You need to set REMOTE_APPS=True in lts.conf for remote apps to work. It
is off by default right now.
-Gadi
On Mon, 2010-06-07 at 16:43 +0200, Jakob Unterwurzacher wrote:
On 07/06/10 03:24, Michael Pope wrote:
I'm running LTSP 5.2.1 and tried to use the ltsp-remoteapps on one of my
clients
On 07/06/10 03:24, Michael Pope wrote:
I'm running LTSP 5.2.1 and tried to use the ltsp-remoteapps on one of my
clients and it didn't start the application. Here is what I did:
On the thin client:
Opened up a terminal
$ ltsp-localapps xterm
With in xterm window
$ ltsp-remoteapps
On 07/06/10 16:43, Jakob Unterwurzacher wrote:
With in xterm window
$ ltsp-remoteapps gnome-terminal
Do I have to get a more recent version of LTSP or is the ltsp-remoteapps
not working at all yet?
Are you sure gnome-terminal is installed on the thin client?
Well. Please disregard this
I'm running LTSP 5.2.1 and tried to use the ltsp-remoteapps on one of my
clients and it didn't start the application. Here is what I did:
On the thin client:
Opened up a terminal
$ ltsp-localapps xterm
With in xterm window
$ ltsp-remoteapps gnome-terminal
Do I have to get a more recent
Michael,
The beginnings of the code to handle this is already there, but I think
it got put on the back burner and no one took it the rest of the way
yet.
There is a program in the chroot called ltsp-remoteapps, which
functions like its counterpart ltsp-localapps on the server. Just as
on the
I've setup LTSP 5 under Ubuntu 10.04 and have installed some local_apps
such as Firefox.
If I click on a pdf within firefox it cannot find the associated program
(which is on the server) because it's looking the local /usr/bin directory.
Is there a way without installing a pdf reader as a local