Yes, rdesktop works this easy. I built it during a gooey lunch one day: shift-click [to start download] click [save] tar -xvf rdesktop* cd rdesktop ./configure make rdesktop .... *blamo* we had a viable screen David \_ SMTP quoth George Toft on 2/19/2002 23:27 as having spake thusly: \_ \_ Something from another LUG - pretty interesting. \_ \_ George \_ \_ \_ -------- Original Message -------- \_ Subject: Terminal Server On Linux \_ Resent-Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2002 16:31:11 -0500 \_ Resent-From: jaxlug-list@jaxlug.org \_ Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2002 13:37:12 -0800 (PST) \_ From: Chris de Vidal \_ Reply-To: chris@devidal.tv \_ To: jaxlug-list@jaxlug.org \_ \_ This comes courtesey of my MIS and good friend Steve Lester. I think \_ he got it from W2KNews.com. \_ \_ CD \_ \_ ===================================== \_ Terminal Server On Linux? Yes And No. \_ \_ In the last issue of W2Knews there was made mention of running MS \_ Terminal Server on a Red Hat box. I have received MANY questions \_ about that particular setup and have made a few clarifications as \_ well. Here is a little background data: I had heard rumors that there \_ was a Terminal Server client that ran well on Linux so I went to have \_ a look. It was an amazingly short search to find the client, which is \_ aptly named "rdesktop". The developer is a fellow in Australia named \_ Matt Chapman. Nice piece of software. Download at the end of this \_ article. \_ \_ First of all, the setup is a Dell Optiplex GX110 with an Intel 933MHz \_ processor with 512 MB of RAM. This setup is much more than is \_ necessary to run Linux, but what can I say. :-) The version of Linux \_ is Red Hat 7.2 (Enigma) and an out-of-the-box install (I know, I know \_ but it was just to test the client). The client itself is a 48 KB \_ download, 216 KB uncompressed. Once installed, the client is called \_ from the command line and all parameters can be entered in the \_ command. The client can be totally configured to do all of the basic \_ option of the RDP client. The options are as follows: \_ \_ Usage: rdesktop [options] server \_ -u: user name \_ -d: domain \_ -s: shell \_ -c: working directory \_ -p: password (autologon) \_ -n: client hostname \_ -k: keyboard layout (hex) \_ -g: desktop geometry (WxH) \_ -f: full-screen mode \_ -b: force bitmap updates \_ -e: disable encryption (French TS) \_ -m: do not send motion events \_ -l: do not request license \_ \_ The -l option is interesting, in that it doesn't request a license \_ from the terminal server itself. With the use of some scripting, you \_ could have the Red Hat box boot up, logon and start the rdesktop \_ client all without the user doing anything. Once the client is \_ started in full screen mode you really can't tell that your aren't on \_ a Windows machine; even Ctrl-Alt-Del works. It really is a slick \_ client and could potentially save you quite a bit of money. \_ \_ If you run rdesktop, you will, at a minimum, save on one Windows \_ license. Potentially more if you also used Sun's StarOffice. In \_ either case, rdesktop is a pretty good implementation of the terminal \_ server client and if you are using Linux, it will give you a way to \_ connect to your MS server. We have mirrored the download here: \_ \_ http://www.w2knews.com/rd/rd.cfm?id=020214TB-rdesktop \_ \_ __________________________________________________ \_ Do You Yahoo!? \_ Send FREE Valentine eCards with Yahoo! Greetings! \_ http://greetings.yahoo.com \_ ________________________________________________ \_ See http://PLUG.phoenix.az.us/navigator-mail.shtml if your mail doesn't post to the list quickly and you use Netscape to write mail. \_ \_ PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us \_ http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss