Mviereck Runx Save

Provide X server on MS Windows with cookie authentication.

Project README

runx - Run Linux GUI applications on MS Windows

runx allows to easily run Linux GUI applications and desktops on MS Windows in Cygwin, MSYS2 or WSL.

  • This is especially of interest for WSL in Windows 10 that does not support graphical applications on itself.

Background:

  • runx starts an X server, either VcXsrv or XWin, to provide a graphical environment for Linux applications.
  • runx creates an authorization cookie to restrict access to the X server to allowed clients only.
  • runx runs the desired Linux GUI application with the credentials needed to access the X server.

For similar functionality on native Linux systems use x11docker with options --backend=host or --xonly.

Table of contents

Linux environments on MS Windows

runx can run in:

  • WSL: Windows subsystem for Linux.
  • Cygwin: Cygwin is a large collection of Open Source tools which provide functionality similar to a Linux distribution on Windows.
  • MSYS2: MSYS2 is a software distro and building platform for Windows and serves as a base for git for windows and MingW. It is mainly used by developers.

Installation

Installation in general:

  • Install an X server, VcXsrv or XWin.
  • Copy runx into folder /usr/local/bin and make it executeable with chmod +x /usr/local/bin/runx.
  • Install Linux dependency xauth if available.
  • Install Linux dependency telnet.

Installation of X server

runx needs an X server. Install on MS Windows one or both of:

  • VcXsrv to provide X server VcXsrv.
    • Easier to install than XWin.
  • Cygwin with packages xinit and xauth.
    • This provides X server XWin for Cygwin and WSL.
    • XWin has a better --gpu support than VcXsrv.

runx will automatically use XWin if available. You can specify the desired X server with options --xwin or --vcxsrv.

Installation in WSL

  • Run the following commands in WSL/Ubuntu terminal to install runx and its dependencies:
    sudo wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mviereck/runx/master/runx -O /usr/local/bin/runx
    sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/runx
    sudo apt update
    sudo apt install xauth
    

Installation in Cygwin

  • Run the Cygwin installer and install packages xinit, xauth and wget.
  • In Cygwin terminal run the commands:
    wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mviereck/runx/master/runx -O /usr/local/bin/runx
    chmod +x /usr/local/bin/runx
    

Installation in MSYS2

  • In MSYS2 terminal run the commands:
    mkdir /usr/local/bin
    wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mviereck/runx/master/runx -O /usr/local/bin/runx
    chmod +x /usr/local/bin/runx
    
  • Constraint in MSYS2: runx only supports X server VcXsrv, but not XWin.

GPU hardware acceleration

runx supports GPU hardware accelerated graphics with option --gpu.

  • GPU access can cause issues with X server VcXsrv, especially with NVIDIA cards. For that reason GPU usage is disabled by default in runx.
  • If you encounter issues with option --gpu, try X server XWin instead of VcXsrv.

Usage examples

  • File manager pcmanfm in WSL:
    • Installation:
      sudo apt update
      sudo apt install pcmanfm
      
    • Run:
      runx -- pcmanfm
      
  • Mate desktop environment in WSL:
    • Installation:
      sudo apt update
      sudo apt install mate-desktop-environment
      
    • Run:
      runx --desktop --gpu -- mate-session
      

Providing X server in background

You can make an entry in the file ~/.bashrc to have an X server always available. Possible entry in ~/.bashrc:

source /usr/local/bin/runx

In future runs of the terminal you can directly run Linux GUI applications, e.g.:

pcmanfm

Use an already running X server

  • If you specify option --display, runx will check if an X server is already running with the specified display number and will only provide the access credentials DISPLAY and XAUTHORITY instead of running an additional X server.
  • The access credentials are also stored in file ~/.Xenv. You can make them available in a new terminal sourcing the file with . ~/.Xenv or source ~/.Xenv.

Output of runx --help

runx - Run Linux GUI applications on MS Windows.
Provides an X server on MS Windows in Cygwin, MSYS2 or WSL.

Syntax:
  runx [OPTIONS]  --  [COMMAND]

Options:
  -h, --help                   Show this help.
  -d, --desktop                Open a parent window for desktop environments.
  -g, --gpu                    Enable GPU hardware acceleration. Can fail 
                               with NVIDIA cards. Works best with XWin.
      --size WIDTHxHEIGHT      Window size for option --desktop, e.g. 800x600.
      --vcxsrv                 Use X server VcXsrv.
      --xwin                   Use X server XWin.
      --clipboard [=yes|no]    Enable clipboard sharing yes/no. Default: yes.
      --display N              Use display number N for new X server.
                               If the display number is already in use, runx will 
                               only provide the likely access credentials.
      --ip ADRESS              IP adress to use. Default: First found 192.168.*
      --no-auth                Disable X cookie authentication. Discouraged.
      --cleanup                Stop all X servers and delete cookies.
  -v, --verbose                Be verbose.

Installation of runx in WSL:
 - Copy runx into /usr/local/bin/
 - Make runx executeable:        sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/runx
 - Install xauth:                sudo apt update
                                 sudo apt install xauth
 
Install an X server on Windows:
  runx supports two X servers: VcXsrv and XWin. Install at least one of them.
   - VcXsrv: Download and install from: 
       https://sourceforge.net/projects/vcxsrv/
   - XWin: Download and install Cygwin64 with packages: xinit xauth
       https://www.cygwin.com
VcXsrv is easier to install. XWin provides a better GPU support.

WSL, Cygwin: runx starts XWin if available, otherwise it starts VcXsrv.
MSYS2:       runx supports VcXsrv only.

Usage:

Example to directly run an application with runx:
 - Install file manager pcmanfm: sudo apt update
                                 sudo apt install pcmanfm
 - Run pcmanfm with:             runx -- pcmanfm

Example to run Mate desktop:
 - Install Mate desktop with:    sudo apt install mate-desktop-environment
 - Run Mate desktop with:        runx --desktop -- mate-session
 
Example to get a Wayland environment:
 - Install Wayland compositor:   sudo apt install weston
 - Run Weston with:              XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=/tmp  runx -- weston

Providing an X server in background all the time:
 - Create an entry in ~/.bashrc: source /usr/local/bin/runx
 - In future terminal session you can directly run GUI commands.
   E.g. just type:  'pcmanfm'  instead of 'runx -- pcmanfm'.
 - If you specify a display number with --display, runx will re-use
   a possibly already running X server with same display number
   and only provide the access credentials DISPLAY and XAUTHORITY.
   This allows to use the same X server across several terminals.

runx stores the access credentials DISPLAY and XAUTHORITY in ~/.Xenv
This allows sourcing the file for custom access setups.

runx version 0.4.20
Please report issues and get help at:   https://github.com/mviereck/runx

Screenshot

runx running Mate desktop on MS Windows: Mate Desktop on MS Windows

Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Mviereck Runx" Project. README Source: mviereck/runx
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