On Tuesday 04 March 2008, eric wrote: > Mick wrote: > > Hi All, > > > > I am trying to connect to my work's T-Snap citrix desktop. I have > > installed net-misc/icaclient-10.6-r3 but when I click on the remote > > desktop I get this error: > > =========================================== > > "Client Error > > > > No connection to ";40;STAEXXXXXXXXXXXX;XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX" > > Invalid server browser command header received." > > =========================================== > > (where XXXX are random characters) > > > > Looking at the launcher.ica file that the browser downloads I can see > > that the domain is defined as: > > =========================================== > > [T-SNAP Desktop] > > Address=;40;STAEXXXXXXXXXXXX;XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX > > AudioBandwidthLimit=2 > > AutologonAllowed=ON > > BrowserProtocol=HTTPonTCP > > CGPSecurityTicket=On > > ClearPassword=XXXXXXXXXXX > > =========================================== > > > > I am assuming here that the client is trying to use the hashed server > > address and the browser cannot resolve this. As far as I understand this > > solution works with guess what: MSWindows (my work is a Microsoft shop) > > and AppleMac. Any ideas what it might take to get it going under Gentoo? > > Have you tried downloading the ica client from Citrix and installing it > to your home directory and trying it? I didn't even know they put it in > portage, I've always had to go to their website. > > Also, what browser are you using (or are you going straight from the > desktop)?
I think I've gone a bit further with this problem. When at work (behind the firewall) I can connect on the server and the t-snap desktop comes up fine using the Citrix client plugin. However, from home I still cannot launch the t-snap desktop. When the Citrix client fires up it tries to connect and eventually I get this error: ==================================== There is no route from the Citrix SSL Relay to the specified subnet address (SSL error 37). ==================================== Any clue what this is all about? -- Regards, Mick
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