HP and Citrix: Delivering the Citrix Access Suite on industry-leading HP ProLiant ser
HP discusses latest innovations to come from the collaborative efforts of HP and Citrix. By working together, these companies have invested significant resources in testing new technologies to shorten implementation cycles and save money for joint customers using the new and powerful x64 and dual-core technology. I'm here today with Allen Northcutt, HP Citrix Team leader to discuss some of the advances to come from this long-term and important relationship. Please note that all internal HP podcasts are "HP Restricted", and not for distribution outside of HP.
Hi all,
I have remote 2Mbs connection to server.
I am wondering - what is the difference (i mean - transferring data) between Citrix sessions and XDMCP?
Why I can connect to server using Citrix and when clicking to open some application its opening fast, but when i am clicking to open same... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I have remote 2Mbs connection to server.
I am wondering - what is the difference (i mean - transferring data) between Citrix sessions and XDMCP?
Why I can connect to server using Citrix and when clicking to open some application its opening fast, but when i am clicking to open same... (0 Replies)
We have installed Citrix server in Solaris 9 (Sparc Ultra45), we are able to connect from windows workstations to Citrix Server. But today
Suddenly we got the error Citrix server cannot accept any connections.
I am not aware of citrix server, All citrix user Please help me in this regard
what... (1 Reply)
I am getting the following message
"Failed to establish all listening sockets"
also /tmp/.X11-pipe gets to about 50 entries and then I can't start any
more Citrix sessions until I manually remove those entries.
Any ideas? (3 Replies)
Hello world!
I have a problem with my solaris 8 and 9 machines running Citrix server,
the fonts in X applications are hard to read and faulty scaled.
Anybody know how to turn om some kind of anti-aliasing or font smoothing?
/David (0 Replies)
Hi,
I don't mean the client.... I mean the server - I have the client to connect to a windows citrix server already.
The next best thing I can use at present is VNC (I only want remote desktop, not application sharing specifically). The thing with VNC is that when you go on you are... (3 Replies)
inet_network(3) Library Functions Manual inet_network(3)NAME
inet_network - Translates an Internet dot-formatted address string to a network address integer
LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc.so, libc.a)
SYNOPSIS
#include <arpa/inet.h>
in_addr_t inet_network(
const char *string );
STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards as follows:
inet_network(): XNS4.0
Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about industry standards and associated tags.
PARAMETERS
Defines an Internet dot-formatted address as the character string a.b.c.d, where a, b, c and d may be expressed as decimal, octal, or hexa-
decimal in the C-language idiom.
DESCRIPTION
The inet_network() function translates a dot-formatted Internet network character address string to a network byte-ordered address (most
significant byte leftmost, least significant byte rightmost).
Values specified using dot notation take on one of the following forms: When all four parts are specified, each is interpreted as a byte of
data and assigned, from left to right, to the four bytes of an Internet address. When three parts are specified, the last part is inter-
preted as a 16-bit quantity and placed in the rightmost two bytes of the network address. This format is convenient for specifying Class B
network addresses as 128.net.host. When two parts are specified, the last part is interpreted as a 24-bit quantity and placed in the
rightmost three bytes of the network address. This format is convenient for specifying Class A network addresses as net.host. When only
one part is specified, the value is stored directly in the network address without any byte rearrangement.
All numbers supplied as parts in dot notation can be decimal, octal, or hexadecimal, as specified in the ISO C standard. A leading 0x or 0X
implies hexadecimal and a leading 0 implies octal. Otherwise, the number is interpreted as decimal.
RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion, the inet_network() function returns an Internet byte-ordered address. Otherwise, it returns (in_addr_t)-1.
ERRORS
Current industry standards for inet_network() do not define error values.
RELATED INFORMATION
Functions: inet_netof(3), inet_lnaof(3), inet_makeaddr(3), inet_addr(3), inet_ntoa(3)
Standards: standards(5)
Network Programmer's Guide delim off
inet_network(3)