Hi Patrick, Thanks for you quickly answer. Yes, x11vnc was installed on my system. The problem is i not understand the “logic" of vnc connection, so i try to dark… I copy the /etc/systemd/system/vncserver@:1.service to /etc/systemd/system/vncserver@:0.service restart the vnc service and obtain Jul 18 11:17:16 systemd[1]: vncserver@:0.service: control process exited, code=exited status=98 Jul 18 11:17:16 systemd[1]: Failed to start Remote desktop service (VNC). Jul 18 11:17:16 systemd[1]: Unit vncserver@:0.service entered failed state. Thanks again, M. > On Jul 18, 2015, at 10:59, Patrick Hess <patrickhess@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > From within the session you want to connect to, you need > to start x11vnc instead of vncserver. That's a separate > package you'll have to install (yum install x11vnc). > > Note that x11vnc's display number will be the same as that > of the X server it was started from, so you'll most likely > have to connect your VNC client to display :0 (and not :1) > in order to access your existing X screen. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos