Can I project a linux machine to my laptop

nickbeef

Distinguished
Jul 15, 2015
54
1
18,545
For my work, we service Linux machines that run our proprietary software to control the HVAC. These boxes just run 24/7, and when we have to service them we have to bring a keyboard, monitor, in addition to our laptop.

I would like to travel with less, and at least use my laptop as a monitor (not have to bring a separate monitor) - even better would to be able to view the Linux machine virtually on my laptop and control it with my laptop keyboard as well (no additional monitor or keyboard). I know this may require a separate device (video capture card?) to use my laptop as a monitor, but what about using my laptop keyboard? Is there a device that can do both?
 
For my work, we service Linux machines that run our proprietary software to control the HVAC. These boxes just run 24/7, and when we have to service them we have to bring a keyboard, monitor, in addition to our laptop.

I would like to travel with less, and at least use my laptop as a monitor (not have to bring a separate monitor) - even better would to be able to view the Linux machine virtually on my laptop and control it with my laptop keyboard as well (no additional monitor or keyboard). I know this may require a separate device (video capture card?) to use my laptop as a monitor, but what about using my laptop keyboard? Is there a device that can do both?
Have you considered remote connectivity software like TeamViewer. You can try it for free but I would note you would want a paid subscription for commercial use. I believe it supports Windows, Mac OSX and Linux. I've only ever used it on Windows though.
 
Have you considered remote connectivity software like TeamViewer. You can try it for free but I would note you would want a paid subscription for commercial use. I believe it supports Windows, Mac OSX and Linux. I've only ever used it on Windows though.
The problem I see is..."Linux machines that run our proprietary software to control the HVAC"

The TeamViewer client, or any other, will be problematic.
 
Do you need a graphical user interface or can you do all the work in terminal/shell ?
It's all in the terminal, I guess. No GUI - just typing commands.

My guess is that to get a video signal into my laptop, I would need some kind of video card that converts HDMI signal to USB, and then use a program, maybe like OBS Studio. I do video production, so this is how I would get a live HDMI feed from the camera into the computer, so I don't see why it wouldn't work for any HDMI feed. I wish there was something similar...

...then there's the issue of a keyboard. Any dumb usb keyboard works, so why not use my laptop's keyboard as an input on another computer? Perhaps it just wasn't designed this way? What about using a USB bridging cable? Maybe it's just "too complicated" or "not possible" for me to not just carry around a separate keyboard, monitor, and laptop to connect to the Linux boxes.