On Sat, 2008-07-05 at 06:57 +0200, Erik Jakobsen wrote:
05/07/2008 06:49:25 Listening for VNC connections on TCP port 5901 05/07/2008 06:49:25 Listening for HTTP connections on TCP port 5801 05/07/2008 06:49:25 URL http://erikja:5801 Could not init font path element /usr/share/fonts/local, removing from list! Could not init font path element /usr/share/fonts/uni, removing from list! Could not init font path element /usr/share/fonts/CID, removing from list! xrdb: No such file or directory xrdb: can't open file '/root/.Xresources'
Should I open port 5901 and 5801 on my router ?.
Yes, if you want unencrypted information sent (at least 5901 and assuming the router is on the server side). If you are sending across an open network, you might want to use a secure shell tunnel. To do this, use a command like the following (from the client): $ /usr/bin/ssh -L 5901:localhost:5901 loginName@server.computer.address.dk In practice, the secure server tunnel is often easier because it uses port 22, which is not likely to be blocked anywhere. Then you should be able to run: $ /usr/bin/vncviewer localhost:1 on the client, and log in through VNC (assuming you ran /usr/bin/vncserver on the server first).
Why can the init font not be done ?.
Ignore this messages. It is X looking for fonts in standard locations. In your case you do not have any fonts there because you do not need them.
What is xrdb, and how to get it available?
I think you are running vncserver as root, which is why you have this message. If you are the only person using VNC, it is safer to run it as a non-root user, and might get rid of this message. I use vncserver as a user and close it down after I close the connection. I have everything in a single python script, though I think its possible to handle the secure shell tunnel using the via option in vncviewer. -- JDL -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org