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Oracle Solaris 11.1 Desktop Administrator's Guide Oracle Solaris 11.1 Information Library |
1. Administering the Oracle Solaris Desktop
2. Managing User Preferences With GConf
9. Overview of the Yelp Help Browser
10. Improving the Performance of the Oracle Solaris Desktop System
11. Disabling Features in the Oracle Solaris Desktop System
12. Working With the X Window System
Configuring an X Server in Oracle Solaris
Working With Xorg Configuration Files
Working With SMF Configuration Properties
Providing Other User Accounts With Access to Your Display
Displaying a Client From a Remote Machine
Setting Up Remote Desktop Access Using VNC
An X server is a single process that controls access to the hardware. The X server performs the following functions:
Listens for incoming connections from new clients
Track inputs from input devices
Manages display access of the clients
Depending on the configuration of your Oracle Solaris system, the X server is started from one of the following programs:
xdm, the X Display Manager
gdm, the GNOME Display Manager
The X client can connect to the X server by using TCP/IP, UNIX domain sockets, and several varieties of SVR4 local connections. For information about specifying the transport type for clients, see the DISPLAY NAMES section of the X(5) man page.
Oracle Solaris currently includes several X servers designed for different usage types. The following table lists some of the X servers included in the Oracle Solaris OS.
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For more information about the X servers included in the Oracle Solaris OS, see the Xserver(1) man page.