Date: Fri, 12 Jan 2018 11:39:35 +0100 From: Harry Schmalzbauer <freebsd@omnilan.de> To: araujo@freebsd.org Cc: "freebsd-virtualization@freebsd.org" <freebsd-virtualization@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: Question about bhyve Message-ID: <5A589067.50903@omnilan.de> In-Reply-To: <CAOfEmZgPzbmyr_fmDAd_V5PK%2BEvJM6sPoADrS_zeFO9Aq3d8Vg@mail.gmail.com> References: <VI1PR02MB120083B7C5873D3D6FA34DC4F6170@VI1PR02MB1200.eurprd02.prod.outlook.com> <CADdqeiOXB_Wj1r2WFSmEXY9ZA0d507h=T5Y4O4O97mr9BF7fPg@mail.gmail.com> <CAOfEmZgPzbmyr_fmDAd_V5PK%2BEvJM6sPoADrS_zeFO9Aq3d8Vg@mail.gmail.com>
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Bezüglich Marcelo Araujo's Nachricht vom 12.01.2018 03:20 (localtime): > Hi, > > You can give a try using devel/libhyve-remote, it is a VNC server based on > libvncserver, clipboard works there. Can someone please give a on-line explanation how this port is to be used – not for end users as far as I understand the description. The sentence above confuses me even more, because of the "libvncserver"! I haven't found time to look into it, but always wondered if it replaces bhyve-vnc-_server_ (so one needs to re-compile bhyve(8) from base after installing that port) or if it is a VNC client, lending X naming convensions where the client - which is really the server - is correctly named "server". AFAIK VNC is different, it's just a X11 client – correct me if I'm wrong. But since you suggest this as a solution to a end-user-task problem, a developer library isn't probably what it is!?! Thanks, -harry
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