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I have a doubt, there is a free program to share mouse between linux and windows, I have a PC and a laptop, on the laptop I have w10 and ubuntu mate 18.04, and the pc w10, when I use the PC and laptop with w10, I use the windows software called "Mouse without borders" but it is only for windows, I am looking for a free one for linux and windows, I know that there is sinergy but it is paid

darioxlz
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2 Answers2

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A search on alternativeto (and filtering by Open Source & Linux) returns Barrier, which is forked from Synergy.

There used to be small print on the Synergy website stating that the payment is to download synergy. It's still open source, and you can might be able to build it yourself, but it might need proprietary binaries.

Kurtoid
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    I believe there is 1 issue with building yourself: the compiled version uses closed source binaries (and that is probably also the reason why it costs money) and those are not included in the build you do yourself. Synergy is worth the 29 dollars (lucky me got a free license for beta testing ;-) ) – Rinzwind Aug 11 '18 at 18:05
  • you can share the software compiled? – darioxlz Aug 11 '18 at 18:32
  • According to the [license file](https://github.com/symless/synergy-core/blob/master/LICENSE), yes. – Kurtoid Aug 11 '18 at 18:35
  • i mean, can you pass the program already compiled for windows 10 home 64 bits and for ubuntu 18.04? – darioxlz Aug 11 '18 at 18:41
  • No. You need to follow the instructions for Windows on Windows 10 and the instructions for Ubuntu on Ubuntu 18.04. The easiest and cheapest solution might be to just use Barrier – Kurtoid Aug 11 '18 at 18:42
  • To clarify, you can pass your mouse between Ubuntu and Windows once you've compiled binaries for both platforms. – Kurtoid Oct 04 '19 at 23:55
  • The last version to include the package `synergy` in the repos seem to be Ubuntu 18.04 LTS. – Flimm Apr 09 '20 at 13:00
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Use Barrier. It is free and open source, was forked from synergy. It is amazing. (Link to GitHub repo)

Installation in newer Ubuntu versions:

Run in a terminal:

sudo apt install barrier

If there is no paackage in your distribution or if you prefer snap packages, you can do instead:

sudo snap install barrier

Installation in Ubuntu 18.04:

In ubuntu 18.04 an alternative way is to first install flatpak:

https://flatpak.org/setup/Ubuntu/

And then barrier using flatpak:

https://flathub.org/apps/details/com.github.debauchee.barrier

mit
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    Flatpak should be good for any Linux system. I certainly had a good experience using it to install Barrier 2.3.1 yesterday. Used Win10 as 'server' and Debian as 'client'. Had to run with **DEBUG2** logging because of **failed to verify server certificate fingerprint** problem. See [here](https://github.com/debauchee/barrier/issues/39). Sharing the clipboard is the best thing since sliced bread. – Bad Loser Sep 26 '19 at 23:48
  • Or just run "sudo apt install barrier" to install it (worked for me in Ubuntu 19.10). – Lissanro Rayen Jan 29 '20 at 15:13
  • In ubuntu 18 I got `No apt package "barrier", but there is a snap with that name. Try "snap install barrier"` Had to `snap install` – Teshan Shanuka J Feb 25 '21 at 03:53
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    I had to disable "Enable SSL" in the settings to get Barrier to work. – Flimm Nov 18 '21 at 08:47
  • You also need to manually set up ssl, which seems to not be described in the tutorials online, and barrier doesn't have a man page.... this did the trick: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67343804/error-ssl-certificate-doesnt-exist-home-rsvay-snap-barrier-kvm-2-local-shar – poleguy May 13 '23 at 07:07