On Thu, Nov 09, 2006 at 10:23:33AM -0600, Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote: > Dan Track wrote: > > On 11/9/06, Manuel Arostegui Ramirez <manuel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Thanks for the reply. Sorry I guess I didn't make myself clear, lets > > say we have teh following: > > > > host1 host2 > > > > I want the user on host2 to ssh to host1, then run say gedit which > > will opne up on the xdisplay the user has running on host1. Do you > > know how to do this? > > > > Thanks > > Dan > > > After you ssh to host1, you will need to ether set DISPLAY. Or you > will need to use the -display option when you start the program. > > export DISPLAY=:0 > > or > > xterm -display :0 & > > This will only work for when you are logged into host1 as the user > that is logged into X on that machine, or if you have disabled X > security on host1. (See the xhost command - it has to be run in X on > host1.) Ah, no. If you ssh in to the remote host with the -Y option, all the mucking with xhosts is moot, and DISPLAY is handled for you. ssh into a remote box with -Y and run "echo $DISPLAY". You will see that you are getting a display on the local machine, but it is display number ten (or some such). That display is tunneled through SSH to your local machine. Normally X uses a clear protocol, meaning anyone can snoop the data. Furthermore, security is bad enough in native X without disabling it entirely. Tunneling X through SSH handles the problem very nicely. Just use the -Y option: ssh -Y foo -- Charles Curley /"\ ASCII Ribbon Campaign Looking for fine software \ / Respect for open standards and/or writing? X No HTML/RTF in email http://www.charlescurley.com / \ No M$ Word docs in email Key fingerprint = CE5C 6645 A45A 64E4 94C0 809C FFF6 4C48 4ECD DFDB
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