![]() (gpartedbin:15490): Gtk-WARNING **: cannot open display: localhost:10.0" PuTTY X11 proxy: wrong authorisation protocol attemptedPuTTY X11 proxy: wrong authorisation protocol attemptedPuTTY X11 proxy: wrong authorisation protocol attemptedPuTTY X11 proxy: wrong authorisation protocol attempted Have you tried connecting from another machine running Linux and using "ssh -X"? Does that work or not?I have run with sudo before on my user account, this is my error after signing in as gparted If you have successfully run X commands with sudo before, then ignore this. The authorization cookie you got as the original user isn't valid for a different user, root in this case. Last edited by JamesDonaldChilds July 3rd, 2013 at 07:39 PM.ĭoes this only happen with sudo? I haven't run X over SSH with putty, but using the normal SSH client with "ssh -X" you will have permission issues if you start the session as an ordinary user but then switch to being the root user with sudo. Xauthority did not want to set on the disk for some reason, I don't know why but un mounting my drive from my home directory fixed the issue. I had a drive mounted to my /home/usr and. Any help appreciated.ĮDIT: I solved my issue, thanks everyone for your help. What is the problem?! This is the second time this has happened and I had to reformat the first time because I could not find an answer. There is another user ssh'ed in on his own account, but he does not have an xserver on his computer and is not using gui applications. I have putty as SSH and Xming as xserver which IS running and was working perfectly earlier. Run 'gedit -help' to see a full list of available command line options." 'PuTTY X11 proxy: wrong authorisation protocol attemptedPuTTY X11 proxy: wrong authorisation protocol attemptedPuTTY X11 proxy: wrong authorisation protocol attemptedPuTTY X11 proxy: wrong authorisation protocol attemptedCannot open display: Out of no where, for no apparent reason when I try to launch gedit I can no longer access it, as it says not not open sudo gedit This seems to provide a copy and paste approach to using Grsync with network folders.I have ssh via putty on a windows machine and successfully ssh'ed in, I have been using gedit/gparted successfully all last night and this morning, I was literally just using it a few minutes ago. ![]() While I have been unable to use Nautilus to browse folder = /run/user it is possible to use a terminal in Bionic and cd /run/userįrom here one can "ls" to list and see the subfolders to drill down to the name of the SAMBA share as mounted. I just noticed that it may be possible to do something similar on Bionic. I discovered that the following works:Ģ Navigate to network share (which in my case is on Ubuntu Bionic Desktop PC)ģ Left click to open shared network folder for browsingĤ Right click in navigation panel offers: "Open in terminal window" - select thisĥ Terminal window shows (what to me was unlikely) path on the status Copy to clipboard path from the terminal window ie: /run/user/USERIDNUMBER/gvfs/smb-share:server=PCNAME,share=SHAREDFOLDERNAMEħ Launch Grsync and paste path into source, edit for subfolders if desiredĨ Save the session for future use in Grsync My portable machine is a 10 year old netbook so it is running the lightweight Ubuntu derived Bodhi 5 os which has PCManFM as its default file manager. There is a partial solution using PCManFM.
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