Linux serverNETWORK ADMINISTRATIONS

How to Install AnyDesk on Linux

Need to access a remote machine from your Linux PC? Here’s how you can install and use AnyDesk for establishing remote connections on Linux.

Links:
AnyDesk (Free) – http://anydesk.com/en/downloads/linux

Commands:
wget -qO – https://keys.anydesk.com/repos/DEB-GPG-KEY | sudo apt-key add –
echo “deb http://deb.anydesk.com/ all main” | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/anydesk-stable.list
sudo apt update
sudo apt install anydesk
sudo dpkg -i anydesk_*_amd64.deb
sudo apt -f install
sudo nano /etc/yum.repos.d/AnyDesk.repo
sudo nano AnyDesk.repo
——————————————————————
[anydesk]
name=AnyDesk – stable
baseurl=
gpgcheck=1
repo_gpgcheck=1
gpgkey=https://keys.anydesk.com/repos/RPM-GPG-KEY
——————————————————————
On RHEL :
baseurl=http://rpm.anydesk.com/rhel/$releasever/$basearch/
——————————————————————
On CentOS:
baseurl=http://rpm.anydesk.com/centos/$releasever/$basearch/
——————————————————————
On Fedora:
baseurl=http://rpm.anydesk.com/fedora/$basearch/
——————————————————————
On openSUSE:
baseurl=http://rpm.anydesk.com/opensuse/$basearch/
——————————————————————
sudo dnf install anydesk
sudo yum install anydesk
zypper addrepo –repo AnyDesk.repo
sudo zypper install anydesk

Chapters:
0:00 Intro
0:23 Installing AnyDesk on Ubuntu, Debian, or Linux Mint Through the AnyDesk Repository
2:31 Installing AnyDesk on Ubuntu, Debian, or Linux Mint Using the AnyDesk DEB Package
4:54 Install AnyDesk on RHEL-Based Systems
7:14 Install AnyDesk on openSUSE
9:22 End screen

What you’ll learn:
1. How to access and control remote machines from your local system
2. How You can share files with the remote system, launch applications on it, chat with the user at the other end, and even share your screen
3. Installing AnyDesk on Ubuntu, Debian, or Linux Mint Through the AnyDesk Repository
a. How To install AnyDesk from the official repository
b. How to add the repository and its GPG key
c. How to Add the repository to your system’s list of sources
d. How to update the APT package index
e. How you can install AnyDesk on your system
4. Installing AnyDesk on Ubuntu, Debian, or Linux Mint Using the AnyDesk DEB Package
a. How To install AnyDesk using its DEB package
b. How to download the installer package from the AnyDesk website
c. How to use the dpkg command to install the DEB package
d. How to fix if you receive any error regarding dependencies
5. Install AnyDesk on RHEL-Based Systems
a. How to install AnyDesk on RPM-based distributions like RHEL, CentOS, and Fedora
b. How you can install AnyDesk by adding its RPM repository and then installing it using the default package manager
c. How to Create a repo file AnyDesk.repo in the /etc/yum.repos.d directory using nano, Vim, or any other text editor
d. How to create repositories file
e. How you can install AnyDesk using your system’s package manager
f. How to To install AnyDesk on RHEL/CentOS/Fedora using dnf command
g. How to install AnyDesk On older distributions such as CentOS 7, RHEL 7, and Fedora 21
6. Install AnyDesk on openSUSE
a. How To install AnyDesk on openSUSE
b. How to add the repository to your system’s software repositories
c. How you can install AnyDesk on your system using Zypper

Song: Kevin MacLeod – Christmas Rap (Vlog No Copyright Music)
Music promoted by Vlog No Copyright Music.
Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vSjWVr7kvMg&t=0s

Song: Simon More – Happy Vibes (Vlog No Copyright Music)
Music provided by Vlog No Copyright Music.
Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kBfkSd4iyc0&t=0s

Song: DREK’S – Clouds
Music provided by Vlog No Copyright Music.
Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIBNMiLM8q8&t=0s

#computereverywhere #howtoinstall #anydesk #linux

source

centos 7

One thought on “How to Install AnyDesk on Linux

  • I have been thinking of Zorin OS lately and I nvr tried Linux and I am doing a deep dive research before I start using Zorin like how to format disk partitions on my 2nd SSD for software installation instead of using my 1st SSD where my Zorin OS is install. I want to learn how to directly install software into such Partitions on 2nd SSD as well. Windows is so easy to do partitions and download apps and change the Drive letter to a certain partitions preferred and I am sure Linux can do the same thing is that right. Maybe a request for such Vid in the future for first time users who are planning to transition from Windows to Linux. I love how you start the step by step from the desktop as a start on your Vid. Being a new user of Linux, disk partitions and how to install software directly to a partition preferred is pretty much my goal of learning and bam I become a Linux user.

Comments are closed.