![]() ![]() But my friend (running WIN7 at the time) seemed to have some difficulties with it. I’m not exactly sure how Teamviewer verifies the daemon is running (probably looking for a process?), but when I launch Teamviewer within firejail (even with -noprofile), it fails to detect that the daemon is already running (hence my suspicion that it is looking for a process - the new PID namespace would preclude it from detecting the daemon).Īs a result I installed TeamViewer in a VM which worked well. The beginning of the explanation is something like: Network process already started (or error)ĭoing some research on the matter I was led to the site Profile requests opt/teamviewer/tv_bin/script/tvw_exec: Zeile 95: 113 Abgebrochen “$TV_BIN_DIR/teamviewerd” -n -f Terminate called without an active exception However it turned out to be the (hitherto) only programme that cannot be sandboxed the traditional way by TeamViewer. In the beginning I was also using TeamViewer and was not really satisfied with it for a particular reason.Īs I tend to sandbox almost everything with firejail ( ) which BTW I consider to be a splendid programme ( very well documented) I was of course trying to sandbox TeamViewer as well. Somehow that does not matter and I was marked as a commercial user, basically begging me to buy a commercial license, when indeed I was just connected one single time to a single PC of a single friend, for one single day. Oh and my account was created 2008 or 2009. I think I tried it 2018 or 2019 the last time. Since then, I cannot really connect to anyone. Yet, because this one time I was connected for a couple hours to a single person’s PC, for one single time, my account was “marked” as commercially using TeamViewer. 2017 I once ran TeamViewer for the greater part of a single day (8+ hours), because I was fixing PC stuff and explained PC stuff, while being connected this whole time to one private friend (not customer!). ![]() Much better than TeamViewer, as it does not have stupid restrictions like TeamViewer. So that would leave me with the VPN option. I´m not so sure whether I´d want to disclose such an important detail. If I understand things correctly that means my password. Ssh -R 43022:localhost:22 will be prompted for the password of the account you are using to connect to the local computer. On the remote computer, we use the following command: So why would she be able to ssh into my place whereas I cannot…Įven if things would work (making use of reverse ssh tunneling): Neither of us has changed anything config-wise as far as SSH is concerned. Both us use are using Lubuntu 20.04.3 LTS. My friend´s laptop and my PC have the exact same setup. If she is able to SSH to your place, she can reverse SSH to you.īut if the networking configuration on your end is straightforward, the remote computer can connect to you ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |