On 04/03/2015 12:11 PM, Jerry Geis wrote: >> Is the port opened in the firewall? > > > > I stopped firewalld with "systemctl stop firewalld" > > > Jerry > > > > On Fri, Apr 3, 2015 at 2:46 PM, Jerry Geis <geisj@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> I am trying to setup a centos 7.1 vncserver >> >> I cannot believe they went from a relatively easy process in 6 to the >> "crazyness" that is 7. >> >> I did the following: >> yum install tigervnc-server >> cp /lib/systemd/system/vncserver@.service >> /etc/systemd/system >> systemctl daemon-reload >> edit /etc/systemd.system/vncserver@.service and replace >> <USER> with myuser >> su - myuser run vncpassword to set password >> systemctl enable vncserver@. >> >> >> Says its enabled: >> systemctl list-unit-files | grep vnc >> vncserver@.service enabled >> >> using another machine to connect gives error about nothing there. >> >> netstat -tuln | grep 5900 >> gives nothing. >> >> What did I miss? >> >> Thanks, >> >> Jerry You should: cp /lib/systemd/system/vncserver@.service /lib/systemd/system/vncserver@:#.service Where # is the vnc port 590# to open. Like /lib/systemd/system/vncserver@:4.service to start a vncserver on port 5904. Then use `systemctl start vncserver@:4' to start that VNC server. Remember to edit the /lib/systemd/system/vncserver@:4.service file's <USER> as you did before. Emmett _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos