
Pretty much everything can be configured from command line on Linux, especially "server" software. Other than this, if you use a Linux "server" i see no reason of it having a graphical interface. AFAIK virtualbox supplies its own rdp client, at least under Linux. The application is easy to install and has a friendly user interface. This all-in-one software package works out of the box to give you two separate connections to one remote computer. Now, your issue seems to be that you want to connect to the virtualbox provided rdp using the native mstsc client. NoMachine software gives you fast, secure and easy-to-use remote access to your computer from any Windows machine.

vitualbox captures the "physical"(in fact virtual) console output and has the option of sending it through a RDP server that is built in the virtualbox implementation and NOT Linux per se.Īlthough if you use it on the same computer i see absolutely no reason of using RDP when you can access the console via the virtualbox graphical interface directly. You have Debian in a virtualbox VM and you use the virtualbox RDP implementation. Although a simpler approach would be using vnc tunneled over ssh (x11vnc is a very good local console grabbing vnc server). No, unless you use some third party RDP server that in fact tunnels VNC (nomachine, xrdp i believe does this). In this case you can try to install the required programs or create symbolic links to them to let the setup script for completing the installation.Your question is "Is it possible to connect from Win10 to Linux using RDP?". on Gentoo 2006.1) either because some of the required programs (as cp, rm, touch, flock etc.) are missing or placed in a different path from the usual path used on redhat.

Note for Gentoo users: installation could fail (e.g. # tar -C /usr/ -xzf nomachine-enterprise-client_x.x.x.tar.gz To install the NoMachine Enterprise Client instead: # tar -C /usr/ -xzf nomachine_x.x.x.tar.gz Then, to install NoMachine or any of the server packages:ġ) Extract the archive in the /usr/NX directory: If you want to install NoMachine on a Gentoo or Arch Linux distribution, you have to download the compressed tar package from the web site:
