Question:
How to use Remote Desktop to connect to a Virtual Machine running Ubuntu?
anonymous
1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
How to use Remote Desktop to connect to a Virtual Machine running Ubuntu?
Three answers:
?
2016-10-01 14:47:39 UTC
i take advantage of VMware computer 8. it works superbly. it relatively is going to deploy the kit in Ubuntu with out having to code them manually such as you do in Fedora. merely after it installs. confident, VMware computer is one hundred sixty funds, yet I on no account had a concern with that application.
Shawn
2012-02-25 18:25:41 UTC
I've never used Ubuntu before , but if you've ever logged on to a Windows OS via RDP(remote desktop protocol) before, it should be no different .. Just make sure that your Ubuntu machine allows RDP
Andrew S
2012-02-25 19:05:08 UTC
I'll make this quite simple: don't bother. xrdp must be in my top five worst Unix programs ever - it is very badly written, buggy, has a voracious appetite for resources (the xrdp session manager will consume 100% CPU) and it isn't actually an X server at all but a translation layer on top of Xvnc. That means you have to install Xvnc first, configure that (probably in the configuration of your XDM/GDM/Klogin/other session manager) before you can point xrdp at the Xvnc session. With the Xvnc involvement performance then tends to be poor since you are sending bitmap images around as opposed to high level primitives supported both by X11 and RDP.



By far the preferable way is to install an X server on the Windows machine and point it at the VM: that will be a lot less of a CPU drain and performance will be orders of magnitude better. X11 over even a 100mbit LAN is indistinguishable from being logged in on the system console. xrdp can't even come close.


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