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hmmmm.... [adler at office00 ~]$ xauth list office00.chevychase.com/unix:0 MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 92e56d4d15d8486e7660d368789733d3 localhost.localdomain/unix:0 MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 92e56d4d15d8486e7660d368789733d3 localhost.localdomain:0 MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 92e56d4d15d8486e7660d368789733d3 office00.stephenadler.local:0 MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 92e56d4d15d8486e7660d368789733d3 192.168.133.1:0 MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 92e56d4d15d8486e7660d368789733d3 192.168.134.1:0 MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 92e56d4d15d8486e7660d368789733d3 I wonder if my VMWare software is the culprit. 192.168.133.x and 192.168.134.x are vmware virtual networks.... Matthew Gillen wrote: > Stephen Adler wrote: > >> [adler at office00 PDS]$ xclock >> Xlib: connection to ":0.0" refused by server >> Xlib: Maximum number of clients reached >> Error: Can't open display: :0.0 >> >> >> >> Guys, I tried to open a terminal on my fedora core 6 system and I >> couldn't. Then I went to an opened terminal window and tried running >> xclock and got the error above. The problem is that I don't have that >> many windows opened!! Could there be someone who managed to attach >> themselves to the X11 and monitoring what I'm doing? Is there a way to >> check to see what clients the X11 server is serving up to see just how >> many is to many and to make sure there isn't anything funny going on on >> my system? >> > > 'xauth list' will list the connections. Probably won't help you though. > Start up tcpdump or wireshark to see if something funny is going on. > > Matt > > -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.
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