Hi Paul,
Thanks again for the tip regarding lbxproxy. I've had good luck with it,
with one exception. For some reason, menus in GTK+ applications get
distorted when using lbxproxy with default settings. After some
experimentation, I found that by adding '-noimage' to my lbxproxy
command line, the
Hi,
Adam M wrote:
[...]
> Now, the problem is when I close PuTTY and then later relaunch it and
> reattach to the running screen session. When I open a new SSH connection
> to my Linux box, that shell often has a different DISPLAY variable than
> previously. Therefore, in order for X forwarding to
Hi Paul,
Wow, lbxproxy really is a significant performance improvement! I just
gave it a try and I can really tell the difference.
Thanks for the tip!
-Adam
On Fri, 9 Nov 2007 19:24:25 +, "Paul Ackersviller"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> While I didn't start using lbxproxy(1), the Low BandWi
Hi Kenichi,
This is actually quite a good idea. I don't need the security/encryption
at all on this network. I didn't think to set DISPLAY directly to my
Windows box.
Thanks!
-Adam
On Fri, 9 Nov 2007 08:56:07 -0800, "Kenichi Nakamura"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> Hi Adam,
>
> Quick question, a
On Fri, Nov 09, 2007 at 11:39:15AM -0500, Adam M wrote:
> I'm a long-time screen user, but there's one thing that's been bothering
> me for years that I've never found a good solution for.
>
> My typical usage is I SSH from my Windows box to my Linux box using
> PuTTY, get a shell, then launch scr
Helloi
You can probably use the 'at' command:
at * stuff "DISPLAY=:X.Y^M"
Or something like that.
Bye
Adam M wrote:
I'm a long-time screen user, but there's one thing that's been bothering
me for years that I've never found a good solution for.
My typical usage is I SSH from my Windows b
I'm a long-time screen user, but there's one thing that's been bothering
me for years that I've never found a good solution for.
My typical usage is I SSH from my Windows box to my Linux box using
PuTTY, get a shell, then launch screen. When you first create a screen
session, it inherits all its e