How to log in to Centos 7 using RDP from Win10 The Next CEO of Stack OverflowRDP using .rdp files to log in as multiple usersdmraid -r" just returns No RAID disksInstall VNC Server via RDP on Windows 2008 ServerRemote desktop connection dos not respond anymore (no more task bar)Remote desktop connection does not respond anymore (no more task bar)CentOS 6.5 blank screen after an updateRDP logout using bat fileLog in to Windows 10 as Administrator using RDPWindows 10 displays strange symbols and restarts upon wake upWindows Server 2012 Black Screen
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How to log in to Centos 7 using RDP from Win10
The Next CEO of Stack OverflowRDP using .rdp files to log in as multiple usersdmraid -r" just returns No RAID disksInstall VNC Server via RDP on Windows 2008 ServerRemote desktop connection dos not respond anymore (no more task bar)Remote desktop connection does not respond anymore (no more task bar)CentOS 6.5 blank screen after an updateRDP logout using bat fileLog in to Windows 10 as Administrator using RDPWindows 10 displays strange symbols and restarts upon wake upWindows Server 2012 Black Screen
I am a bit frustrated now. I have configured our Centos 7 server to be accessible from windows remote desktop. The connection is ok, but the server is now in locked status and I can not wake it up. All I see is a nice blue screen with the clock and a notification from application installer. How can I send CTRL+ALT+DEL to make the login form appearing on the screen? Are there any other shortcut combinations for this?

windows-10 remote-desktop centos
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ucsendre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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I am a bit frustrated now. I have configured our Centos 7 server to be accessible from windows remote desktop. The connection is ok, but the server is now in locked status and I can not wake it up. All I see is a nice blue screen with the clock and a notification from application installer. How can I send CTRL+ALT+DEL to make the login form appearing on the screen? Are there any other shortcut combinations for this?

windows-10 remote-desktop centos
New contributor
ucsendre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
It should be like Windows where you left-click the mouse towards the bottom of the screen and drag up.
– n8te
6 hours ago
@n8te This works! Never used this before. Thank you! Ps. i think you should post it as answer not comment so I could accept as a solution.
– ucsendre
6 hours ago
add a comment |
I am a bit frustrated now. I have configured our Centos 7 server to be accessible from windows remote desktop. The connection is ok, but the server is now in locked status and I can not wake it up. All I see is a nice blue screen with the clock and a notification from application installer. How can I send CTRL+ALT+DEL to make the login form appearing on the screen? Are there any other shortcut combinations for this?

windows-10 remote-desktop centos
New contributor
ucsendre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
I am a bit frustrated now. I have configured our Centos 7 server to be accessible from windows remote desktop. The connection is ok, but the server is now in locked status and I can not wake it up. All I see is a nice blue screen with the clock and a notification from application installer. How can I send CTRL+ALT+DEL to make the login form appearing on the screen? Are there any other shortcut combinations for this?

windows-10 remote-desktop centos
windows-10 remote-desktop centos
New contributor
ucsendre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
ucsendre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
edited 1 hour ago
Monty Harder
1794
1794
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asked 7 hours ago
ucsendreucsendre
283
283
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ucsendre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
ucsendre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
ucsendre is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
It should be like Windows where you left-click the mouse towards the bottom of the screen and drag up.
– n8te
6 hours ago
@n8te This works! Never used this before. Thank you! Ps. i think you should post it as answer not comment so I could accept as a solution.
– ucsendre
6 hours ago
add a comment |
It should be like Windows where you left-click the mouse towards the bottom of the screen and drag up.
– n8te
6 hours ago
@n8te This works! Never used this before. Thank you! Ps. i think you should post it as answer not comment so I could accept as a solution.
– ucsendre
6 hours ago
It should be like Windows where you left-click the mouse towards the bottom of the screen and drag up.
– n8te
6 hours ago
It should be like Windows where you left-click the mouse towards the bottom of the screen and drag up.
– n8te
6 hours ago
@n8te This works! Never used this before. Thank you! Ps. i think you should post it as answer not comment so I could accept as a solution.
– ucsendre
6 hours ago
@n8te This works! Never used this before. Thank you! Ps. i think you should post it as answer not comment so I could accept as a solution.
– ucsendre
6 hours ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
The Gnome lockscreen behaves similar to the way you login to Windows 10.
To make the login screen appear to be able to unlock it, simply left-click your mouse towards the bottom of the screen and drag up.
add a comment |
White the accepted answer works around the issue, ctrl+alt+end will actually issue a ctrl+alt+del on the remote, should you need it.
See this for potential additional info.
This was my first thought too since that is how you do it on a Windows system in a remote session. But Ctrl + Alt + End actually won't unlock a Linux/Gnome lockscreen, which is what OP is needing. Your link is also referring to a Windows system as the system they're RDPing into.
– n8te
12 mins ago
Really the issue is the Ctrl + Alt + Del doesn't even unlock a Gnome lockscreen, or else you are correct that Ctrl + Alt + End would work in its place. By default in Gnome lockscreen Ctrl + Alt + L is what is actually used to unlock it. Just found that out myself. See: askubuntu.com/questions/126782/…
– n8te
4 mins ago
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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2 Answers
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votes
The Gnome lockscreen behaves similar to the way you login to Windows 10.
To make the login screen appear to be able to unlock it, simply left-click your mouse towards the bottom of the screen and drag up.
add a comment |
The Gnome lockscreen behaves similar to the way you login to Windows 10.
To make the login screen appear to be able to unlock it, simply left-click your mouse towards the bottom of the screen and drag up.
add a comment |
The Gnome lockscreen behaves similar to the way you login to Windows 10.
To make the login screen appear to be able to unlock it, simply left-click your mouse towards the bottom of the screen and drag up.
The Gnome lockscreen behaves similar to the way you login to Windows 10.
To make the login screen appear to be able to unlock it, simply left-click your mouse towards the bottom of the screen and drag up.
answered 6 hours ago
n8ten8te
5,10772233
5,10772233
add a comment |
add a comment |
White the accepted answer works around the issue, ctrl+alt+end will actually issue a ctrl+alt+del on the remote, should you need it.
See this for potential additional info.
This was my first thought too since that is how you do it on a Windows system in a remote session. But Ctrl + Alt + End actually won't unlock a Linux/Gnome lockscreen, which is what OP is needing. Your link is also referring to a Windows system as the system they're RDPing into.
– n8te
12 mins ago
Really the issue is the Ctrl + Alt + Del doesn't even unlock a Gnome lockscreen, or else you are correct that Ctrl + Alt + End would work in its place. By default in Gnome lockscreen Ctrl + Alt + L is what is actually used to unlock it. Just found that out myself. See: askubuntu.com/questions/126782/…
– n8te
4 mins ago
add a comment |
White the accepted answer works around the issue, ctrl+alt+end will actually issue a ctrl+alt+del on the remote, should you need it.
See this for potential additional info.
This was my first thought too since that is how you do it on a Windows system in a remote session. But Ctrl + Alt + End actually won't unlock a Linux/Gnome lockscreen, which is what OP is needing. Your link is also referring to a Windows system as the system they're RDPing into.
– n8te
12 mins ago
Really the issue is the Ctrl + Alt + Del doesn't even unlock a Gnome lockscreen, or else you are correct that Ctrl + Alt + End would work in its place. By default in Gnome lockscreen Ctrl + Alt + L is what is actually used to unlock it. Just found that out myself. See: askubuntu.com/questions/126782/…
– n8te
4 mins ago
add a comment |
White the accepted answer works around the issue, ctrl+alt+end will actually issue a ctrl+alt+del on the remote, should you need it.
See this for potential additional info.
White the accepted answer works around the issue, ctrl+alt+end will actually issue a ctrl+alt+del on the remote, should you need it.
See this for potential additional info.
answered 3 hours ago
KimmaxKimmax
291418
291418
This was my first thought too since that is how you do it on a Windows system in a remote session. But Ctrl + Alt + End actually won't unlock a Linux/Gnome lockscreen, which is what OP is needing. Your link is also referring to a Windows system as the system they're RDPing into.
– n8te
12 mins ago
Really the issue is the Ctrl + Alt + Del doesn't even unlock a Gnome lockscreen, or else you are correct that Ctrl + Alt + End would work in its place. By default in Gnome lockscreen Ctrl + Alt + L is what is actually used to unlock it. Just found that out myself. See: askubuntu.com/questions/126782/…
– n8te
4 mins ago
add a comment |
This was my first thought too since that is how you do it on a Windows system in a remote session. But Ctrl + Alt + End actually won't unlock a Linux/Gnome lockscreen, which is what OP is needing. Your link is also referring to a Windows system as the system they're RDPing into.
– n8te
12 mins ago
Really the issue is the Ctrl + Alt + Del doesn't even unlock a Gnome lockscreen, or else you are correct that Ctrl + Alt + End would work in its place. By default in Gnome lockscreen Ctrl + Alt + L is what is actually used to unlock it. Just found that out myself. See: askubuntu.com/questions/126782/…
– n8te
4 mins ago
This was my first thought too since that is how you do it on a Windows system in a remote session. But Ctrl + Alt + End actually won't unlock a Linux/Gnome lockscreen, which is what OP is needing. Your link is also referring to a Windows system as the system they're RDPing into.
– n8te
12 mins ago
This was my first thought too since that is how you do it on a Windows system in a remote session. But Ctrl + Alt + End actually won't unlock a Linux/Gnome lockscreen, which is what OP is needing. Your link is also referring to a Windows system as the system they're RDPing into.
– n8te
12 mins ago
Really the issue is the Ctrl + Alt + Del doesn't even unlock a Gnome lockscreen, or else you are correct that Ctrl + Alt + End would work in its place. By default in Gnome lockscreen Ctrl + Alt + L is what is actually used to unlock it. Just found that out myself. See: askubuntu.com/questions/126782/…
– n8te
4 mins ago
Really the issue is the Ctrl + Alt + Del doesn't even unlock a Gnome lockscreen, or else you are correct that Ctrl + Alt + End would work in its place. By default in Gnome lockscreen Ctrl + Alt + L is what is actually used to unlock it. Just found that out myself. See: askubuntu.com/questions/126782/…
– n8te
4 mins ago
add a comment |
ucsendre is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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It should be like Windows where you left-click the mouse towards the bottom of the screen and drag up.
– n8te
6 hours ago
@n8te This works! Never used this before. Thank you! Ps. i think you should post it as answer not comment so I could accept as a solution.
– ucsendre
6 hours ago