martinw79 (OP)
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June 16, 2011, 11:49:56 AM |
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Has anyone else run into an issue where the Catalyst application crashes once you RDP into a machine? I leave catalyst open to look @ the GPU temps, however, the app crashes as soon as I RDP in and will not reopen. I also found that once the app crashes, the hash count goes down by 50%.
Are there other alternatives to watching the GPU temp / loads w/o using what's built into Catalyst? I would give it a try to see if it works over RDP.
Thanks for any input.
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___________________ MW79
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Saturn7
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June 16, 2011, 05:16:13 PM |
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When you RDP into your system, RDP hijacks DISPLAY 0 and pipes it into software instead of the hardware on your system. So you can't RDP onto a system that is mining on display 0.
There maybe a fix for that but i haven't found one.
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First there was Fire, then Electricity, and now Bitcoins
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jkminkov
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June 17, 2011, 07:13:16 AM |
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you don't need catalyst, use MSI Afterburner, sapphire trixx, gpu-z
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.:31211457:. 100 dollars in one place talking - Dudes, hooray, Bitcoin against us just one, but we are growing in numbers!
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3phase
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Third score
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June 17, 2011, 08:53:14 AM |
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Martin, if you're talking about Windows, RDP will not give access to the card. Your connection will only allow you to see a dummy display device, same happens with sound also. Any software accessing the GPU card will not work (best case) or crash (worst case)
Use Teamviewer instead (it's actually safer as well).
If you're talking about Unix, Saturn's reply above is correct.
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jasonstx
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June 24, 2011, 11:39:58 PM |
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VNC type applications work as well, not as secure as teamviewer but the technical aspects are the same. Its more akin to sending screenshots over the network instead of a driver level hook.
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FreeJAC
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June 25, 2011, 05:08:09 AM |
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Yeah RDP really messes things up when it comes to mining. Stay away from it.
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Donate here.... 18NiDLDA3qRxkEPN36xrzsdSgvEkbDKgNr
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jasonstx
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June 29, 2011, 02:29:58 AM |
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I did some testing on different types of apps from a security standpoint and I must say that VNC is pretty secure if you lock your system down and only accept connections from the loopback. I ended up running sshd on a nonstandard port.
Connection steps are to SSH into the box, then VNC to it (since they are windows).
Also setup the sshd to ip block after 1 failed password attempt.
next it to setup a keypair though.
fun fun fun
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BCwinning
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June 29, 2011, 02:36:15 AM |
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as others mentioned vnc works well though (tightvnc here)
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The New World Order thanks you for your support of Bitcoin and encourages your continuing support so that they may track your expenditures easier.
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tonto
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June 29, 2011, 08:57:28 PM |
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my work blocks VNC, so I tried going over a different port, but I think they wised up to me, so now I gotta find yet another port! Unless they're blocking everything except for certain ports, then maybe I'll set my home VNC to 80 or something since I don't run a website at home
I may try team viewer as well
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