trickle
wayvnc
trickle | wayvnc | |
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5 | 21 | |
528 | 934 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 8.0 | |
almost 3 years ago | 6 days ago | |
C | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | ISC License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
trickle
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Enabling IPv6 support for IPv4-only apps on Linux
This method could apply to other tools with the same IPv4/IPv6 behaviour, without further modification. Changing the behaviour in the utility directly would only fix it for that one utility meaning that to fix another you need to do the same work again. It is perhaps also safer than modifying such a core component as SSH: if you introduce a bug the trick can be easily disabled until fixed, if you accidentally break SSH you might cause yourself significantly more hassle.
> This sort of negates that advantage
LD_PRELOAD trickery doesn't negate the advantage of having full source access, patching SSH would also have been a perfectly valid option, but is perhaps a better tool for this particular job.
For another use of the trick see https://github.com/mariusae/trickle (the project looks stale, though that may be because it is properly done and there have been no security/other bugs to fix in recent history) which slips its own functions in the call chain to apply user controlled (rather than firewall/routing level) throughput shaping to utilities that don't offer it out of the box.
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What kind of applications are missing from the Linux ecosystem?
Have you tried Trickle?
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Intentionally throttle import?
Assuming you're on Linux you could use something like Trickle: https://github.com/mariusae/trickle
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How can I cap my download speeds?
install trickle
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How do I limit my bandwidth on Ubuntu?
https://github.com/mariusae/trickle https://www.usenix.org/legacy/event/usenix05/tech/freenix/full_papers/eriksen/eriksen.pdf
wayvnc
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Dropping GNOME's X11 session approved for Fedora 41
You can run remote applications with Wayland now: https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterp...
There is also a VNC server for fullscreen sessions (only supports wlroots compositors for now): https://github.com/any1/wayvnc
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Is my use case with X.org possible with Wayland?
There's wayvnc.
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Asahi Linux To Users: Please Stop Using X.Org
It says on their GitHub page that "Gnome, KDE, and Weston are not supported". What does that mean?
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What kind of applications are missing from the Linux ecosystem?
I thought this existed in the form of wayvnc but from their README it seems they don't support the popular desktop environments (GNOME, KDE).
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What are my options for remote desktop software on wayland?
Not sure if I would call it hassle free, but wayvnc isn't that hard to set up.
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When do you think you will switch to Wayland?
And wayvnc
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Can I run Sway via remote desktop on a Linode server running arch?
There is however a fresh issue on the wayvnc github with what looks like your problem. https://github.com/any1/wayvnc/issues/206
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Use a laptop as a 2nd display on Linux using FreeRDP
On wayvnc git master and sway 1.8 (or git master), you can script things so that a "virtual" display gets created automatically when someone connects to VNC, and removed when they disconnect.
See https://github.com/any1/wayvnc/pull/200/files
The script in the PR does something a bit different, but it's only an example and can be modified to do what I described in the first paragraph.
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Intel is using DXVK for their Windows Arc GPU DX9 drivers
No - it's not X, it's doesn't share a screen in the way X does.
That said... if this is a shoddy attempt at a "gotcha" style question - Screen sharing and remote desktop are both supported.
Ex - for Gnome:
https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/Mutter/RemoteDesktop
LibVNCServer for VNC support, FreeRDP for remote desktop protocol.
For KDE:
https://userbase.kde.org/Krfb
Which mostly just works as long as you have Pipewire and xdg-desktop-portal-kde installed (the base plasma-wayland session usually includes them)
This one is a bit less polished - some users still have problems with keyboard input, depending on the distro and other installed packages.
For Sway:
xdg-desktop-portal-wlr works just fine for screen sharing, and you can use https://github.com/any1/wayvnc for VNC access (including having a completely headless machine).
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Linux experts, how to start TigerVNC automatically when switching to desktop?
Ah right, looks like the VNC server you're using is xorg only. You can try WayVNC for gaming mode https://github.com/any1/wayvnc .
What are some alternatives?
wondershaper - Command-line utility for limiting an adapter's bandwidth
x11vnc - a VNC server for real X displays
WSL - Issues found on WSL
sway - i3-compatible Wayland compositor
LMS - Lightweight Music Server. Access your self-hosted music using a web interface.
kanshi - Dynamic display configuration (mirror)
Monitorian - A Windows desktop tool to adjust the brightness of multiple monitors with ease
FreeRDP - FreeRDP is a free remote desktop protocol library and clients
elpriser
noVNC - VNC client web application
fish-shell - The user-friendly command line shell.
xdg-desktop-portal-wlr - xdg-desktop-portal backend for wlroots