He/him. 2 kids, 4 pets, loves the radical democratic-anarchosocialist ideal, all life & their rights & pride, novels, music, learning, exploring, materialistic bible reading, free IT & data. #MediaMupan. Heretic. … Job: IT

PGP Fingerprint 3E2A EC6D A0D4 214B EC3E 6593 4AC3 784F D6A4 25F4

Title “Join the Mockingjay” (https://flic.kr/p/qKXWHT) by just_Arty and
avatar “Live Long And Prosper - Actual Tattoo” (https://flic.kr/p/7cxuEi) by Spider.Dog
both: creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0

  • 3 Posts
  • 14 Comments
Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: September 14th, 2020

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  • @On Rustdesk server software seems free to me. It is open source and free of charge. If you need service because you don’t succeed installing it, that service will not be free. I cannot see any limitation to use rustdesk with their or own relay servers, but I have not understood yet the difference the company defines between managed and unmanaged users. I guess it depends on your usage if you hit any hidden limits in the free plan, if they exist.

    Alternatives for GUI remote control include VNC. But I’d tunnel it through SSH because it’s weakly encrypted, at least the last time I checked it.

    If you find any evidence for your assumptions on rustdesk.com or experience, please let us know.

    @const_void @socphoenix




  • @socphoenix @On You have other possibilities with Windows targets for remote control. You could set up the Windows built-in OpenSSH or another SSH server on the target, use Kitty SSH client, and tunnel RDP through SSH tunnel. Use FreeTube or NewPipe to find tutorial clips for that. If only classic SSH on the command line is possible, I’d prefer PowerShell remoting, if your client is on Windows too.

    You wouldn’t usually bother to implement RDP services with Linux targets, if not forced to by policies.

    In summary, Microsoft RDP can be easiest, because built-in. Can be obligatory. There are prequisites: access to the target’s domain (VPN, SSH, Citrix, …), entitled user credentials, client software, knowledge of target’s internal address / hostname.

    3/4


  • @socphoenix @On If the machine you are working at is on

    * Windows: You can use Windows built-in RDP client mstsc.exe. There are alternatives and wrappers. I found that using mstsc.exe through RDP+ (https://donkz.nl) is the most reliable, comfortable, and safely automatable solution.

    * Linux: You need a client software. I use Remmina (often in your distribution’s standard repository) for that purpose. I understand from FreeRDP’s linked and the github pages that FreeRDP is a concurrent client. It’s tagged »Android« too. I usually need to work on the target and wouldn’t torture myself with a mini and touch screen for RDP, so I personally don’t mind.

    You always need to try which client software works best in your situation and setup. So testing if FreeRDP is a client, and if for your operating system, can be done on the run.

    2/x


  • @socphoenix @On RDP server and client is Microsoft built-in, but bound to license restrictions. In general, 2 concurrent rdp sessions on one machine are possible without a need to extend the standard Windows license / price. You can add and license the rdp services role / terminalserver role to a machine setup and have more flexibility: more users, more administration of user sessions.

    If your target is a Windows machine, you need a user that is a member of the target machine’s local rdp or local admin security group, either directly or via a domain security group, start a client software (below) depending on your machine’s operating system, enter the target machine’s address (ip or name) and user name and password, and have a desktop session on the target machine in a window to remote comtrol it. You might need a VPN or citrix connection to the target’s domain and you might need to qualify a user domain of your login credentials, but that’s it in general.

    1/x