--- William Hooper whooperhsd3@earthlink.net wrote:
Lee Parmeter wrote: [snip]
The Vino package was installed on my installation by default, but I am unable to connect to the CentOS 4
server from a client
machine running Ubuntu Hoary (gnome 2.10). The is
rejected. Tried
vncviewer using hostname:0 per documentation. So, I am
now wondering what
else needs to be done to enable remote connects to
succeed. I did
configure the "remote desktop" settings per discussion
in the thread.
Check the usual suspects? Is your firewall configured correctly? Is vino actually listening (netstat)?
No firewall. The viewer even fails when run on the server as: vncviewer localhost:0
Since I am on a trusted network, I added an ALL statement ot hosts.allow for my client machine's ip.
I don't know vino specifically, does it leverage the VNC X module?
Yes, I think that's what is needed. Some statements are required in the xorg.conf file to enable vnc support. I ran across some info in this area on the Ubuntu forums.
I would just use the standard Xvnc and hostname:1,
which is
working, but when I login via vncviewer I am unable to
do any root
configuration via gnome.
I can't say I've seen this issue. Do you have a Gnome session open on the console at the same time?
Not always, generally the user is logged out of the server.
I know Gnome doesn't like
that.
I am being to wonder if vino really works! Why is there no doc or man page?
-- William Hooper
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
-- Lee Parmeter Emperor, linXos - The Flying Penguin http://www.linXos.com Linux Registered User #337161
'It's free. It works. Duh.'" - Eric Harrison
The United States is NOT a democracy, it was founded as a Republic!
God is not a republican or a democrat nor is His government a democracy! - Lee Parmeter
__________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com