Providing the X server is allowing TCP domain connections and accepts
the MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 over TCP connections, getting the MIT-MAGIC-
COOKIE-1 to the remote host is relatively easy.  The xauth on the
console host can see the MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 and can be used to copy it
into the .Xauthority file in the users home directory.  Thereafter
remote applications will automatically pick it up from the user's (NFS
shared) home directory on any other hosts they need to use.

We have seen many of our applications where the overhead of the
encryption is simply massive and combined with the latency of the
continuous context switching to the SSH process to encrypt the data
becomes utterly unacceptable.  Granted one particular application
involves synchronising video feeds from multiple video camera captures
performed by multiple hosts but in this and other roles X11 is up to the
task; tunnelled/encrypted X11 is far too slow and is not suitable for
purpose.

Regards, Bevis.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1206533

Title:
  X server authority only allows local connections even if xserver-
  allow-tcp=true

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