To run networked applications, you must follow the information and directions in Solaris Advanced User's Guide. You must additionally make the following adjustments to enable operation of the Traditional Chinese features of the Chinese OpenWindows environment.
To run a networked application on a remote machine, you must set your environment variables correctly, as follows:
The DISPLAY
environment
variable in your shell on the remote machine must be set to your local screen.
The LANG environment variable in your shell on the remote machine must be set to zh_TW.
If the OpenWindows libraries have not been installed in the standard /usr/lib or /usr/local shared library directories, you must set the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable to the appropriate directory ($OPENWINHOME/lib).
The following sequence of commands shows how to start a Shell Tool on a remote machine running Traditional Chinese Solaris 1.x (including Traditional Chinese OpenWindows 2.x). In this example, the local machine is running Solaris 2.x, including Traditional Chinese OpenWindows 3.x, and the remote machine, used to run the Shell Tool, has Traditional Chinese Solaris 1.x, including Traditional Chinese OpenWindows 2.x:
Type the following command.
local_machine% xhost +remote_machine |
Log in to the remote machine.
local_machine% rlogin remote_machine |
or
local_machine% telnet remote_machine |
Set the language locale on the remote machine.
remote_machine% setenv LANG tchinese |
Set the remote machine to display on your local machine.
remote_machine% setenv DISPLAY local_machine:0.0 |
Set the OpenWindows environment home directory.
remote_machine% setenv OPENWINHOME /usr/openwin |
Set the path to the OpenWindows LD library.
remote_machine% setenv LD_LIBRARY_PATH $OPENWINHOME/lib |
Start up the OpenWindows application, for example Shell Tool:
remote_machine% $OPENWINHOME/bin/xview/shelltool -lc_basiclocale \oldlocale -lc_inputlang oldlocale -lc_displaylang oldlocale |
The status region does not show which Chinese input method is used.
To run a different application, use that application's command in place of shelltool.