![]() ![]() But I don't know how to use MobaXterm with VcXsrc and I can't comment the issue on Github to get some help of those users ? VS Code is available as portable version but my Laragon folder is about 6GB which could be a show-stopper somehow. I also thought about slimming down my dev-setup that much that I could easily sync it as a package through Dropbox, OneDrive or any similar solution. I thought about and installing everything on that system but still I'd need a fast internet connection which isn't always available. Right now im tinkering on a old Thinkpad from 2008, an hour ago I was on a X1 and an hour before that I used my Surface. I wish I could just fire up or log in to whatever to have my dev-environment but actually I haven't found anything that really works. your wish of an independet environment is exactly what I'm looking for as well. I could and should give your module a try.īesides that. I used to use Site Profile Exporter for the most part but once in a while - my own projects - I need a different way that just works of some kind I still try to figure out. That migration-thing is nothing I want to use a module for while syncing dev/test/stage/qa/live environments. Local Laragon -git-> -git-> clientorprojectdomain.tld Unless I have to update things in the database - SSH and git on my hosting is almost enough to get things updated within a minute or so. I'm far away from a perfect or even reliable solution. I try to find a workflow that involves my tools, Git (github or Bitbucket) and some kind of easy sync to my hosting-destinations. Haven't done anything with Docker yet but installed the WSL and play around with it at the moment. how should it work via internet and via SSH or whatever? I would need a super fast 1Gbit line but all I get is just enough for Netflix. ![]() It ran stable and almost fast enough but even those tiny tiny lags annoyed me that much that I just stopped trying. I recently had similar thoughts and ideas and started trying things.Īt first I installed Linux in a virtual machine (to save that cloud hosting step) which worked quite well. but as I see it I remember things I have tried to do with Cygwin ( ) a decade (or so) ago.īack to your question. It seems that the X11 server I'm using on Windows does not work for vscode. Very nice! But unfortunately I couldn't get vscode to run ? error while loading shared libraries: libXtst.so.6: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory I managed to run the xclock program of the Ubuntu 18.04 host server on my Win10 client. Have a look at MobaXterm, it seems to be a great alternative to WinSCP or Putty or FileZilla. It's a tool where you can forward the program's execution from the host via SSH and display the GUI on the client. Then a friend of mine mentioned X11-forwarding and a tool called MobaXterm. Also VNC did not seem to be a good option (didn't try that, though). Via teamviewer I got only 800圆00 screen resolution (was not able to change that) and the commercial license is too expensive. I failed ? I'm not good at linux, so maybe it was my fault, but I could not get a remote connection working properly via xrdp/rdp. That's why I thought: Why not use something like a remote desktop, install a desktop on the Ubuntu server and use it from wherever I want, always with my common settings and highspeed internet. I don't have code intellisense available for the project, which is also very important I don't have a "search in files" feature, which is VERY important for my work I still need to keep different VSCode installations in sync (themes, settings, extensions, php path variables etc. That works great for little edits, but it has three major drawbacks: Currently I'm using a VSCode extension to map remote file systems via SSH into the IDE. Of course, I'd need an internet connection (so it wouldn't work that great in a train/airplane), but that's fine I guess. That would all be solved if I could move my dev environment to the cloud. Slooooooow internet connection at my weekend home in the mountains. It's a windows system and not always behaving same as my linux live server When I share work with clients my PC has to be turned on (ngrok) I have to keep VSCode in sync between different machines (Desktop, Laptop, weekend home) That would have major benefits to my current setup (local Win10 laragon + VSCode). BUT: I wanted to access the whole dev server remotely with a GUI, so that I can install and use VSCode directly on the server. That's nothing new, you might think, and you are partly right, because that's what we are all doing with our live servers. I've recently been evaluating different cloud providers and while playing around with all this fancy, scalable, flexible (and quite cheap!) cloud stuff I thought, "what if I created an Ubuntu dev server for all my web development?". I'm trying and trying and can't seem to get this working. ![]()
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