![]() ![]() Is your remote system using XFCE (I'm not familiar with Gnome nor KDE) ? Is it possible something is configured wrong in that desktop ? I note for KDE I have a file /usr/share/kde4/services/vnc.protocol. Given both my 13.1 and 13.2 work for vnc, then from that I deduce that for vnc to nominally function without a special configuration, that file is not needed to be configured. I note my openSUSE-13.2 system has the file /etc/modprobe.d/nf (where the contents are all commented out) while my openSUSE-13.1 system has no such file. Do you have such a directory ? If so you could try removing it and trying again (maybe back it up somewhere first, prior to removing). One thing I note is because I did not do anything special to configure vnc, I do not have any vnc config files (that I can find) in my regular user accounts. No, i don't have any of these, or at least i don't know anything about it, i did not enabled anything intentionally.Īh, yes, my bad - i should say "enabled VNC in Yast", not "configured." Neorouter ubuntu gui movie#Yes, everything works perfect, just have successfully uploaded 800Mb size movie file. Neorouter ubuntu gui install#Vnc worked immediately out of the install (after my installing tigervnc (or tightvnc) and xorg-x11-Xvnc (and their associated dependencies). I did not need to 'configure' yast other than to open the appropriate firewall ports. You state you "Configured VNC with Yast". Is there any custom information about your vnc/remote connection that you have not told us that might help provide us further insight ? Or if you do have such, disable it temporary, then try the vnc access to see if that temporary disabling makes a difference. Neorouter ubuntu gui Pc#Or if it is disconnected in such a case ?Īssuming tests show the connection is fine, possibly you can advise as to what vnc app versions you have ? For example, on my laptop (running openSUSE-13.2) that I use to access the desktop of my mother's PC (over 7000km away) where she is running openSUSE-13.1 I rpm -qa | grep vncįurther, please confirm you have no exotic defensive measures/scripts in place that will disconnect upon someone trying to hack, where that could have been triggered prematurely. Possibly try copying a file of reasonable size (not too small) to/from the PC, using say sftp, to see if the connection remains stable there over several minutes of sustained data access. ![]() Have you tried any long term access tests to confirm the quality/consistency of the connect ? Using default colormap which is TrueColor. True colour: max red 255 green 255 blue 255, shift red 16 green 8 blue 0 Least significant byte first in each pixel. Then got a second long splashscreen of opensuse background (same as in screenshot in post #1)Īnd then vncviewer -encodings "tight copyrect hextile" localhost:1Ĭonnected to RFB server, using protocol version 3.8 Vncviewer -encodings "tight copyrect hextile" localhost:1 Ssh -t -L 5901:localhost:5901 'x11vnc -localhost -nolookup -nopw -display :1' Ok i tried, i did as in post #13, same problem. I agree a test with ssh, follows by a test of piping vnc through ssh is worth trying. ![]() Why should openSUSE stop and not somewhere along the route ? If you initially get the desktop and then it stops, are you certain it is openSUSE and not somewhere along the route that is stopping ? openSUSE worked initially from what you said. That should work just fine, regardless of firewall settings or anything Ssh -L 5910:localhost:5900 use vnc to connect to localhost:10 What I do (and suggest you do) is tunnel over ssh: Traffic, and the passwords are easy to hack. VNC security is nonexistent - no encryption of > No, as i mentioned before - i tried lots of clients, Windows, Linux > disconnects after showing openSUSE background screen. ![]() > incorectly - client would not connect to server at all, not like here. > problem, because if ports would not be forwarded, or forwarded Routing is done by TP-link router with OpenWRt on it. > No, PC's are not in the same network, not even in same country at this > Are both PCs openSUSE (client and Server) ? > PCs on different networks ? If different networks, do you have the > Is this VNC over a LAN (ie both PCs on same LAN) ? or is it with both ![]()
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