See if this helps.
http://www.xrdp.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=18:running-xrdp-and-sesman-non-daemon&catid=2:documents&Itemid=7
On Wed, Mar 27, 2013 at 3:21 PM, Ralph Schmieder wrote:
> Hi, Jay. I'd assume to start the xrdp / sesman like the init.d script does
> plus some
Hi, Jay. I'd assume to start the xrdp / sesman like the init.d script does plus
some additional debug parameters / stay-in-forground switches. If there's
anything that's not quite obvious I'm all ears :)
Otherwise looking forward to the Wiki post.
Thanks,
-ralph
On Wed, 27 Mar 2013 11:17:25
Hi Ralph,
One thing you can do is run xrdp and sesman from the command line.
You might be able to see some output that explains what's going on.
Do you know how to do that?
If not, let me know.
I'll create a wiki page for it because it's such a handy debugging techneque.
Jay
On Wed, Mar 27,
Hi Ralph,
When I investigated, I used this topic:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/xrdp/forums/forum/389417/topic/3706601
But I found out nothing...
Then I switched to KDE, which I understand is not an option for you.
Anyway, maybe the topic linked above help you find out what is going on.
Reg
Hi, Tamas. Thanks for your response. Can't test with KDE / other environment as
I rely on Gnome and think it should work with Gnome just as well as with other
session managers.
FOr me, it looks like that xrdp-chansrv is busy waiting on some resource (maybe
a lock on a file) and I just have to
Hi,
Maybe this is absolutely irrelevant, but in the past I saw nearly 100%CPU
usage with Gnome. Changing to KDE solved the issue.
tamas
On 24 March 2013 16:18, Ralph Schmieder wrote:
> Hi, all. I'm using xrdp latest git build on CentOS 6.4 compiled using the
> instructions at [1] 'building on
Hi, all. I'm using xrdp latest git build on CentOS 6.4 compiled using the
instructions at [1] 'building on CentOS 5.x'.
Whenever I enable 'allow_channels=true' in the xrdp.ini to allow for clipboard
functionality I see that xrdp-chansrv pegs the CPU at 100%. A subsequent
session of another use