On Wed, Jan 23, 2013 at 8:37 AM, Rainer Traut tr.ml@gmx.de wrote:
Am 23.01.2013 14:15, schrieb Nico Kadel-Garcia:
On Wed, Jan 23, 2013 at 7:42 AM, Zoltan Frombach zoltan@frombach.com wrote:
I run an Ubuntu VM under windows. Inside that, I use virt-manager to manage a remote Linux running KVM + libvirt. This way you do not need to have X on the remote box.
Zoltan
On 1/23/2013 10:49 AM, Nux! wrote:
On 23.01.2013 05:45, mattias wrote:
are there any windows based software to administer an kvm hhost? e.g create edit machines no web based
It can also be run via a local SSH server (such as the one built into CygWin) by logging in remotely to the KVM server. You *will* need to be sure that the KVM server has enough X utilities to actually run X services this way, including tools such as "xorg-x11-xauth" and maybe the editor or X terminal of your choice. But no, there is not really a "virt-manager" directly built for Windows.
And then? Ok rhetorical question, you mean local X server like xming: http://www.straightrunning.com/XmingNotes/
SSH client is of your personal choice (putty, ZOC) and this way you can avoid Cygwin.
Yes, I meant a local X server. You're quite correct, thank you.
I've used Xming: I wasn't wildly impressed, but I'm a bit harsh on X applications, and found the bandwidth optimization and ability to reconnect to lost sessions or to share sessions provided by NX software and its variants to be invaluable.