xauth: unable to open display “0”












0















I have installed /usr/local/stata/xstata-mp as root, permissions 755.



When I try to run this program from a non-root account via the terminal, I get:



user@host ~ % /usr/local/stata/xstata-mp
(xstata-mp:8030): Gtk-WARNING **: 10:09:24.384: cannot open display: 0


"That's odd," I think, I just know I set DISPLAY=0 in my .zshrc, "Well, maybe I need to explicitly do so when running this command?" So I try:



user@host ~ % DISPLAY=0 /usr/local/stata/stata-mp
(xstata-mp:8201): Gtk-WARNING **: 10:13:28.638: cannot open display: 0


Edit: per @steeldriver 's comment I have also tried DISPLAY=:0



I have a gander around, and find Why don't gksu/gksudo or launching a graphical application with sudo work with Wayland? which seems promising (although I am not using Wayland, I am on Ubuntu 18.10 and Wayland remains installed). I try the below command as user@host, and as su in an administrative account:



user@host ~ % xhost -si:localuser:root
xhost: unable to open display "0"


I get desperate, and try:



user@host ~ % DISPLAY=0 xhost -si:localuser:root
xhost: unable to open display "0"


I try other display numbers all to no avail. I think "I am a newb, maybe localhost really means [LOCAL USER] and try with the permutations mentioned above.



user@host ~ % xhost -si:user:root
xhost: unable to open display "0"


It turns out I am a newb, but that didn't help. :)



How can I make the xhost magic happen so that Gtk doesn't throw a fit and I can just launch my application (as user@host)?










share|improve this question

























  • The DISPLAY variable would usually have the form :0 rather than plain 0 - also you could check that the X server is running on display :0 (by pgrep -a Xorg for example)

    – steeldriver
    Jan 11 at 19:28


















0















I have installed /usr/local/stata/xstata-mp as root, permissions 755.



When I try to run this program from a non-root account via the terminal, I get:



user@host ~ % /usr/local/stata/xstata-mp
(xstata-mp:8030): Gtk-WARNING **: 10:09:24.384: cannot open display: 0


"That's odd," I think, I just know I set DISPLAY=0 in my .zshrc, "Well, maybe I need to explicitly do so when running this command?" So I try:



user@host ~ % DISPLAY=0 /usr/local/stata/stata-mp
(xstata-mp:8201): Gtk-WARNING **: 10:13:28.638: cannot open display: 0


Edit: per @steeldriver 's comment I have also tried DISPLAY=:0



I have a gander around, and find Why don't gksu/gksudo or launching a graphical application with sudo work with Wayland? which seems promising (although I am not using Wayland, I am on Ubuntu 18.10 and Wayland remains installed). I try the below command as user@host, and as su in an administrative account:



user@host ~ % xhost -si:localuser:root
xhost: unable to open display "0"


I get desperate, and try:



user@host ~ % DISPLAY=0 xhost -si:localuser:root
xhost: unable to open display "0"


I try other display numbers all to no avail. I think "I am a newb, maybe localhost really means [LOCAL USER] and try with the permutations mentioned above.



user@host ~ % xhost -si:user:root
xhost: unable to open display "0"


It turns out I am a newb, but that didn't help. :)



How can I make the xhost magic happen so that Gtk doesn't throw a fit and I can just launch my application (as user@host)?










share|improve this question

























  • The DISPLAY variable would usually have the form :0 rather than plain 0 - also you could check that the X server is running on display :0 (by pgrep -a Xorg for example)

    – steeldriver
    Jan 11 at 19:28
















0












0








0








I have installed /usr/local/stata/xstata-mp as root, permissions 755.



When I try to run this program from a non-root account via the terminal, I get:



user@host ~ % /usr/local/stata/xstata-mp
(xstata-mp:8030): Gtk-WARNING **: 10:09:24.384: cannot open display: 0


"That's odd," I think, I just know I set DISPLAY=0 in my .zshrc, "Well, maybe I need to explicitly do so when running this command?" So I try:



user@host ~ % DISPLAY=0 /usr/local/stata/stata-mp
(xstata-mp:8201): Gtk-WARNING **: 10:13:28.638: cannot open display: 0


Edit: per @steeldriver 's comment I have also tried DISPLAY=:0



I have a gander around, and find Why don't gksu/gksudo or launching a graphical application with sudo work with Wayland? which seems promising (although I am not using Wayland, I am on Ubuntu 18.10 and Wayland remains installed). I try the below command as user@host, and as su in an administrative account:



user@host ~ % xhost -si:localuser:root
xhost: unable to open display "0"


I get desperate, and try:



user@host ~ % DISPLAY=0 xhost -si:localuser:root
xhost: unable to open display "0"


I try other display numbers all to no avail. I think "I am a newb, maybe localhost really means [LOCAL USER] and try with the permutations mentioned above.



user@host ~ % xhost -si:user:root
xhost: unable to open display "0"


It turns out I am a newb, but that didn't help. :)



How can I make the xhost magic happen so that Gtk doesn't throw a fit and I can just launch my application (as user@host)?










share|improve this question
















I have installed /usr/local/stata/xstata-mp as root, permissions 755.



When I try to run this program from a non-root account via the terminal, I get:



user@host ~ % /usr/local/stata/xstata-mp
(xstata-mp:8030): Gtk-WARNING **: 10:09:24.384: cannot open display: 0


"That's odd," I think, I just know I set DISPLAY=0 in my .zshrc, "Well, maybe I need to explicitly do so when running this command?" So I try:



user@host ~ % DISPLAY=0 /usr/local/stata/stata-mp
(xstata-mp:8201): Gtk-WARNING **: 10:13:28.638: cannot open display: 0


Edit: per @steeldriver 's comment I have also tried DISPLAY=:0



I have a gander around, and find Why don't gksu/gksudo or launching a graphical application with sudo work with Wayland? which seems promising (although I am not using Wayland, I am on Ubuntu 18.10 and Wayland remains installed). I try the below command as user@host, and as su in an administrative account:



user@host ~ % xhost -si:localuser:root
xhost: unable to open display "0"


I get desperate, and try:



user@host ~ % DISPLAY=0 xhost -si:localuser:root
xhost: unable to open display "0"


I try other display numbers all to no avail. I think "I am a newb, maybe localhost really means [LOCAL USER] and try with the permutations mentioned above.



user@host ~ % xhost -si:user:root
xhost: unable to open display "0"


It turns out I am a newb, but that didn't help. :)



How can I make the xhost magic happen so that Gtk doesn't throw a fit and I can just launch my application (as user@host)?







xorg display






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 11 at 23:15







Lexible

















asked Jan 11 at 18:33









LexibleLexible

1279




1279













  • The DISPLAY variable would usually have the form :0 rather than plain 0 - also you could check that the X server is running on display :0 (by pgrep -a Xorg for example)

    – steeldriver
    Jan 11 at 19:28





















  • The DISPLAY variable would usually have the form :0 rather than plain 0 - also you could check that the X server is running on display :0 (by pgrep -a Xorg for example)

    – steeldriver
    Jan 11 at 19:28



















The DISPLAY variable would usually have the form :0 rather than plain 0 - also you could check that the X server is running on display :0 (by pgrep -a Xorg for example)

– steeldriver
Jan 11 at 19:28







The DISPLAY variable would usually have the form :0 rather than plain 0 - also you could check that the X server is running on display :0 (by pgrep -a Xorg for example)

– steeldriver
Jan 11 at 19:28












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