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I intend to manage my photo library (not editing, just tagging, sorting, etc.), manage my media server (NFS share), open occasion office document, that king of work. Are you saying I should abandon all hope? My intention is not to run games or do 3D modeling or things of the sort. In this area, Linux community development of a comparable graphics architecture has fallen short (Possibly the most well known, longest known architecture is OpenGL). #The nomachine service is not available on host ssh windowsThe Windows GPU architecture is different with far longer than a decade of dedicated work designing the Windows graphics architecture, implementing things like DirectX. IMO Linux has never really solved the remote graphics display performance issue (This isn't a specific openSUSE issue). Still, if you look in the Virtualization forum, you'll see a few recent threads which are trying to push the current known boundaries on what is possible doing GPU pass through, the idea is to avoid the issues related to virtualized graphics and give the Guest direct access to hardware. This is why for the longest time you'll see recommendations to not run gaming machines as virtualized Guests, and the recommendation holds true for any high demand multimedia. #The nomachine service is not available on host ssh how toSince I don't really know what my options are, I'm looking for advise on how to get smooth OpenSUSE desktop experience in my setup: Win 10 Host and Hyper-V OpenSUSE guest.IMO Linux has never really solved the remote graphics display performance issue (This isn't a specific openSUSE issue). Unfortunately, experience of connecting from Win 10 Host (native RDP client) over RDP to Hyper-V OpenSUSE guest running XRDP server is rather slow. for that reason I went to XRDP, hopping it will solve my issue with Hyper-V OpenSUSE. #The nomachine service is not available on host ssh fullconnecting from Win10 Host to Hyper-V win 7 guest over RDP (using native Win 10 RDP client) I get well performing full screen Win 7 environment. ![]() I gave this an example, that solves resolution limitation. My goal is to connect from my Win10 host into Hyper-V OpenSUSE guest. I do not intend on using Blender or other multimedia CPU/GPU intensive applications on virtual OST. in order to have smooth OST GUI experience while running it on Hyper-V. So, I'm fishing for suggestions, tips, links to how-to's, etc. ![]() It does authenticate, but then says that nomachine service is not running, although OST says that service has started. I'm connecting to it using sesman-Xvnc option, as others don't seem to work at all.įor Linux to Linux connections I've used X11 forwarding over SSH, but not even sure it is possible with Windows to Linux setup?Īnd I also tried installing FreeNX server on OST and accessing it with NoMachine client from Windows (using SSH). I've tried adjusting settings (setting max_bpp and xserverbpp to 256, bitmap_cache and bitmap_compression set to yes), but it still lags behind a bit, especially when dragging windows. It gives me full screen 4K (3840 x 2160) resolution, but it is slow. The speed is great, but unfortunately, it does not overcome resolution restrictions. So I'm looking for something similar for my OST guest OS. The challenge is that Hyper-V client only gives 1280x768 resolution on OpenSUSE, and with PDI adjustment for 4K display it is unusable.Ĭonnecting to Windows guest on hyper-v over RDP solves resolution restrictions. #The nomachine service is not available on host ssh windows 10I will not go into details on my motivations and decision process, but I've settle on Windows 10 Pro Host OS and Hyper-V virtual machines. Now I need to refresh my memory on Windows, but I am not ready to abandon Linux (OpenSUSE in particular). I have been using Linux since Win Vista came out. I have purchased a laptop with PCIe SSD and a 4K display. This is specific yet generic question, so a background information is needed. I need to set up some sort of remote desktop server on OpenSUSE Tumbleweed (OST). ![]()
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