I am trying to connect to my work's T-Snap citrix desktop. I have installed
net-misc/icaclient-10.6-r3 but when I click on the remote desktop I get this
error:
===========================================
"Client Error
No connection to ";40;STAEXXXXXXXXXXXX;XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX"
Invalid server browser command header received."
===========================================
(where XXXX are random characters)
Looking at the launcher.ica file that the browser downloads I can see that the
domain is defined as:
===========================================
[T-SNAP Desktop]
Address=;40;STAEXXXXXXXXXXXX;XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
AudioBandwidthLimit=2
AutologonAllowed=ON
BrowserProtocol=HTTPonTCP
CGPSecurityTicket=On
ClearPassword=XXXXXXXXXXX
===========================================
I am assuming here that the client is trying to use the hashed server address
and the browser cannot resolve this. As far as I understand this solution
works with guess what: MSWindows (my work is a Microsoft shop) and AppleMac.
Any ideas what it might take to get it going under Gentoo?
--
Regards,
Mick
Also, what browser are you using (or are you going straight from the
desktop)?
eric
--
gento...@lists.gentoo.org mailing list
When you use portage it shows the F flag. During emerge it advises you to
manually download the .rpm package from the Citrix website and save it
manually in portage/distfiles before continuing with the emerge. I tried
both Firefox and Opera. How could I try it straight from the desktop?
--
Regards,
Mick
I think I've gone a bit further with this problem. When at work (behind the
firewall) I can connect on the server and the t-snap desktop comes up fine
using the Citrix client plugin. However, from home I still cannot launch the
t-snap desktop. When the Citrix client fires up it tries to connect and
eventually I get this error:
====================================
There is no route from the Citrix SSL Relay to the specified subnet address
(SSL error 37).
====================================
Any clue what this is all about?
--
Regards,
Mick