09-23-2008
Make sure that your local xserver is listening for incomming connections (on the machine you initiate the connection from), then make sure you authorize the xclient to connect to it.
man xhost will give you the needed info for this.
If you are able to run xclock then the above step is not needed.
Then on the remote end export your display variable:
export DISPLAY=192.168.0.1:0.0
where 192.168.0.1 is the ip address of the machine you initiate the connection from.
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
net::socks
Net::SOCKS(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Net::SOCKS(3pm)
NAME
Net::SOCKS - a SOCKS client class
SYNOPSIS
Establishing a connection:
my $sock = new Net::SOCKS(socks_addr => '192.168.1.3',
socks_port => 1080,
user_id => 'the_user',
user_password => 'the_password',
force_nonanonymous => 1,
protocol_version => 5);
# connect to finger port and request finger information for some_user
my $f= $sock->connect(peer_addr => '192.168.1.3', peer_port => 79);
print $f "some_user
"; # example writing to socket
while (<$f>) { print } # example reading from socket
$sock->close();
Accepting an incoming connection:
my $sock = new Net::SOCKS(socks_addr => '192.168.1.3',
socks_port => 1080,
user_id => 'the_user',
user_password => 'the_password',
force_nonanonymous => 1,
protocol_version => 5);
my ($ip, $ip_dot_dec, $port) = $sock->bind(peer_addr => "128.10.10.11",
peer_port => 9999);
$f= $sock->accept();
print $f "Hi! Type something.
"; # example writing to socket
while (<$f>) { print } # example reading from socket
$sock->close();
DESCRIPTION
my $sock = new Net::SOCKS(socks_addr => '192.168.1.3',
socks_port => 1080,
user_id => 'the_user',
user_password => 'the_password',
force_nonanonymous => 1,
protocol_version => 5);
To connect to a SOCKS server, specify the SOCKS server's
hostname, port number, SOCKS protocol version, username, and
password. Username and password are optional if you plan
to use a SOCKS server that doesn't require any authentication.
If you would like to force the connection to be
nonanoymous, set the force_nonanonymous parameter.
my $f= $sock->connect(peer_addr => '192.168.1.3', peer_port => 79);
To connect to another machine using SOCKS, use the connect method.
Specify the host and port number as parameters.
my ($ip, $ip_dot_dec, $port) = $sock->bind(peer_addr => "192.168.1.3",
peer_port => 9999);
If you wanted to accept a connection with SOCKS, specify the host
and port of the machine you expect a connection from. Upon
success, bind() returns the ip address and port number that
the SOCKS server is listening at on your behalf.
$f= $sock->accept();
If a call to bind() returns a success status code SOCKS_OKAY,
a call to the accept() method will return when the peer host
connects to the host/port that was returned by the bind() method.
Upon success, accept() returns SOCKS_OKAY.
$sock->close();
Closes the connection.
SEE ALSO
RFC 1928, RFC 1929.
AUTHOR
Clinton Wong, clintdw@netcom.com
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1997-1998 Clinton Wong. All rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it
and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.14.2 2012-04-18 Net::SOCKS(3pm)