded pty1 and pty2, and
> ttyp0, ttypS1, ttypS2 etc, etc. So I could login with root at terminals and
> t
Hi Y'all,
Since I updated my RedHat 5.2 box to RedHat 6.0, I got some problems.
For example, in RH 5.2 I edited /etc/securetty and aded pty1 and pty2, and
ttyp0, ttypS1, ttypS2 etc, etc. So I could login with root at terminals and
telnet sessions.
But in RedHat 6.0 this doesn't work at all... No
On Sat, 24 Apr 1999, Luis Villa wrote:
> 1) I am logging in remotely to my machine (using xdm) from my laptop on a
> regular basis. For a variety of reasons (speed, resolution, etc.) I prefer
> to use enlightenment on my laptop and windowmaker on my desktop. Has
> anyone worked out a clean way to
On Sat, Apr 24, 1999 at 03:12:52PM -0400, Luis Villa wrote:
> 2) Simpler :) Where is the TERM definition for xterm stored, and is it
> safe to change it? I'm pretty sick of logging into my school account from
> my box and getting the message "Terminal type "xterm-debian", is unknown."
> and then ha
Before I go further, I'd just like to note that I'm only subscribed to
the compressed version of the list, so please cc: copies to me, otherwise
I might not get them for a while. Thanks.
Two separate and basically unrelated questions:
1) I am logging in remotely to my machine (using xdm) from m
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