Книга: Fedora™ Unleashed, 2008 edition

VNC

VNC

The next step up from XDMCP is VNC, which was developed at AT&T's Cambridge Research Laboratory in England. VNC is widespread in the Linux world and, to a lesser extent, in the Windows world. Its main advantage is its widespread nature: Nearly all Linux distributions bundle VNC, and clients are available for a wide selection of platforms.

By default, Fedora installs the VNC server component but not the client component. Go to the Add or Remove Packages dialog box and select System Tools. Then select vnc to install the client, go to Network Servers, and select vnc-server to install the server.

With that done, all that remains is to tell Fedora who should be allowed to connect to your session. This is done from the Remote Desktop option on the Preferences menu. By default, your desktop is not shared, so check Allow Other Users to View Your Desktop to share it. You should also check Allow Other Users to Control Your Desktop; otherwise, people can see what you are doing but not interact with the desktop — which is not very helpful.

The second set of options on that screen is important. If you are using this as a remote way to connect to your own desktop, deselect Ask You for Confirmation. If this is not done, when you try to connect from your remote location, Fedora pops a message box up on the local machine asking Should this person be allowed to connect?. Because you are not there to click Yes, the connection fails. If you want to let someone else remotely

connect to your system, keep this box enabled so that you know when people are connecting. You should always enter a password, no matter who might connect. VNC, like XDMCP, should not be considered secure over the Internet, or even on untrusted networks.

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