09-09-2005
A Little More Info Please
You have two Debian boxes. Are they the machines you are connecting to? I am assuming so since you mention Putty (which as far as I know is Windows only although it can run under WINE). What kind of machines are you making the connection from? If you are connecting with Putty under Windows, are you running an Xserver on the Windows box? What you wrote leads me to assume this:
Windows Box 1 (Running Putty) ----------> Debian Box 1
Windows Box 1 (Running Putty) ----------> Debian Box 2
Windows Box 1 (Running SSH.Com) ------> Debian Box 1
Windows Box 1 (Running SSH.Com) ------> Debian Box 2
Is that correct?
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. OS X (Apple)
Hi,
I have issues with running graphical interfaces on my computer being remotely logged into a network via the -X option of ssh. My .cshrc shows DISPLAY=hostname:0 and I think there should be a different number instead of the 0. I changed the ssh_config file already to 'X11 forwarding yes', which... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ginese
0 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I am using Putty, enabled SSH X11 forwarding and entered the X11 display location as "localhost:0". However I encountered the following error:
------------------------------------
# xclock &
2941
# X connection to localhost:10.0 broken (explicit kill or server shutdown).
+ Exit 1... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: panggou
4 Replies
3. Red Hat
X11 forwarding problem between 2 RHEL4 machines with SSH
Already configured the following on both machines under /etc/ssh
Under sshd_config:
UsePAM no
AllowTcpForwarding yes
Under ssh_config:
ForwardAgent yes
ForwardX11 yes
ForwardX11Trusted yes
-----------------------------
Using... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: panggou
1 Replies
4. HP-UX
Hi,
We've been facing a strange issue. Clients use X11 forwarding via SSH on HP server and sometimes the same DISPLAY is assigned to two (maybe more) sessions. As a result, some users can't open their applications, and some have their windows redirected to somebody else.
It looks as if sshd... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: piooooter
1 Replies
5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi all
I'm having an issue with X11 Forwarding
I have a VM set up on my computer which I usually "ssh -X" to over a home network (192.168.1.*).
Client 192.168.1.100
Server 192.168.1.103
This worked perfectly fine for X11 forwarding.
However I am not at home now (and have no access to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: grahambo2005
2 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello. I installed a Debian box, and its installed remotely. I need to boot up iceweasel from there to do a quick test.
I log on using:
ssh root@<IP> -X
I have modified the /etc/ssh/sshd_config file, and added the X11Forwarding yes flag
And yet I still get:
Error: cannot open... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: dynelight
10 Replies
7. Red Hat
Is it possible to launch an X11 application and have it use an X11 server on the other side of a bastion host? Specifically, here's my setup:
my laptop ------------- bastion -------------- remote host
I have putty installed on my laptop. The bastion is rhel 6.5 and the remote host is... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tsreyb
1 Replies
8. IP Networking
I would like to disable X11 session forcefully. I have tried the following things:
1. Setting appropriate DISPLAY variable in the /etc/environment file to be "0.0"
2. I have tried setting the sshd_config parameter X11Forwarding to be "no"
This session communication is happening by exchanging... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vaibhavvsk
2 Replies
9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers
Unable to get X11 activated on my login even after Unix admin has enabled it (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: tomsayer1977
2 Replies
10. Red Hat
hi,
I'm trying to run a bash script that starts GUI. Though it says application started when I run this bash script doesn't show up any GUI. Here is what I've tried so far and please let me know if I'm missing something with the X11 set up here.
cat /etc/redhat-release
Red Hat Enterprise... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: fop4658
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
bbackupctl
BBACKUPCTL(8) Box Backup BBACKUPCTL(8)
NAME
bbackupctl - Control the Box Backup client daemon
SYNOPSIS
bbackupctl [-q] [-c config-file] command
DESCRIPTION
bbackupctl sends commands to a running bbackupd daemon on a client machine. It can be used to force an immediate backup, tell the daemon to
reload its configuration files or stop the daemon. If bbackupd is configured in snapshot mode, it will not back up automatically, and the
bbackupctl must be used to tell it when to start a backup.
Communication with the bbackupd daemon takes place over a local socket (not over the network). Some platforms (notably Windows) can't
determine if the user connecting on this socket has the correct credentials to execute the commands. On these platforms, ANY local user can
interfere with bbackupd. To avoid this, remove the CommandSocket option from bbackupd.conf, which will also disable bbackupctl. See the
Client Configuration page for more information.
bbackupctl needs to read the bbackupd configuration file to find out the name of the CommandSocket. If you have to tell bbackupd where to
find the configuration file, you will have to tell bbackupctl as well. The default on Unix systems is usually /etc/box/bbackupd.conf. On
Windows systems, it is bbackupd.conf in the same directory where bbackupd.exe is located. If bbackupctl cannot find or read the
configuration file, it will log an error message and exit.
bbackupctl usually writes error messages to the console and the system logs. If it is not doing what you expect, please check these outputs
first of all.
-q
Run in quiet mode.
-c config-file
Specify configuration file.
Commands
The following commands are available in bbackupctl:
terminate
This command cleanly shuts down bbackupd. This is better than killing or terminating it any other way.
reload
Causes the bbackupd daemon to re-read all its configuration files. Equivalent to kill -HUP.
sync
Initiates a backup. If no files need to be backed up, no connection will be made to the server.
force-sync
Initiates a backup, even if the SyncAllowScript says that no backup should run now.
wait-for-sync
Passively waits until the next backup starts of its own accord, and then terminates.
wait-for-end
Passively waits until the next backup starts of its own accord and finishes, and then terminates.
sync-and-wait
Initiates a backup, waits for it to finish, and then terminates.
FILES
/etc/box/bbackupd.conf
SEE ALSO
bbackupd.conf(5), bbackupd-config(8), bbackupctl(8)
AUTHORS
Ben Summers
Per Thomsen
James O'Gorman
Box Backup 0.11 10/28/2011 BBACKUPCTL(8)