On Thu, 1 Oct 2020 at 20:51, Stefan Baur <X2Go-ML-1@baur-itcs.de> wrote:
When you log in to that jump host, is there any way to find out what it is running? Like, Linux, some BSD, or something commercial/closed source? Can you run commands like "uname -a" there?
Debian 10 (buster)
I can live with establishing that ssh proxy connection manually, but I am
still a bit confused that even now the comparison with VPN is still showing VPN as being faster. Have you guys tested this and got consistent results which shows the opposite?
Oh, so you have the option of using a VPN connection instead of going through that jump host? In that case, it would be interesting to see what happens when you set up a jump host of your own (preferably based on Debian Buster) on your internal network (i.e. in the same network where your X2Go Server resides). If you can connect via the VPN to the Jump Host under your control, and from there to the X2Go Server, and it feels almost as fast or just as fast as connecting directly to the server (via VPN), then that would be an indication that your "official" jump host is having issues with our client. If, on the other hand, you're seeing the same lag again, it would mean that something's broken on our end, i.e. in X2GoClient.
Sorry, that was a mistake, I meant VNC not VPN. What I meant is that I am still confused that even with those improvements of x2go, vnc is still noticably faster.
I do have a different config to a server which I can reach both via an ssh jump host (running ubuntu) or a VPN, I will test this when I get some time.
Once I have more time on my hands I will try this with different machines and connections I have plenty where I could try this out.
Completely different question: the way this works, would it in principle be possible to also have a windows client? I am almost exclusively using linux but with vnc I can use it from a windows machine as well, if needed.
Um, sounds like you haven't looked at the X2Go web page yet? https://wiki.x2go.org/doku.php -> the green box labeled "Get X2Go"
OK, so now I am blind as well, sorry.
At the moment this actually works better than on linux in HDPI multi monitor configuration because windows is able to seamlessly scale the vnc client window according to the monitor dpi, while linux (at least Ubuntu 20.04) still cannot do this properly.
Well, X2GoClient allows you to set the DPI for your session (third tab in the session config), and it also allows you to enable or disable XINERAMA there. Maybe that helps?
Thanks for that info and all your help!
Cheers, johann