The covered private patio and large yard in the back will host plenty of fun times and memories. Great location with shopping and restaurants close. Directions: From Temple, go West on Adams, Left at S.Pea Ridge Rd at 2nd stop sign Make a left, Right on Hickman.
Copy text from Host Linux system (xterm, select text) does not paste into windows XP Guest system.Copy text from Guest Windows XP system to Linux Host (via right click) works.3.2.12 PUEL edition.Host: Linux lyalls-pc 2.6.35-gentoo- SMP PREEMPT Sun Dec 5 12:30:59 CST 2010 i686 Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Quad CPU Q9400 @ 2.66GHz GenuineIntel GNU/LinuxGuest: Windows XP Pro, fully patched with very little other software installed. Guest Additions updated.X System of Host: xorg-server-1.7.7- (Gentoo versioning)Window Manager of Host: Fluxbox-1.1.1- (Gentoo versioning).
A Gentoo guest (guest details further down), with Gentoo host (as described earlier)Xterm in Host, select text with cursor, right click in guest, pasted the last copy/paste from the other Windows XP guest, which was still running. Guest is also running fluxbox window manager (1.1.1-) with xorg-server (1.7.7-) (gentoo version numbers)Selected text in Gentoo guest Xterm, right click in Host xterm, text that was previously selected in Host is pasted, not the selected text in the guest.Fresh build of gentoo kernel.Gentoo guest has Additions 3.2.12 guest additions (VBoxLinuxAdditions-x86.run)Also, Solaris 10 u8, Guest Additions 3.2.12 (SunOS unknown 5.10 Generic141445-09 i86pc i386 i86pc) - an appliance downloaded from Oracle.WM is Sun Java Desktop system. Running a Gnome Terminal 2.6.1.Select text in Host xterm, right click in guest xterm, pastes last pasted text, not the selected host text.Use guest gnome terminal edit-Paste, same.Select text in Guest gnome terminal, right click in host xterm, pasts last pasted text (selected text in host xterm).Select text in Guest gnome terminal, use Edit-Copy, then right click in host xterm, guest text is pasted in.
So I’ve been playing with deploying TeamViewer 13 unattended host for several hours today and have reached the conclusion that the deployment documentation is just grossly inadequate. Here’s what I’ve learned after looking at several forum posts:
- Don’t try to deploy your customized TeamViewer unattended host MSI application via the GPO software installation package method in Active Directory. Deploy GPO using a batch script or powershell instead and save yourself the aggravation of troubleshooting why some workstations won’t install the package.
- I tried the GPO software installation package method first because it’s one of the recommended ways to deploy the TeamViewer MSI via the official deployment documentation on P7. But after finding that most of my deployments failed with %%2 and %%1274 even after adding a 30 second delay to Computer Configuration > Policies > Administrative Templates > System > Group Policy > Startup policy processing wait time, I decided i had wasted enough time troubleshooting this method and found the script method to work much better.
- What finally worked consistently for me was this simple batch script (where XXXXXXX is your deployment ID):start /wait msiexec.exe /i SERVERSHARETeamViewer_Host-idcXXXXXXX.msi /qn
- If systems already have TeamViewer installed (either deployed or manually installed), you won’t be able to use the TeamViewer assignment tool to assign newly deployed unattended host installs (where the newest version was just installed over an existing version) to a new or different TeamViewer account. Running the Teamviewer_Assignment.exe on an existing install that was upgraded via deployment will yield the following error:Error: Assignment failed with: Reading datafile “C:Program Files (x86)TeamViewerAssignmentData.json” failed with: File not foundIf you’re like me, where the customer used a new TeamViewer ID to sign up for the upgraded version, you’ll need to completely uninstall TeamViewer host on all workstations and then re-install. Here’s how:
- Run a GPO with a script to completely remove TeamViewer first. Here is an example of a script for removing x64 versions of older TeamViewer versions:
- @echo offREM Check for running TeamViewer processestasklist /FI “IMAGENAME eq TeamViewer.exe” 2>NUL | find /I /N “TeamViewer.exe”>NUL
if “%ERRORLEVEL%””0” (GOTO :CHECK) ELSE (GOTO :END)REM Check if TeamViewer 13 is already installed (crude test that may not work for everyone).:CHECK
Set “VER=C:userspublicdesktopTeamViewer 13 Host.lnk”
IF EXIST “%VER%” (GOTO :END) ELSE (GOTO :UNINSTALL)REM Uninstall TeamViewer and remove registry entry (needed if re-assigning to a different account):UNINSTALL
taskkill /f /im TeamViewer.exe
TIMEOUT 2
start “C:Program Files (x86)TeamVieweruninstall.exe” /S
reg delete “HKLMSoftwareWow6432NodeTeamViewer” /f
TIMEOUT 10
exit:END
exit - After complete removal, re-install TeamViewer.
- Now run the TeamViewer Assignment tool and it should succeed.
- @echo off
TIMEOUT 60
start /wait msiexec.exe /i SERVERSHARETeamviewer_Host-XXXXXXXX.msi /qn
TIMEOUT 30
start /wait SERVERSHARETeamViewer_Assignment.exe -apitoken XXXXXXX-XXXXXXXXXXX -datafile “C:Program Files (x86)TeamViewerAssignmentData.json” -allowEasyAccess=true -devicealias “${COMPUTERNAME}”
exit
- Finally, if you want to push a uniform personal password to your deployed unattended host installs (generally not recommended, but sometimes required), you’ll have to do it by exporting a .reg file, naming it TeamViewer_Settings.reg (the name matters) and storing it in the same share as the TeamViewer MSI deployment installation file. Here’s how:
- On a workstation with the same version of TeamViewer installed, select Extras->Options->Advanced->Show Advanced Options->Export options to a *.reg file.
- Enter TeamViewer_Settings.reg as thefilename and click Save.
- Check the Export personal password option and enter and confirm a desired personal password to set for each unattended host install. Then click Export.
- Store the resultant TeamViewer_Settings.reg file on a network share where your MSI file exists. When TeamViewer is deployed, the exported password will automatically be set as the personal password on all deployed systems.
exit
- On a workstation with the same version of TeamViewer installed, select Extras->Options->Advanced->Show Advanced Options->Export options to a *.reg file.
That’s it folks.