![]() ![]() ![]() VRDP connects to the VM's "monitor", not the VM's OS. VRDP can be thought of as an RDP-enabled KVM switch, completely independent of the installed VM OS. The first line "checked Display > Remote Display > Enable server etc" is for Virtualbox's RDP server (VRDP). Try to telnet "xubuntu ip" 3389 and no luck Again, this requires no help from special VirtualBox features - but I would not enable both.Įmoxam wrote:checked Display > Remote Display > Enable server, using the default settings (port 3389 etc) But you still couldn't connect using Telnet to a TCP port 3389 configured to listen for RDP connections.įinally, if you want to RDP into a Linux guest I have had good luck installing xrdp, the generic RDP server for Linux. a text based connection, then AFAIK all you require is a TCP/IP connection and a telnet client such as "PuTTY". I assume the VirtualBox feature will be a host application listening on host TCP port 3389, if it gets a connection there it will presumably relay comms to the guest using VBoxSVC, the normal background VM comms interface. I assume that isn't a problem.Īlso, I assume that the VirtualBox RDP feature doesn't care what type of network connection you have between host and VM (you mentioned "bridged"). You don't mention trying RDP, the intended client protocol?ītw, since RDP is a remote DESKTOP protocol it is implicitly assumed that the VM will be using a desktop based GUI. But, you discuss enabling an RDP server and then trying to connect using a Telnet client. AFAIK, Telnet and RDP are completely unrelated protocols. ![]()
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