X2Go

From ArchWiki

X2Go enables to access a graphical desktop of a computer over the network. The protocol is tunneled through the Secure Shell protocol, so it is encrypted.

Note: X2Go is not compatible with all desktop environments. You can check X2Go desktop environment compatibility first. Compatibility is especially important if you want to connect to an existing Xorg session. In addition, X2Go does not support GLX 1.4 which is required for many graphical applications, including Firefox. Making those work requires further hacks.

Installation

Two parts are available in official repositories. They can be installed with the following packages:

Server side

Configure Secure Shell daemon

X2Go uses Secure Shell in order to work, so you need to configure sshd daemon to allow X11 forwarding. Follow the instructions at OpenSSH#X11 forwarding and OpenSSH#Daemon management.

Check fuse kernel module is loaded

In order for the server to be able to access files on the client computer, the fuse module is needed. One can check that lsmod | grep fuse returns a match, otherwise load the fuse kernel module.

Setup SQLite database

Run the following command on the server to initialize the SQLite database (which is required in order for the x2go server to work):

# x2godbadmin --createdb

Control published applications

X2Go can publish the installed applications in a menu to the client. This is controlled by the files in /etc/x2go/applications/. This location however is not created by default and can be created by creating a symlink to /usr/share/applications/. Alternatively instead of creating a symlink one could also create a folder and link only the desired applications instead.

See [1] for more information.

Start X2Go server daemon

Now all you need to do is start the system x2goserver.service.

Client side

Run X2Go Client on the client computer, the one that wants to access the server:

$ x2goclient

For the list of available options, see x2goclient(1).

Note: Make sure the client computer can open a SSH session to the server by checking from the client that ssh username@host is successful.

You can now create several sessions, which then appear on the right side and can be selected by a mouse click. Each entry consists of your username, hostname, IP, and port for SSH connection. Furthermore you can define several speed profiles (coming from modem up to LAN) and the desktop environment you want to start remotely.

Access the local desktop

To access the local desktop, the one currently running on the server rather than a new one, one can choose the option "X2Go/X11 Desktop Sharing" or "Connection to local desktop" (depending on the version of your client) in "session type" in the X2Go Client as long as the users match, if it is user foo accessing the session of user foo.

However to access the local desktop of a different user, one needs to install x2godesktopsharingAUR and launch x2godesktopsharing.

Exchange data between client and server (desktop)

On the X2Go client (e.g. laptop) local directories could be shared. The server will use fuse and SSHFS to access this directory and mount it to a subdirectory media of your home directory on the server. This enables you to have access to laptop data on your server or to exchange files. It is also possible to mount these shares automatically at each session start.

Leave a session temporarily

Another special feature of X2Go is the possibility of suspending a session. This means you can leave a session on one client and reopen it even from another client at the same point. This can be used to to start a session in the LAN and to reopen it later on a laptop. The session data are stored and administered in a SQLite database on the server in the meanwhile. The state of the sessions is protocolled by a process named x2gocleansessions.

Troubleshooting

The desktop environment does not start

Local session prevents X2Go new session

It happens that when a desktop session already runs locally and X2Go tries to start a new one, it fails. This is typically an issue related to D-Bus, see [2] for details.

If D-Bus fails to start, try using a Custom desktop command instead of the default session type. For the command, use the desktop starter as an option of dbus-launch, for example dbus-launch startxfce4. This is a way to launch a session bus instance, set the appropriate environment variables so that the new session can find the bus.

Path issue

It may be that the desktop environment's executable, startkde, startgnome or startxfce4 is not in the $PATH when logging in using SSH. In this case, do not simply choose the defaults of KDE, Gnome or XFCE but use the full paths to the executable, for example /usr/bin/startxfce4. You can also start openbox or another window manager. You should be asked for your server's password and user name, now and after login you will see the X2Go logo for a short time, and the desktop.

No selection screen in x2goclient

A regression in iproute2 causes ss to show no result when specifying the -u flag, as done in /usr/bin/x2golistdesktops. [3]

See [4], [5] for more information.

Sessions do not logoff correctly

Due to this bug the X2Go sessions might not logoff correctly. The script that initiates the session spits out many log lines that might confuse X2go. A simple workarround is to create a custom session script and redirect the log output either to a file or to /dev/null and then point your X2Go-client to this custom script.

