Tony Su
2018-05-31 23:44:10 UTC
At the moment, this is more a matter of interest and don't have an
immediate need.
With our new launch of openSUSE 15,
It includes the current versions of VNC for all distros and...
There is a major new re-architecture.
At the moment, because it's TigerVNC that's distributed with openSUSE,
my main resource is the Arch Wiki
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/TigerVNC
Some big changes with current VNC
- No longer requires an xorg xserver, particularly if your current
Desktop uses Wayland
- Now deployed as a "socket service" which I understand is why a
special xserver is no longer needed. Without more detail, I'm assuming
that VNC is accessible locally through a UNIX socket and by network
using a Network socket.
- No simple configuration scripts to configure server-side configurations.
- Although like before, there are 6 existing configurations of which
only two are enabled (1 VNC client and one Java client).
- No way I've found to view existing configurations or edit those
configurations.
This stuff is really new and a radical change from anything before,
And I've found the MAN pages and --help large and not informative enough.
Tony
immediate need.
With our new launch of openSUSE 15,
It includes the current versions of VNC for all distros and...
There is a major new re-architecture.
At the moment, because it's TigerVNC that's distributed with openSUSE,
my main resource is the Arch Wiki
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/TigerVNC
Some big changes with current VNC
- No longer requires an xorg xserver, particularly if your current
Desktop uses Wayland
- Now deployed as a "socket service" which I understand is why a
special xserver is no longer needed. Without more detail, I'm assuming
that VNC is accessible locally through a UNIX socket and by network
using a Network socket.
- No simple configuration scripts to configure server-side configurations.
- Although like before, there are 6 existing configurations of which
only two are enabled (1 VNC client and one Java client).
- No way I've found to view existing configurations or edit those
configurations.
This stuff is really new and a radical change from anything before,
And I've found the MAN pages and --help large and not informative enough.
Tony
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