Hi Michael,
sorry for the long delay, I was on vacation time without a good internet access. I had a lot of troubles getting glx working and I change my strategy for a local access. But I'm still interested in getting it working better.
A Diumenge, 10 d'agost de 2014, Michael DePaulo va escriure:
The architecture you have right now is this:
Your host has qemu-kvm hosting the VM.
The host has libvirtd managing qemu-kvm.
virt-manager can be opened and closed on the server, locally or over x2go, to manage the libvirtd.
Your client should run virt-viewer instead of x2go client. virt-viewer is available for both Windows and Linux. virt-viewer (a Red Hat sponsored project) is available not only for Red Hat based distros, but also for Ubuntu, Debian and other distros. The URL to enter in virt-viewer is spice://hostname:59xx, where hostname is the host, and 59xx is the port
[...] that
virt-manager lists for the display. When you select the display under the VM's hardware details, it should list what port it is on. If the port is not listed, remove and add the display, and configure the display to listen on "All interfaces".
Ok, I have configured my guest with a qxl graphics card and spice server with port 5902. However I'm not able to connect from another box (neither the host). with the command virt-viewer spice://mybox:5902
You could also run virt-manager directly on the client and connect to the server's libvirtd with it. virt-manager is available for Linux, but not for Windows. You do not need libvirtd running on the client, although the OS may make the virt-manager package depend on the libvirtd package. If so, just disable the libvirtd service from running.
I can connect.
[...]
Ping Leopold
Pong ....
I will try to make more test this week. I hope to be able to run spice and qxl to see if it works.
Thanks for all,
Leopold
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