| LibVNCServer: A library for easy implementation of a VNC server. |
| Copyright (C) 2001-2003 Johannes E. Schindelin |
| |
| If you already used LibVNCServer, you probably want to read NEWS. |
| |
| What is it? |
| ----------- |
| |
| VNC is a set of programs using the RFB (Remote Frame Buffer) protocol. They |
| are designed to "export" a frame buffer via net (if you don't know VNC, I |
| suggest you read "Basics" below). It is already in wide use for |
| administration, but it is not that easy to program a server yourself. |
| |
| This has been changed by LibVNCServer. |
| |
| There are two examples included: |
| - example, a shared scribble sheet |
| - pnmshow, a program to show PNMs (pictures) over the net. |
| |
| The examples are not too well documented, but easy straight forward and a |
| good starting point. |
| |
| Try example: it outputs on which port it listens (default: 5900), so it is |
| display 0. To view, call |
| vncviewer :0 |
| You should see a sheet with a gradient and "Hello World!" written on it. Try |
| to paint something. Note that everytime you click, there is some bigger blot, |
| whereas when you drag the mouse while clicked you draw a line. The size of the |
| blot depends on the mouse button you click. Open a second vncviewer with |
| the same parameters and watch it as you paint in the other window. This also |
| works over internet. You just have to know either the name or the IP of your |
| machine. Then it is |
| vncviewer machine.where.example.runs.com:0 |
| or similar for the remote client. Now you are ready to type something. Be sure |
| that your mouse sits still, because everytime the mouse moves, the cursor is |
| reset to the position of the pointer! If you are done with that demo, press |
| the down or up arrows. If your viewer supports it, then the dimensions of the |
| sheet change. Just press Escape in the viewer. Note that the server still |
| runs, even if you closed both windows. When you reconnect now, everything you |
| painted and wrote is still there. You can press "Page Up" for a blank page. |
| |
| The demo pnmshow is much simpler: you either provide a filename as argument |
| or pipe a file through stdin. Note that the file has to be a raw pnm/ppm file, |
| i.e. a truecolour graphics. Only the Escape key is implemented. This may be |
| the best starting point if you want to learn how to use LibVNCServer. You |
| are confronted with the fact that the bytes per pixel can only be 8, 16 or 32. |
| |
| Projects using it |
| ---------------------------------------- |
| |
| VNC for KDE |
| http://www.tjansen.de/krfb |
| |
| GemsVNC |
| http://www.elilabs.com/~rj/gemsvnc/ |
| |
| VNC for Netware |
| http://forge.novell.com/modules/xfmod/project/?vncnw |
| |
| RDesktop |
| http://rdesktop.sourceforge.net |
| |
| Mail me, if your application is missing! |
| |
| How to use |
| ---------- |
| |
| To make a server, you just have to initialise a server structure using the |
| function rfbDefaultScreenInit, like |
| rfbScreenInfoPtr rfbScreen = |
| rfbGetScreen(argc,argv,width,height,8,3,bpp); |
| where byte per pixel should be 1, 2 or 4. If performance doesn't matter, |
| you may try bpp=3 (internally one cannot use native data types in this |
| case; if you want to use this, look at pnmshow24). |
| |
| |
| You then can set hooks and io functions (see below) or other |
| options (see below). |
| |
| And you allocate the frame buffer like this: |
| rfbScreen->frameBuffer = (char*)malloc(width*height*bpp); |
| |
| After that, you initialize the server, like |
| rfbInitServer(rfbScreen); |
| |
| You can use a blocking event loop, a background (pthread based) event loop, |
| or implement your own using the rfbProcessEvents function. |
| |
| Making it interactive |
| --------------------- |
| |
| Input is handled by IO functions (see below). |
| |
| Whenever you change something in the frame buffer, call rfbMarkRectAsModified. |
| You should make sure that the cursor is not drawn before drawing yourself |
| by calling rfbUndrawCursor. You can also draw the cursor using rfbDrawCursor, |
| but it hardly seems necessary. For cursor details, see below. |
| |
| Utility functions |
| ----------------- |
| |
| Whenever you draw something, you have to call |
| rfbMarkRectAsModified(screen,x1,y1,x2,y2). |
| This tells LibVNCServer to send updates to all connected clients. |
| |
| Before you draw something, be sure to call |
| rfbUndrawCursor(screen). |
| This tells LibVNCServer to hide the cursor. |
| Remark: There are vncviewers out there, which know a cursor encoding, so |
| that network traffic is low, and also the cursor doesn't need to be |
| drawn the cursor everytime an update is sent. LibVNCServer handles |
| all the details. Just set the cursor and don't bother any more. |
| |
| To set the mouse coordinates (or emulate mouse clicks), call |
| defaultPtrAddEvent(buttonMask,x,y,cl); |
| IMPORTANT: do this at the end of your function, because this actually draws |
