Revision 21 as of 2020-09-11 14:59:41

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Remote access to a Linux host's desktop with VNC

The following article explains how to access the desktop of a Linux host residing inside the ETH network from another host on the in- or outside by using Virtual Network Computing (VNC)1. Throughout his article, the following placeholders are used:

Connect to the ETH network

If current_host resides outside of the ETH network, you need to connect to it thorugh either a VPN connection or an SSH tunnel. Connecting through VPN is the preferred method as it uses a dedicated infrastructure. Both methods are explained in the following steps.
If current_host is alreay inside the ETH network, skip to Start a VNC server on internal_host.

Preferred method: Connect through a VPN connection

Know your ETH network password

If you're unsure about your eth_network_password, login on password.ethz.ch with your regular eth_password and change your former eth_network_password to a new password.

Install the VPN client on your current host

Initiate a VPN connection to internal_host

Now you are ready to connect the VPN client on current_host to the ETH network and continue with the following steps.

Alternative method: Connect through an SSH tunnel

SSH tunnel on Linux

The host login.ee.ethz.ch is the entry point for an SSH connection. More information about SSH connections can be found in the article RemoteAccess: SSH -remote_terminal_session.

The default VNC port will only be known for sure after you start the VNC server on internal_host

SSH tunnel on Windows 10 with OpenSSH

SSH tunnel on Windows with putty

/!\ DETAILS MISSING A comfortable setup of putty is described in Windows "direct" SSH access with PuTTY

Start a VNC server on internal_host

To start a VNC server instance on internal_host, you need to initiate a SSH connection to it.
If you previously opened a VPN connection, make sure it is still active

Initiate a SSH connection to internal_host

SSH connection on Linux

SSH connection on Windows 10 with OpenSSH

SSH connection on Windows with putty

Follow the article Windows "direct" SSH access with PuTTY

Setup and start the VNC server

Configuration and start of a VNC server works with an ISG-provided wrapper script by issuing the command

vncserver

in your shell connected to internal_host.

Setup and first startup

If this is the first time you start vncserver, you will be asked to provide a password to allow access to the VNC server instance you start now and in the future. It is possible to set the password to allow only observing or also interacting with the VNC session. Choose a strong password, as anyone on the ETH network can connect to your internal_host while a VNC server is running. The password should contain:

The setup followed by the startup process will look like this:

Creating directory /home/eth_username/.vnc......
Creating startup_file /home/eth_username/.vnc/xstartup.....

You will require a password to access your desktops.

Password:
Verify:
Would you like to enter a view-only password (y/n)? n

New 'default' desktop is internal_host:N

Creating default config /home/eth_username/.vnc/config
Starting applications specified in /home/eth_username/.vnc/xstartup
Log file is /home/eth_username/.vnc/internal_host:N.log

Note the virtual display number N of your VNC server appearing after internal_host:. It is needed later to connect your VNC viewer on current_host to the VNC server instance on internal_host or to kill a vncserver process manually.
The default desktop started now is Xfce4. If you prefer a different desktop you have to kill the running vncserver process and start it again with the desktop of your choice.
Otherwise the vncserver process terminates after you log out of your desktop environment.

Terminating a running VNC server process

Issue the command

vncserver -kill :N

in a shell on internal_host.

Choose a non-default desktop

To start the VNC session with a non-default desktop, provide one of the options [xfce|gnome|kde|light|xterm]:

vncserver gnome

Use a VNC viewer to view and control the desktop on internal_host

VNC viewer software

The listed VNC software contains a viewer component and is available for both Linux and Windows:

The above list is not meant to be complete, feel free to install other solutions on your self-managed computer.

Connect your VNC viewer to the VNC server on internal_host

VNC connection from a Linux client

On a Linux client issue the command

vncviewer internal_host:590N

VNC connection from a Windows or Mac client

On a Windows or Mac client enter the hostname of internal_host and the display number N as shown in the following example for TurboVNC viewer:

If you terminate your VNC viewer without logging out of your desktop environment, your VNC session will stay active and you can reconnect to it later on.

VNC connection from Mac alternative

On a Mac client the built-in VNC viewer may be started by pressing Command-K and entering the url vnc://internal_host:590N. No support is given for this way to connect to a VNC session.

Misc

Check (student) host availability

Check with the command htop if any other users are using internal_host 's resources right now. If they do, log out and log in to a different host.
A list of student hosts can be shown by issuing the command grep tardis /etc/hosts

Advanced usage

Some advanced configuration or usage examples have not yet been migrated from the previous documentation about VNC.

Virtual display size

The size of the virtual display can be set by entering its dimensions in pixel in either /home/eth_username/.vnc/config.turbo for gnome sessions or /home/eth_username/.vnc/config for all other sessions by adding a line similar to the following:

geometry=3840x1200
  1. VNC on Wikipedia (1)

  2. The standard VNC implementation uses the password as a DES key, which is the reason it's truncated after 8 characters. The DES key size is limited to 56 bits plus 8 parity bits. Using ASCII characters made up of 7 bits it's possible to use an 8 character password, as the unused 8th bit of each byte is discarded. A password shorter than 8 characters is padded with zeroes. (2)