In all cases, xrdp will synchronize a physical display, keyboard, mouse, etc on a remote client with a local graphical display. Many other possibilities are commented out in the xrdp.ini file. You have other options too, if you want to access the physical graphical console via RDP, you can activate the X11vnc, which will attach a VNC session to a running X session on a physical graphic card. This is what makes Xorg faster than Xvnc. Another approach is to install the package xorgxrdp, which makes X11 work directly with RDP, bypassing the need of a graphic card. Then xrdp gets whatever is drawn on this card and sends it to the client. Xvnc simulates a physical graphic card, on which X11 will work as it does on a physical console. Long answer: RDP is just the transmission protocol, on your Linux server you need a graphical environment. You have to choose Xorg, Xvnc crashes with the clipboard. On top of the login you have a drop-down menu where you can choose Xvnc or Xorg (or more stuff depending on your /etc/xrdp/xrdp.ini). Short answer: when you open the RDP session, you have the login screen, with the XRDP logo on top and a login/password form. "Did you chose the right way on the login screen ?" process_message_channel_setup: num_chans 0 An established connection closed to endpoint: NULL:N A connection received from: 0.0.0.0 port 0 I promptly got lkicked off, but was able to log in again. Systemclt restart rvice systemctl restart rvice
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