Hi,
I recently started migrating users to a Windows domain. We have all been
using Cygwin for some time but now in the domain I am experiencing problems.
Worse still I can not revert to a working version.
I have tried reinstalling and uninstalling but the same problems persist.
I am probably
Paul Mulcahy wrote:
Hi,
I recently started migrating users to a Windows domain. We have all been
using Cygwin for some time but now in the domain I am experiencing problems.
Worse still I can not revert to a working version.
I have tried reinstalling and uninstalling but the same problems
And the message is?
The message is:
A fatal error has occurred and cygwin/x will now exit.
Please open /tmp/Xwin.log for more information.
I have attached the log.
We prefer that you attach rather than append your cygcheck output.
Apologies, I was having issues posting to the list. I
I'm not sure if this is the right place to pose the question, but I
thought I'd start here.
We've got several machine that have cygwin with X installed, when we ssh
from them to an HP-UX box and attempt to run an application matlab
(which opens up a new window), everything appears to work
I have noticed that when logged in as 'administrator' everything works but
not as a user. Is there anything in particular that Xwin does that that a
domain may not allow?
___
Paul Mulcahy
Systems Manager
Telcotec
+353 1 290 9242
--
Unsubscribe info:
Paul Mulcahy schrieb:
Maybe you have a problem with ntfs file permissions.
The domain users must have at least write access to tmp and their home
directory, and read access to most of the rest. The domain Administrator
I suspect it is somewhere in permissions but I have allowed the user and
You could use sysinternals process monitor to track file and registry
access
From what I can see nothing is even failing! It's like it just won't work.
I assume other people have Cygwin working in a windows domain. Was there
some trick? Did you just install as admin and it worked for users?
Paul Mulcahy wrote:
Maybe you have a problem with ntfs file permissions.
The domain users must have at least write access to tmp and their home
directory, and read access to most of the rest. The domain Administrator
usually is in the local Administrators group and will have access
(depending
Greetings.
I am trying to connect to a Gentoo X Server and it is connecting, but I
don't seem to be able to open an xterm. All I get is a full screen without
anything. I am running this command:
XWin -query d-tuxedo
where d-tuxedo is the X Server. It works well with xinit. Here is the
Hi,
DISPLAY on the Linux box must be set to the IP address of the cygwin box.
But DISPLAY on the cygwin box must be set to either localhost or the IP
address of this machine.
You also must have some method to communicate between both machines. I
always used telnet as it was all locally
d-tuxedo 00:32:35- set | grep DISPLAY
DISPLAY=localhost:0.0
what should it be?
- Original Message -
From: Erich Dollansky [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: cygwin-xfree@cygwin.com
Sent: Friday, November 30, 2007 12:31 AM
Subject: Re: Using XWin.exe to connect to a linux X Server
Hi,
jose
Hi,
jose isaias cabrera wrote:
I am trying to connect to a Gentoo X Server and it is connecting, but I
don't seem to be able to open an xterm. All I get is a full screen
without anything. I am running this command:
I did this for years using FreeBSD as the server. No problems.
XWin
12 matches
Mail list logo