Here is a sample script for an XFCE session:

 #!/bin/sh
 #
 #xfce4-session spits out quite a bit of text during logout, which I guess
 #confuses x2go so we would get a black screen and session hang.
 #adding redirect to a logfile like "~/logfile" or "/dev/null" nicely solved it
 # see https://bugs.x2go.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=914
 /usr/bin/xfce4-session > /dev/null

Notification area disappeared

If you log in, but the notification area is missing, you can use exactly the same fix as for #Local session prevents X2Go new session.

Shared folders do not mount (Windows Clients)

The ssh-daemon used by the X2go windows client uses depreceated ssh-dss keys by default and because Arch does not accept them your shared folders will not mount. Check out this bug report for more information.

This can be solved on the windows side by generating different type of key:

 C:\Program Files (x86)\x2goclient\ssh-keygen -b 2048 -t rsa

And simply replace c:\Users\User\.x2go\etc\ssh_host_dsa_key and c:\Users\User\.x2go\etc\ssh_host_dsa_key.pub with the newly generated key files.

Other workarrounds from [6] might help, too.

Workaround for failing compositing window manager for remote session

Tango-edit-clear.pngThis article or section needs language, wiki syntax or style improvements. See Help:Style for reference.Tango-edit-clear.png

Reason: please use the first argument of the template to provide a brief explanation. (Discuss in Talk:X2Go)

This is useful for situations, when the computer running x2goserver is used also for local sessions with e.g. compiz as the window manager. For remote connections with x2goclient, compiz fails to load and metacity should be used instead. The following is for GNOME, but could be modified for other desktop environments. (Getting compiz ready is not part of this how-to.)

Create /usr/local/share/applications/gnome-wm-test.desktop:

[Desktop Entry]
Type=Application
Encoding=UTF-8
Name=gnome-wm-test
Exec=/usr/local/bin/gnome-wm-test.sh
NoDisplay=true

Create script /usr/local/bin/gnome-wm-test.sh:

#!/bin/sh
# Script for choosing compiz when possible, otherwise metacity
# Proper way to use this script is to set the key to mk-gnome-wm
# /desktop/gnome/session/required_components/windowmanager
xdpyinfo 2> /dev/null | grep -q "^ *Composite$" 2> /dev/null
IS_X_COMPOSITED=$?
if [ $IS_X_COMPOSITED -eq 0 ] ; then
    gtk-window-decorator &
    WM="compiz ccp --indirect-rendering --sm-client-id $DESKTOP_AUTOSTART_ID"
else
    WM="metacity --sm-client-id=$DESKTOP_AUTOSTART_ID"
fi
exec bash -c "$WM"

Modify the following gconf key to start the session with gnome-wm-test window manager:

$ gconftool-2 --type string --set /desktop/gnome/session/required_components/windowmanager "gnome-wm-test"

/bin/bash: No such file or directory when connect (or what ever shell you use)

In you ssh configuration, if you chroot a user, this user need to have his own /bin directory inside his chrooted directory. If not, you will not be able to connect.

X2Go client: Cannot connect to remote X2Go server from local Wayland session: "The connection with the remote server was shut down"

X2Go client launches as expected from a local Wayland session but attempting to connect to a remote X2Go server fails. This problem is usually caused by Qt on Wayland.

Follow the instructions in Desktop entries#Modify environment variables and change the lines starting with

Exec=x2goclient

to

Exec=env QT_QPA_PLATFORM=xcb x2goclient

X2Go client: Cannot connect to xyz:22 - Could not apply options

x2go client can not parse custom user ssh configuration files with tokens.

This ssh configuration

Host xyz
    IdentitiesOnly yes
    IdentityFile %d/.ssh/%L.key

will result in connection failure with debug output:

x2go-DEBUG-../src/sshmasterconnection.cpp:622> "Cannot connect to xyz:22" - "Couldn't apply options"

This ssh configuration works:

Host xyz
    IdentitiesOnly yes
    IdentityFile ~/.ssh/mysupersecret.key

X2Go server: localhost ssh tunnel on server fails with sshd error: error: connect_to localhost port xyz: failed.

X2Go server requires IPv4 for localhost ssh tunnel on the server. If you configure the sshd server to use IPv6 only

AddressFamily inet6

X2Go client connections will fail.

Performance issues

In case of performance issues (applications are unresponsive or freeze), try to turn off sound support, printing support and file share tunneling.

See also