--- title: "xpra" date: 2020-01-15T18:29:57-05:00 draft: false tags: [ "linux" ] --- [`xpra`](http://xpra.org/) allows one to run persistent X applications on a remote host and display it on a local machine. It's a combination of [SSH X11 Forwarding](https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/OpenSSH#X11_forwarding) and [Screen](https://www.gnu.org/software/screen/). To get started you need to install the `xpra` package on both the server and client. On Ubuntu 18.04, this package isn't configured properly so one should use this PPA instead. ```bash sudo add-apt-repository ppa:mikhailnov/xpra ``` To install, ```bash sudo apt install xpra ``` Now you can from the client open up an application with one command ```bash xpra start ssh:user@host --exit-with-children --start-child="executable" ``` If you want it to behave more like screen. Then on the server. ```bash xpra start :100 ``` Where you can replace `:100` with another high display number. Then you can run the executable, ```bash DISPLAY=:100 executable ``` From the client, ```bash xpra attach ssh:user@host:100 ``` `xpra` has heuristics that determines the encoding of the images passed. You can however override it using the `--encoding`s flag to better tailor to your needs. - `rgb`: Raw pixel format that is lossless and uses compression. Best in high bandwidth environments. - `png` compressed, lossless, but CPU intensive. May result in skipped frames - `h264`, `vp8`, `vp9` are lossy formats that have tunable quality and speed parameters More resources: - [Arch Wiki](https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Xpra) - [Ubuntu Wiki](https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Xpra)