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Re: X questions: how to run x-program on other machine?

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Date: Friday, August 14, 1992 - 7:23 pm

In article <zhao.713807106@unixg.ubc.ca> zhao@unixg.ubc.ca (Jiansheng Zhao) writes:

Not yet.  To run the stock X server and clients, you need to have 
either a unix domain socket (local machine), or a TCP/IP socket
connection.  This means you need to have IP access to the 
net on which the host computer runs.

IP access may be attained through either a dirrect ethernet connection,
or via SLIP or CSLIP - Serial Line IP, or Compressed SLIP.  

In order to run SLIP, both ends must be support SLIP software.  Generally,
you need th sysadmin of the remote site to add you in so that they will 
route packets to you.

Another possibility is setting up a bogus X server on the remote
machine as some display other than :0, and coming up with a scheme 
for transmitting requests to your local clients through some propriety
scheme.  

Certain vendors do this.

You might look at xmx if you are interested.


Normally, it doesn't matter, as long as you have xmkmf installed on 
your system.  Xmkmf will "do the right thing", setting up the 
include directories, etc, as defined in your X config directory.
-- 
Microsoft is responsible for propogating the evils it calls DOS and Windows, 
IBM for AIX (appropriately called Aches by those having to administer it), but neither is as bad as AT&T.  Boycott AT&T, and let them know how you feel. 


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Re: X questions: how to run x-program on other machine?, Drew Eckhardt, (Fri Aug 14, 7:23 pm)
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