| the cursor if no cursor encoding is active. |
| |
| What is the difference between rfbScreenInfoPtr and rfbClientPtr? |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The rfbScreenInfoPtr is a pointer to a rfbScreenInfo structure, which |
| holds information about the server, like pixel format, io functions, |
| frame buffer etc. |
| |
| The rfbClientPtr is a pointer to an rfbClientRec structure, which holds |
| information about a client, like pixel format, socket of the |
| connection, etc. |
| |
| A server can have several clients, but needn't have any. So, if you |
| have a server and three clients are connected, you have one instance |
| of a rfbScreenInfo and three instances of rfbClientRec's. |
| |
| The rfbClientRec structure holds a member |
| rfbScreenInfoPtr screen |
| which points to the server and a member |
| rfbClientPtr next |
| to the next client. |
| |
| The rfbScreenInfo structure holds a member |
| rfbClientPtr rfbClientHead |
| which points to the first client. |
| |
| So, to access the server from the client structure, you use client->screen. |
| To access all clients from a server, get screen->rfbClientHead and |
| iterate using client->next. |
| |
| If you change client settings, be sure to use the provided iterator |
| rfbGetClientIterator(rfbScreen) |
| with |
| rfbClientIteratorNext(iterator) |
| and |
| rfbReleaseClientIterator |
| to prevent thread clashes. |
| |
| Other options |
| ------------- |
| |
| These options have to be set between rfbGetScreen and rfbInitServer. |
| |
| If you already have a socket to talk to, just set rfbScreen->inetdSock |
| (originally this is for inetd handling, but why not use it for your purpose?). |
| |
| To also start an HTTP server (running on port 5800+display_number), you have |
| to set rfbScreen->httpdDir to a directory containing vncviewer.jar and |
| index.vnc (like the included "webclients" directory). |
| |
| Hooks and IO functions |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| There exist the following IO functions as members of rfbScreen: |
| kbdAddEvent, kbdReleaseAllKeys, ptrAddEvent and setXCutText |
| |
| kbdAddEvent(rfbBool down,rfbKeySym key,rfbClientPtr cl) |
| is called when a key is pressed. |
| kbdReleaseAllKeys(rfbClientPtr cl) |
| is not called at all (maybe in the future). |
| ptrAddEvent(int buttonMask,int x,int y,rfbClientPtr cl) |
| is called when the mouse moves or a button is pressed. |
| WARNING: if you want to have proper cursor handling, call |
| defaultPtrAddEvent(buttonMask,x,y,cl) |
| in your own function. This sets the coordinates of the cursor. |
| setXCutText(char* str,int len,rfbClientPtr cl) |
| is called when the selection changes. |
| |
| There are only two hooks: |
| newClientHook(rfbClientPtr cl) |
| is called when a new client has connected. |
| displayHook |
| is called just before a frame buffer update is sent. |
| |
| You can also override the following methods: |
| getCursorPtr(rfbClientPtr cl) |
| This could be used to make an animated cursor (if you really want ...) |
| setTranslateFunction(rfbClientPtr cl) |
| If you insist on colour maps or something more obscure, you have to |
| implement this. Default is a trueColour mapping. |
| |
| Cursor handling |
| --------------- |
| |
| The screen holds a pointer |
| rfbCursorPtr cursor |
| to the current cursor. Whenever you set it, remember that any dynamically |
| created cursor (like return value from rfbMakeXCursor) is not free'd! |
| |
| The rfbCursor structure consists mainly of a mask and a source. The mask |
| describes, which pixels are drawn for the cursor (a cursor needn't be |
| rectangular). The source describes, which colour those pixels should have. |
| |
| The standard is an XCursor: a cursor with a foreground and a background |
| colour (stored in backRed,backGreen,backBlue and the same for foreground |
| in a range from 0-0xffff). Therefore, the arrays "mask" and "source" |
| contain pixels as single bits stored in bytes in MSB order. The rows are |
| padded, such that each row begins with a new byte (i.e. a 10x4 |
| cursor's mask has 2x4 bytes, because 2 bytes are needed to hold 10 bits). |
| |
| It is however very easy to make a cursor like this: |
| |
| char* cur=" " |
| " xx " |
| " x " |
| " "; |
| char* mask="xxxx" |
| "xxxx" |
| "xxxx" |
| "xxx "; |
| rfbCursorPtr c=rfbMakeXCursor(4,4,cur,mask); |
| |
| You can even set "mask" to NULL in this call and LibVNCServer will calculate |
| a mask for you (dynamically, so you have to free it yourself). |
| |
| There is also an array named "richSource" for colourful cursors. They have |
| the same format as the frameBuffer (i.e. if the server is 32 bit, |
| a 10x4 cursor has 4x10x4 bytes). |
| |
| History |
| ------- |
| |
| LibVNCServer is based on Tridia VNC and OSXvnc, which in turn are based on |
| the original code from ORL/AT&T. |
| |
| When I began hacking with computers, my first interest was speed. So, when I |
| got around assembler, I programmed the floppy to do much of the work, because |
