Hi Philip,
If you’re using Chrome you can install this extension:
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/clipboard-permission-mana/ipbhneeanpgkaleihlknhjiaamobkceh?hl=en
On a supported guacamole desktop, an icon in the extensions bar will let you
allow direct copy/paste. I’m not sure what th
wn you, O man, what is good; And what does the LORD require of
> you But to do justly, To love mercy, And to walk humbly with your God?
> --Micah 6:8-- ==
>
>
>
> On Thursday, August 31, 2017, 4:03:58 PM EDT, Steve Karam
> wrote:
>
>
> Nick,
>
>
” options. I also
don’t see the logo on the omni bar.
Any chance using a reverse proxy or a non-default path could render it unusable?
Regards,
Steve Karam
> On Aug 31, 2017, at 3:27 PM, Nick Couchman wrote:
>
> I assume you don't mean "without clipboard" and, instead, y
more likely it’s
the targets initializing.
Steve Karam
> On Mar 16, 2017, at 5:49 PM, Mehdi Osman wrote:
>
> Hi Mike,
>
> Any idea on the issue?
>
> Your help is very much appreciated.
> Thanks for your support and keep up the good work.
>
>
> From: Mehdi O
Hi Ray,
With text input, Guacamole won’t really know whether the keyboard is needed or
not at any particular time. There’s an input box, therefore the keyboard is
there.
I haven’t tried on an Android tablet, but on an iPad I will hide the keyboard
when I don’t need it and it stays hidden unti
Wow, that’s amazing. I had no idea.
I wonder if it’s possible to make it automatically go into text-input mode from
a mobile browser as well. That would be stellar (though it does get rather
crowded).
> On Sep 26, 2016, at 5:44 PM, Mike Jumper wrote:
>
> There is no way for
> JavaScript itse
Hi Keith,
Perhaps I'm misunderstanding your use case, but it sounds like all you need is
an nginx reverse proxy. Users connect to nginx, and the nginx host proxies
connections to the target systems.
I actually do this in a cloud lab system I designed to proxy port 80 on a
central server to di
each subsequent
login. But is there a guacamole specific way?
Thanks!
Steve Karam