Difference between revisions of "Interoperability"
From Linuxintro
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* If you want to access or provide network drives, use [[samba]]. | * If you want to access or provide network drives, use [[samba]]. | ||
* If you want to control a Windows computer, use [http://www.rdesktop.org/ rdesktop]. | * If you want to control a Windows computer, use [http://www.rdesktop.org/ rdesktop]. | ||
+ | * If you want to run Windows executables, use [[wine]]. | ||
* To send a message to a Windows computer use | * To send a message to a Windows computer use | ||
echo "hallo" | smbclient -M ''netbiosComputerName'' &> /dev/null | echo "hallo" | smbclient -M ''netbiosComputerName'' &> /dev/null |
Revision as of 13:37, 19 September 2013
This article lists what is possible regarding Linux-Windows Interoperability.
You work on a Linux computer
- If you want to access or provide network drives, use samba.
- If you want to control a Windows computer, use rdesktop.
- If you want to run Windows executables, use wine.
- To send a message to a Windows computer use
echo "hallo" | smbclient -M netbiosComputerName &> /dev/null
You work on a Windows computer
- If you want to copy files to/from a Linux computer, use WinSCP.
- If you want to control a Linux computer, use xming.
Other
- If you want to use a USB disk with Linux and Windows and you want to use files greater than 2GB, use ntfs.
- If you want to use your keyboard and mouse on any computer, use synergy.
- If you have Windows and Linux and want to use the Windows bootloader, do
dd if=/dev/sdx3 bs=512 count=1 of=/windows/C/bootsek.lin
Note - in this example we assume your Linux partition is /dev/sdx3. Now enter into C:\boot.ini the following line:
c:\bootsek.lin="Linux"
- Note
- Why dual-boot if you can have virtual machines?