Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Help with exporting DISPLAY from Linux to Windows XP Post 302489523 by oopsalion on Thursday 20th of January 2011 04:34:08 PM
Old 01-20-2011
192.168.0.1 was just an example, i am exporting it to a different ip.

I believe there are some more settings on the Linux machine (maybe the firewall) which are not allowing me to forward the display, so i would want to know what... as there are some servers in my network from which i can bring back the display
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

exporting display

how do I export my display from my unix box to my pc basically what is the syntax for export DISPLAY (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: csaunders
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

How to open display from windows to solaris?

How can I telnet from my windows XP machine to my Ultra 60 and run firefox? I am unable to open the display using /usr/openwin/bin/xhost like I do from one Sun machine to another? Thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ridgeback00
2 Replies

3. Solaris

Exporting X display question

I have a sun box i can connect to using exceed in broadcast or query mode. I have been using passive mode to call up just a few apps, xcalc for example. How do i get the solaris 9 user login screen using passive mode? is it dtlogin or something that im should run frmo the shell? (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: BG_JrAdmin
0 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Exporting Files from Unix to a Windows Platform

I was able to convert my csv file in Unix to xls. I would like to export the converted xls file to a windows environment. I have to manually connect using the following below: ftp: 192.x.x.x -> username/pass -> cd -> mget *.xls and then confirm. Could I automate this process into a shell... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ravzter
4 Replies

5. Linux

What's better for running Windows software in Linux, Wine or Windows VMware?

What are the differences, advantages, and disadvantages? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Advice Pro
1 Replies

6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

X Windows display

Hello Folks, Have X-Win 32 installed on my desktop. Earlier when it used to be XP, ran the following commands on unix system: export DISPLAY=<desktop ip>:0.0 xterm Above used to work like charm Now it got upgraded to Windows 7 Setting the display & triggering xterm doesn't work. It... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: vibhor_agarwali
8 Replies

7. Solaris

Exporting display to windows machine

hello all, I have been googling alot about my problem and finally thought to post a question. server: SunOS 5.1 64bit pn Sun Netra 240 i need to run an application which shows a gui tool but i believe SunOS cant show the GUI so i need to export the display to my system which is running... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: wonderwall
3 Replies

8. Solaris

Problem exporting NFS filesysytem with root permissions to Linux

Hi, I have a Solaris 10 server and I want to export a filesystem to a linux client and give the client's root user root priviliges on the filesystem. The client is an ubuntu 14.04 LTS server. the dfstab on the server looks lik this: /usr/sbin/share -F nfs -o ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: nvanvliet
1 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Seen Windows pc, having all the features of Linux, could exe, read and edit save like windows

Hi, totally new to linux base using windows when started learning and using computers. but i remember that one pc was there , look alike windows desktop, but could not do the task as windows just click and open and view edit etc. But, you could do a little differently even saving in and opening... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: jraju
8 Replies
stone(1)						      General Commands Manual							  stone(1)

NAME
stone - a simple TCP/IP packet repeater SYNOPSYS
stone [-d] [-n] [-u max] [-f n] [-l] [-z SSL] st [-- st] ... OPTIONS
-d Increase the debug level. -z SSL encryption. -n IP addresses and service port numbers are shown instead of host names and service names. -u max max is integer. The program will memorize max sources simultaneously where UDP packets are sent. -f n n is integer. The program will spawn n child processes. -l Sends error messages to the syslog instead of stderr. st is one of the followings; Multiple st can be designated, separated by --. (1) host:port sport [xhost ...] (2) host:port shost:sport [xhost ...] (3) display [xhost ...] (4) proxy sport [xhost ...] (5) host:port/http request [hosts ...] (6) host:port/proxy header [hosts...] The program repeats the connection on port sport to the other machine host port port. If the machine, on which the program runs, has two or more interfaces, type (2) can be used to repeat the connection on the specified interface shost. display [xhost ...] Abbreviating notation. The program repeats the connection on display number display to the X server designated by the environment variable DISPLAY. proxy sport [xhost ...] Http Proxy. Specify the machine, on which the program runs, and port sport in the http proxy settings of your WWW browser. host:port/http request [hosts ...] Repeats packets over http request. request is the request specified in HTTP 1.0. host:port/proxy header [hosts...] host:port/proxy header [hosts...] Type (6) repeats http request with header in the top of request headers. xhost Only machines xhost can connect to the program. xhost/mask Only machines on specified networks are permitted to connect to the program. In the case of class C network 192.168.1.0, for exam- ple, use 192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0. sport/udp Repeats UDP packets instead of TCP packets. port/ssl Repeats packets with encryption. sport/ssl Repeats packets with decryption. sport/http Repeats packets over http. DESCRIPTION
Stone is a TCP/IP packet repeater in the application layer. It repeats TCP and UDP packets from inside to outside of a firewall, or from outside to inside. Stone has following features: 1. Stone supports Win32. Formerly, UNIX machines are used as firewalls, but recently WindowsNT machines are used, too. You can easily run Stone on WindowsNT and Windows95. Of course, available on Linux, FreeBSD, BSD/OS, SunOS, Solaris, HP-UX and so on. 2. Simple. Stone's source code is only 2000 lines long (written in C language), so you can minimize the risk of security holes. 3. Stone supports SSLeay. Using SSLeay developed by Eric Young, Stone can encrypt/decrypt packets. 4. Stone is a http proxy. Stone can also be a tiny http proxy. EXAMPLES
outer: a machine in the outside of the firewall inner: a machine in the inside of the firewall fwall: the firewall on which the stone is executed stone 7 outer Repeats the X protocol to the machine designated by the environmental variable DISPLAY. Run X clients under DISPLAY=inner:7 on outer. stone outer:telnet 10023 Repeats the telnet protocol to outer. Run telnet fwall 10023 on inner. stone outer:domain/udp domain/udp Repeats the DNS query to outer. Run nslookup - fwall on inner. stone outer:ntp/udp ntp/udp Repeats the NTP to outer. Run ntpdate fwall on inner. stone localhost:http 443/ssl Make WWW server that supports https. Access https://fwall/ using a WWW browser. stone localhost:telnet 10023/ssl Make telnet server that supports SSL. Run SSLtelnet -z ssl fwall 10023 on inner. stone proxy 8080 http proxy. Where fwall is a http proxy (port 8080): stone fwall:8080/http 10023 'POST http://outer:8023 HTTP/1.0' stone localhost:telnet 8023/http Run stones on inner and outer respectively. Repeats packets over http. stone fwall:8080/proxy 9080 'Proxy-Authorization: Basic c2VuZ29rdTpoaXJvYWtp' for browser that does not support proxy authorization. COPYRIGHT
All rights about this program stone are reserved by the original author, Hiroaki Sengoku. The program is free software; you can redis- tribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL). NO WARRANTY
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY. AUTHOR
Hiroaki Sengoku sengoku@gcd.org http://www.gcd.org/sengoku/ Version 2.0 stone(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:42 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy