How to check if X server is running?

五迷三道 提交于 2019-11-29 22:04:23

I often need to run an X command on a server that is running many X servers, so the ps based answers do not work. Naturally, $DISPLAY has to be set appropriately. To check that that is valid, use xset q in some fragment like:

if ! xset q &>/dev/null; then
    echo "No X server at \$DISPLAY [$DISPLAY]" >&2
    exit 1
fi

$DISPLAY is the standard way. That's how users communicate with programs about which X server to use, if any.

I use

pidof X && echo "yup X server is running"

pgrep and $DISPLAY are other options.

Other considerations:

su then $DISPLAY will not be set. Things that change the environment of the program running can make this not work.

I don't recommand ps -e | grep X as this will find procX, which is not the X server.

One trick I use to tell if X is running is:

telnet 127.0.0.1 6000

If it connects, you have an X server running and its accepting inbound TCP connections (not usually the default these days)....

shuckc

You can use xdpyinfo (can be installed via apt-get install x11-utils).

xprop -root &> /dev/null 

...is my tried & true command to test for an "X-able" situation. And, it's pretty much guaranteed to be on any system running X, of course, the command fails if not found anyways, so even if it doesnt exist, you can pretty much assume there is no X either. (thats why I use &> instead of >)

1)

# netstat -lp|grep -i x
tcp        0      0 *:x11                   *:*                     LISTEN      2937/X          
tcp6       0      0 [::]:x11                [::]:*                  LISTEN      2937/X          
Active UNIX domain sockets (only servers)
unix  2      [ ACC ]     STREAM     LISTENING     8940     2937/X              @/tmp/.X11-unix/X0
unix  2      [ ACC ]     STREAM     LISTENING     8941     2937/X              /tmp/.X11-unix/X0
#

2) nmap

# nmap localhost|grep -i x
6000/tcp open  X11
#

I wrote xdpyprobe program which is intended for this purpose. Unlike xset, xdpyinfo and other general tools, it does not do any extra actions (just checks X server and exits) and it may not produce any output (if "-q" option is specified).

Srijan Chaudhary

First you need to ensure foundational X11 packages are correctly installed on your server:

rpm -qa | grep xorg-x11-xauth

If not then, kindly install all packages :

sudo yum install xorg-x11-xauth xterm

Ensure that openssh server is configured to forward x11 connections :

edit file : vim /etc/ssh/sshd_config

X11Forwarding yes

NOTE : If that line is preceded by a comment (#) or is set to no, update the file to match the above, and restart your ssh server daemon (be careful here — if you made an error you may lock yourself out of the server)

sudo /etc/init.d/sshd restart

Now, configure SSH application to forward X11 requests :

ssh -Y your_username@your_server.your_domain.com
Serge Stroobandt
if [[ $DISPLAY ]]; then 
  …
fi

This is PHP script for checking.

$xsession = `pidof X`;
if (!$xsession) {
    echo "There is no active X session, aborting..\n";
    exit;
}

Similar command can be used in shell script too. like the pidof command.

The bash script solution:

if ! xset q &>/dev/null; then
    echo "No X server at \$DISPLAY [$DISPLAY]" >&2
    exit 1
fi

Doesn't work if you login from another console (Ctrl+Alt+F?) or ssh. For me this solution works in my Archlinux:

#!/bin/sh
ps aux|grep -v grep|grep "/usr/lib/Xorg"
EXITSTATUS=$?
if [ $EXITSTATUS -eq 0 ]; then
  echo "X server running"
  exit 1
fi

You can change /usr/lib/Xorg for only Xorg or the proper command on your system.

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