David Timms: >>> - if the viewer is exited, then vnc viewer should restart, waiting for a >>> machine to connect to. >>> - has a way to exit the viewer. Tim: >> The above two seem mutually exclusive. I imagine some sort of process >> watchdog could check for a terminated VNC process and restart it. >> Though you'd have to be careful of looping around restarting a crashed >> process with faults. David Timms: > I found the user can make two mistakes: > - tells the remote vnc desktop to logout - leaving the vnc-session > alive, but showing only a back ground image. From my tests, this > requires a vncserver -kill :1 and vncserver :1 to allow it to work > again. {and a local machine logoff (ctrl-alt-backspace) to allow > autologin/sessions startup to reconnect to the vncserver} > - if the user activates the vnc viewer popup {F8}, Exit viewer can be > selected. This disconnects the viewer session. A {ctrl-alt-backspace} > gets the user connected to the vnc server again. > > In |sessions|current sessions| there is an option to set a program style > as restart. This didn't seem to work for vncviewer. A simplistic solution might be to add a whacking great big "RESTART" icon on the desktop, which either has the commands to start up VNC again, or does a logout and relies on the auto-relogin process. That gives users some fall back option if they get lost. -- (Currently testing FC5, but still running FC4, if that's important.) Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list