| it's clock rate was higher than that of my C64. This was my first experience |
| with client/server techniques. |
| |
| When I came around Xwindows (much later), I was at once intrigued by the |
| elegance of such connectedness between the different computers. I used it |
| a lot - not the least priority lay on games. However, when I tried it over |
| modem from home, it was no longer that much fun. |
| |
| When I started working with ASP (Application Service Provider) programs, I |
| tumbled across Tarantella and Citrix. Being a security fanatic, the idea of |
| running a server on windows didn't appeal to me, so Citrix went down the |
| basket. However, Tarantella has it's own problems (security as well as the |
| high price). But at the same time somebody told me about this "great little |
| administrator's tool" named VNC. Being used to windows programs' sizes, the |
| surprise was reciprocal inverse to the size of VNC! |
| |
| At the same time, the program "rdesktop" (a native Linux client for the |
| Terminal Services of Windows servers) came to my attention. There where even |
| works under way to make a protocol converter "rdp2vnc" out of this. However, |
| my primary goal was a slow connection and rdp2vnc could only speak RRE |
| encoding, which is not that funny with just 5kB/s. Tim Edmonds, the original |
| author of rdp2vnc, suggested that I adapt it to Hextile Encoding, which is |
| better. I first tried that, but had no success at all (crunchy pictures). |
| |
| Also, I liked the idea of an HTTP server included and possibly other |
| encodings like the Tight Encodings from Const Kaplinsky. So I started looking |
| for libraries implementing a VNC server where I could steal what I can't make. |
| I found some programs based on the demo server from AT&T, which was also the |
| basis for rdp2vnc (can only speak Raw and RRE encoding). There were some |
| rumors that GGI has a VNC backend, but I didn't find any code, so probably |
| there wasn't a working version anyway. |
| |
| All of a sudden, everything changed: I read on freshmeat that "OSXvnc" was |
| released. I looked at the code and it was not much of a problem to work out |
| a simple server - using every functionality there is in Xvnc. It became clear |
| to me that I *had* to build a library out of it, so everybody can use it. |
| Every change, every new feature can propagate to every user of it. |
| |
| It also makes everything easier: |
| You don't care about the cursor, once set (or use the standard cursor). |
| You don't care about those sockets. You don't care about encodings. |
| You just change your frame buffer and inform the library about it. Every once |
| in a while you call rfbProcessEvents and that's it. |
| |
| Basics |
| ------ |
| |
| VNC (Virtual network computing) works like this: You set up a server and can |
| connect to it via vncviewers. The communication uses a protocol named RFB |
| (Remote Frame Buffer). If the server supports HTTP, you can also connect |
| using a java enabled browser. In this case, the server sends back a |
| vncviewer applet with the correct settings. |
| |
| There exist several encodings for VNC, which are used to compress the regions |
| which have changed before they are sent to the client. A client need not be |
| able to understand every encoding, but at least Raw encoding. Which encoding |
| it understands is negotiated by the RFB protocol. |
| |
| The following encodings are known to me: |
| Raw, RRE, CoRRE, Hextile, CopyRect from the original AT&T code and |
| Tight, ZLib, LastRect, XCursor, RichCursor from Const Kaplinsky et al. |
| |
| If you are using a modem, you want to try the "new" encodings. Especially |
| with my 56k modem I like ZLib or Tight with Quality 0. In my tests, it even |
| beats Tarantella. |
| |
| There is the possibility to set a password, which is also negotiated by the |
| RFB protocol, but IT IS NOT SECURE. Anybody sniffing your net can get the |
| password. You really should tunnel through SSH. |
| |
| Windows or: why do you do that to me? |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| If you love products from Redmod, you better skip this paragraph. |
| I am always amazed how people react whenever Microsoft(tm) puts in some |
| features into their products which were around for a long time. Especially |
| reporters seem to not know dick about what they are reporting about! But |
| what is everytime annoying again, is that they don't do it right. Every |
| concept has it's new name (remember what enumerators used to be until |
| Mickeysoft(tm) claimed that enumerators are what we thought were iterators. |
| Yeah right, enumerators are also containers. They are not separated. Muddy.) |
| |
| There are three packages you want to get hold of: zlib, jpeg and pthreads. |
| The latter is not strictly necessary, but when you put something like this |
| into your source: |
| |
| #define MUTEX(s) |
| struct { |
| int something; |
| MUTEX(latex); |
| } |
| |
