Thanks for the full explanation. Sounds like it might be a nice thing in general to run the X server -- I suspect other linux apps would do well to run that way. I'm on the same lan, so I don't believe there'll be a firewall problem. When I'm off-premises, there very well might be. I'm off to discover X servers for Windows 2000. Thanks! Joseph R. Skoler joseph@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:joseph@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> CompuHelp Technologies, Inc. Computer Consulting, Network Solutions, Integration, Support 11 Lispenard Street New York, NY 10013 212-995-2955 http://www.compuhelp.com > -----Original Message----- > From: Guy Harris [mailto:gharris@xxxxxxxxx] > Sent: Monday, May 06, 2002 6:30 AM > To: Joseph R. Skoler > Cc: ethereal-users@xxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: Re: [Ethereal-users] Brand new > > > On Mon, May 06, 2002 at 05:48:59AM -0400, Joseph R. Skoler wrote: > > I'm a novice at this, so I probably don't follow entirely. > > > > Here's the situation: > > > > I've got RedHat 7.2 on a box and I'm ssh'd into that box > using SecureCRT. > > > > So, should I run xhost during these sessions? > > Given that SecureCRT is a Windows application, the machine in front of > which you're sitting, and to which your keyboard, mouse, and > monitor are > connected, is presumably running some version of Windows. > > If you want to run, on another machine, applications such as Ethereal > that use X11 for GUI display, and have them pop up windows on your > Windows machine and get input from the keyboard and mouse on your > Windows machine, you will need to be running an X server on > your Windows > machine. > > If you are running an X server, you will need to configure it to allow > the Red Hat box to connect to that server. I cannot help you > there; you > will have to read the documentation for your X server and see how to > configure it to allow particular machines to connect to the X server. > > You will also have to arrange that there is no firewall between your > Windows machine and the Red Hat machine that would prevent the Red Hat > machine from connecting to an X server on your Windows machine. I > cannot help you there; I don't know what your network configuration is > like, nor, if I did, could I help you configure firewalls. > > If you do not have an X server application running on your Windows > machine, you will have to get one. I don't know all of the X servers > available for Windows; vendors such as Hummingbird: > > http://www.hcl.com/ > > sell them. >
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