Hello,
Have you tried with "vino"? I prefer it than a separate VNC server with
a separate display.
With Vino, I can log in locally to my desktop at office; i would lock
the screen when i leave my office and when i arrive home i would connect
to the same desktop/display i left off at office with a normal VNC
client (RealVNC for windows).
Just do:
yum install vino
vino-passwd
vino-preferences
HTH
Regards,
Khem
On 05/31/2012 03:17 PM, Andrew Haley wrote:
On 05/29/2012 09:22 PM, Tommy Pham wrote:
> On Tue, May 29, 2012 at 1:01 PM, Andrew Haley<aph(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>> On 05/29/2012 06:26 PM, Tommy Pham wrote:
>>> Is it possible to have remote access via VNC without having the user
>>> to be logged in (automatically, especially on a system reboot)?
>> I don't get the problem. You don't have to be logged in on
>> the console, or anything like that. You just have to be able
>> to start a vnc server, and you can do that via ssh. What else
>> do you want to do?
> I have no problems doing the major of the work needed via ssh and
> command line. However, there are a few things that requires the GUI,
> specifically Oracle, for me to do a few things. Setting the autologin
> would allow me to VNC into the system, especially when the system is
> rebooted.
But I can do it already.
I log in to the system via ssh and start the vnc server.
Then I create an ssh tunnel, and connect to the VNC server I just
started. VNC goes through SSH.
> However, that poses a security risk for me. Basically, I'm
> looking for something similar to MS Windows' RDP. Whether the user is
> logged or not, anyone with the right access can RDP in. IIRC, the old
> original VNC server used to do that on Windows. I haven't used VNC
> server in about 10~ years.
What's the problem with what I just described?
Andrew.