There is also waypipe
which allows you to run Wayland apps over ssh.
Really? Wayland mentions are getting up there with vegans. We know already, go home!
While I agree Wayland still immature despite decade of development, you don't have to be a dick when voicing your opinion.
Three things you can count on. Vegans, Wayland fanbois, and Arch users all telling us about their respective choice. That is being a dick.
My favorite is doing this on a windows host with rootless x and having classic gnome on top of my windows desktop 😹
As a Windows sysadmin who knows embarrassingly little about Linux, how is the performance? Is it comparable to RDP or better?
The performance isn't the best, when compared to RDP. Protocols like RDP can take shortcuts by treating it more as an image then a fully remote rendering, like image compression techniques. For tunneling an X-window over SSH, the compression option you have is with the connection, itself. Using say, ssh -CX
or ssh -CY
allows ssh to compress the connection for better performance, but that compression able to do lossy image compression. The killer will be latency. If it's over a highly latent connection, like a WAN or satellite, it will be rough. But on a wired lan, or decent local wifi, it's pretty all right.
I should look into it, but I don't know whether or not X11 provides for any kind of video compression when updating regions of the screen. I only ever use this over a an 802.11g LAN so even if there is no video compression I don't notice any lag. I haven't tried using it over the Internet, but I am guessing it would probably be a bit slow.
I just use Moonlight/Sunshine, but my usecase is consistently just streaming my main PC to wherever I am
Don't forget to -C
your ssh for better performance over the wire. It can help a lot.
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Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
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