Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: VNC issue on solaris10
Operating Systems Solaris VNC issue on solaris10 Post 302487163 by upengan78 on Tuesday 11th of January 2011 02:56:34 PM
Old 01-11-2011
Do you notice this issue with tightvncviewer only ?

Is your ~/.vnc/xstartup correctly configured?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Linux

VNC/Fedora7 issue

Hi, This has been extremely frustrating, and I need help figuring this one out! I am running Fedora 7 on computer A, and am VNCing into it from my Mac using Chicken of the VNC. For Sarah, everything works fine. However for Bob, the toolbar along the top is missing and every... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: user23
0 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

portability issue linux(2.6) solaris10

the following simple scripts work fine on linux but fail on solaris: #!/bin/bash eval /usr/bin/time -f \'bt=\"%U + %S\"\' ./JUNK >> ./LOG 2>&1 cp ./LOG ./LOG_joe LC_joe=`cat ./LOG | wc -l` LC_joe=`echo $LC_joe-1|bc` tail -1 ./LOG > ./tmp head -$LC_joe ./LOG_joe > ./LOG rm ./LOG_joe ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: joepareti
1 Replies

3. Solaris

Solaris10

Hi All How can we verify if any of the parameters we have change in Solaris10 after reboot. Like is there any command? Please advice Thanks (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: imran721
3 Replies

4. Solaris

Memory issue on solaris10 box

my system has 128G of installed memory. top, vmstat shows the system has just over 10G of free memory on the system. but as per prstat o/p the usage is just 50-55G is there anyway i can find which process/zone is using more memory ? System has 3 zones and all running application servers. ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: fugitive
1 Replies

5. Solaris

/tmp issue on solaris10 box

I have a T5240 server with following swap configuration $ grep tmp /etc/vfstab swap - /tmp tmpfs - yes - $ swap -l swapfile dev swaplo blocks free /dev/swap 4294967295,4294967295 16 213909472 213909472 ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: fugitive
4 Replies

6. Solaris

Swap issue on a Solaris10 box

One of our system is running 3 oracle db instances. And as per prstat o/p the system is approximately using 78G of swap memory # prstat -J -n 2,15 PROJID NPROC SWAP RSS MEMORY TIME CPU PROJECT 4038 557 31G 29G 22% 113:23:43 10% proj1 4036 466 20G 19G... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: fugitive
2 Replies

7. Solaris

VNC as only 1 user issue

Our current VNC setup is for only 1 user login, but this login can not access a few of the programs that I need. How can I add additional logins to VNC? I have only been able to find the logs in .vnc and the usr/bin scripts. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: gcad76
1 Replies

8. Solaris

Veritas I/O fencing issue on Solaris10

I have 2 clusters running on solaris10 servers. VCS is working fine but when i configure I/O fencing with co-ordinated disks only one node have the keys on the disks at time where as both the nodes shuld have keys there what could be the reason for this ? like in the following o/p only Node2's... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: fugitive
0 Replies

9. Solaris

vnc issue after reboot

Hi , Everytime after reboot when user tries to start vnc below error is thrown $ vncserver :5 Couldn't start Xvnc; trying default font path. Please set correct fontPath in the vncserver script. Couldn't start Xvnc process. _XSERVTransSocketCreateListener: failed to bind listener... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: chidori
7 Replies

10. Solaris

vnc Issue

Dear all, I recently installed did VNC configuration on a Solaris Server. I am using VNC E4 2 7 as my Windows client. The issue is that every time I log into my machine and use terminal ( a few commands like df -h or any other command and then close VNC ( windows). When I log back in ,... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Junaid Subhani
9 Replies
vncserver(1)						     Virtual Network Computing						      vncserver(1)

NAME
vncserver - start or stop a VNC server SYNOPSIS
vncserver [:display#] [-name desktop-name] [-geometry widthxheight] [-depth depth] [-pixelformat format] [Xvnc-options...] vncserver -kill :display# DESCRIPTION
vncserver is used to start a VNC (Virtual Network Computing) desktop. vncserver is a Perl script which simplifies the process of starting an Xvnc server. It runs Xvnc with appropriate options and starts some X applications to be displayed in the VNC desktop. vncserver can be run with no options at all. In this case it will choose the first available display number (usually :1), start Xvnc as that display, and run a couple of basic applications to get you started. You can also specify the display number, in which case it will use that number if it is available and exit if not, eg: vncserver :13 Editing the file $HOME/.vnc/xstartup allows you to change the applications run at startup (but note that this will not affect an existing desktop). OPTIONS
You can get a list of options by giving -h as an option to vncserver. In addition to the options listed below, any unrecognised options will be passed to Xvnc - see the Xvnc man page, or "Xvnc -help" for details. -name desktop-name Each desktop has a name which may be displayed by the viewer. It defaults to "host:display# (username)" but you can change it with this option. It is passed in to the xstartup script via the $VNCDESKTOP environment variable, allowing you to run a different set of applications according to the name of the desktop. -geometry widthxheight Specify the size of the desktop to be created. Default is 1024x768. -depth depth Specify the pixel depth in bits of the desktop to be created. Default is 16, other possible values are 8, 15 and 24 - anything else is likely to cause strange behaviour by applications. -pixelformat format Specify pixel format for server to use (BGRnnn or RGBnnn). The default for depth 8 is BGR233 (meaning the most significant two bits represent blue, the next three green, and the least significant three represent red), the default for depth 16 is RGB565 and for depth 24 is RGB888. -cc 3 As an alternative to the default TrueColor visual, this allows you to run an Xvnc server with a PseudoColor visual (i.e. one which uses a colour map or palette), which can be useful for running some old X applications which only work on such a display. Values other than 3 (PseudoColor) and 4 (TrueColor) for the -cc option may result in strange behaviour, and PseudoColor desktops must be 8 bits deep. -httpd Instruct Xvnc to run a mini-httpd if the VNC Java applet is found. -kill :display# This kills a VNC desktop previously started with vncserver. It does this by killing the Xvnc process, whose process ID is stored in the file "$HOME/.vnc/host:display#.pid". It actually ignores anything preceding a ":" in its argument. This can be useful so you can write "vncserver -kill $DISPLAY", for example at the end of your xstartup file after a particular application exits. FILES
Several VNC-related files are found in the directory $HOME/.vnc: $HOME/.vnc/xstartup A shell script specifying X applications to be run when a VNC desktop is started. If it doesn't exist, vncserver will create a new one which runs a couple of basic applications. $HOME/.vnc/passwd The VNC password file. $HOME/.vnc/host:display#.log The log file for Xvnc and applications started in xstartup. $HOME/.vnc/host:display#.pid Identifies the Xvnc process ID, used by the -kill option. SEE ALSO
vncviewer(1), vncpasswd(1), vncconfig(1), Xvnc(1) http://www.realvnc.com AUTHOR
Tristan Richardson, RealVNC Ltd. VNC was originally developed by the RealVNC team while at Olivetti Research Ltd / AT&T Laboratories Cambridge. It is now being maintained by RealVNC Ltd. See http://www.realvnc.com for details. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability | | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability | | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ RealVNC Ltd 03 Mar 2005 vncserver(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:19 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy