So, I have installed the Remote Server Administration Tools on my Win7 computer, and it works well, but it is a bit slow sometimes, over our site-to-site VPN.
I have a project where I'll have a number of remote Linux systems in the field. From time to time they'll need to connect to a central server via SSH. These remote systems are automated and have no user present. The number and IP of the remote systems is likely to change often, so keeping a central list of them may be difficult.
This must have been asked many times before, but neither google or the search on this site came up with anything useful. So I believe this cannot be done, but I'm gonna ask anyway.
Hello folks
Our office has a debian server, running as a samba PDC.
I have downloaded and installed Remote Server Administration Tools for Windows 8 on my Windows 8 Enterprise machine.
Online resources suggest installing RSAT should also install Server Manager GUI, but I am unable to find it.
Do I need to perform some additional steps to enable Server Manager?
I have tried researching this, but haven't come across any solutions.
Edit:
Hi everyone. i have a centos6 server from centos server i have a php prog that's connect to remote server the other server have a windows server 2008 on it my problem when i try to conne... [by acidsnake]
Welcome to the CentOS fora. Please see the recommended reading for new users linked in my signature.You should not need a local mail server to use Thunderbird with a remote server. I ... [by pschaff]
I have an interesting problem I'm trying to solve. I have a JumpBox server that I have in order to securely ssh into client's servers. This is the only server my clients ever open up port 22 to. However, this JumpBox server is very small and does not have enough space to hold large files (bigger than 5GB).
I have a remote linux server. I want to access it remote desktop style from windows.
I found this tutorial
http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/VNC-Server
And a bunch of others
All are so complicated.
Are there easier tutorial? Something that can explain what is Gnome, what is VNC, what is tiger-vnc, etc?