| Microsoft's C++ compiler doesn't do it. It complains that this is an error. |
| This, however, is how I implemented mutexes in case you don't need pthreads, |
| and so don't need the mutex. |
| |
| You can find the packages at |
| http://www.gimp.org/win32/extralibs-dev-20001007.zip |
| |
| Thanks go to all the GIMP team! |
| |
| What are those other targets in the Makefile? |
| --------------------------------------------- |
| |
| OSXvnc-server is the original OSXvnc adapted to use the library, which was in |
| turn adapted from OSXvnc. As you easily can see, the OSX dependend part is |
| minimal. |
| |
| storepasswd is the original program to save a vnc style password in a file. |
| Unfortunately, authentication as every vncviewer speaks it means the server |
| has to know the plain password. You really should tunnel via ssh or use |
| your own PasswordCheck to build a PIN/TAN system. |
| |
| sratest is a test unit. Run it to assert correct behaviour of sraRegion. I |
| wrote this to test my iterator implementation. |
| |
| blooptest is a test of pthreads. It is just the example, but with a background |
| loop to hunt down thread lockups. |
| |
| pnmshow24 is like pnmshow, but it uses 3 bytes/pixel internally, which is not |
| as efficient as 4 bytes/pixel for translation, because there is no native data |
| type of that size, so you have to memcpy pixels and be real cautious with |
| endianness. Anyway, it works. |
| |
| fontsel is a test for rfbSelectBox and rfbLoadConsoleFont. If you have Linux |
| console fonts, you can browse them via VNC. Directory browsing not implemented |
| yet :-( |
| |
| Why I don't feel bad about GPL |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| At the beginning of this projects I would have liked to make it a BSD |
| license. However, it is based on plenty of GPL'ed code, so it has to be |
| a GPL. I hear BeeGee complaining: "but that's invasive, every derivative |
| work, even just linking, makes my software GPL!" |
| |
| Yeah. That's right. It is because there are nasty jarheads out there who |
| would take anybody's work and claim it their own, selling it for much too |
| much money, stealing freedom and innovation from others, saying they were |
| the maintainers of innovation, lying, making money with that. |
| |
| The people at AT&T worked really well to produce something as clean and lean |
| as VNC. The managers decided that for their fame, they would release the |
| program for free. But not only that! They realized that by releasing also |
| the code for free, VNC would become an evolving little child, conquering |
| new worlds, making it's parents very proud. As well they can be! To protect |
| this innovation, they decided to make it GPL, not BSD. The principal |
| difference is: You can make closed source programs deriving from BSD, not |
| from GPL. You have to give proper credit with both. |
| |
| Now, why not BSD? Well, imagine your child being some famous actor. Along |
| comes a manager who exploits your child exclusively, that is: nobody else |
| can profit from the child, it itself included. Got it? |
| |
| What reason do you have now to use this library commercially? |
| |
| Several: You don't have to give away your product. Then you have effectively |
| circumvented the GPL, because you have the benefits of other's work and you |
| don't give back anything and you will be in hell for that. In fact, this |
| library, as my other projects, is a payback for all the free software I can |
| use (and sometimes, make better). For example, just now, I am using XEmacs |
| on top of XFree86, all running under Linux. |
| |
| Better: Use a concept like MySQL. This is free software, however, they make |
| money with it. If you want something implemented, you have the choice: |
| Ask them to do it (and pay a fair price), or do it yourself, normally giving |
| back your enhancements to the free world of computing. |
| |
| Learn from it: If you like the style this is written, learn how to imitate |
| it. If you don't like the style, learn how to avoid those things you don't |
| like. I learnt so much, just from looking at code like Linux, XEmacs, |
| LilyPond, STL, etc. |
| |
| License |
| ------- |
| |
| This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or |
| modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License |
| as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 |
| of the License, or (at your option) any later version. |
| |
| This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
| but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
| MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
| GNU General Public License for more details. |
| |
| You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
| along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software |
| Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.dfdf |
| |
| Contact |
| ------- |
| |
| To contact me, mail me: Johannes dot Schindelin at gmx dot de |
| |