1LibVNCServer: A library for easy implementation of a VNC server. 2Copyright (C) 2001-2003 Johannes E. Schindelin 3 4If you already used LibVNCServer, you probably want to read NEWS. 5 6What is it? 7----------- 8 9VNC is a set of programs using the RFB (Remote Frame Buffer) protocol. They 10are designed to "export" a frame buffer via net (if you don't know VNC, I 11suggest you read "Basics" below). It is already in wide use for 12administration, but it is not that easy to program a server yourself. 13 14This has been changed by LibVNCServer. 15 16There are two examples included: 17 - example, a shared scribble sheet 18 - pnmshow, a program to show PNMs (pictures) over the net. 19 20The examples are not too well documented, but easy straight forward and a 21good starting point. 22 23Try example: it outputs on which port it listens (default: 5900), so it is 24display 0. To view, call 25 vncviewer :0 26You should see a sheet with a gradient and "Hello World!" written on it. Try 27to paint something. Note that everytime you click, there is some bigger blot, 28whereas when you drag the mouse while clicked you draw a line. The size of the 29blot depends on the mouse button you click. Open a second vncviewer with 30the same parameters and watch it as you paint in the other window. This also 31works over internet. You just have to know either the name or the IP of your 32machine. Then it is 33 vncviewer machine.where.example.runs.com:0 34or similar for the remote client. Now you are ready to type something. Be sure 35that your mouse sits still, because everytime the mouse moves, the cursor is 36reset to the position of the pointer! If you are done with that demo, press 37the down or up arrows. If your viewer supports it, then the dimensions of the 38sheet change. Just press Escape in the viewer. Note that the server still 39runs, even if you closed both windows. When you reconnect now, everything you 40painted and wrote is still there. You can press "Page Up" for a blank page. 41 42The demo pnmshow is much simpler: you either provide a filename as argument 43or pipe a file through stdin. Note that the file has to be a raw pnm/ppm file, 44i.e. a truecolour graphics. Only the Escape key is implemented. This may be 45the best starting point if you want to learn how to use LibVNCServer. You 46are confronted with the fact that the bytes per pixel can only be 8, 16 or 32. 47 48Projects using it 49---------------------------------------- 50 51VNC for KDE 52http://www.tjansen.de/krfb 53 54GemsVNC 55http://www.elilabs.com/~rj/gemsvnc/ 56 57VNC for Netware 58http://forge.novell.com/modules/xfmod/project/?vncnw 59 60RDesktop 61http://rdesktop.sourceforge.net 62 63Mail me, if your application is missing! 64 65How to use 66---------- 67 68To make a server, you just have to initialise a server structure using the 69function rfbDefaultScreenInit, like 70 rfbScreenInfoPtr rfbScreen = 71 rfbGetScreen(argc,argv,width,height,8,3,bpp); 72where byte per pixel should be 1, 2 or 4. If performance doesn't matter, 73you may try bpp=3 (internally one cannot use native data types in this 74case; if you want to use this, look at pnmshow24). 75 76 77You then can set hooks and io functions (see below) or other 78options (see below). 79 80And you allocate the frame buffer like this: 81 rfbScreen->frameBuffer = (char*)malloc(width*height*bpp); 82 83After that, you initialize the server, like 84 rfbInitServer(rfbScreen); 85 86You can use a blocking event loop, a background (pthread based) event loop, 87or implement your own using the rfbProcessEvents function. 88 89Making it interactive 90--------------------- 91 92Input is handled by IO functions (see below). 93 94Whenever you change something in the frame buffer, call rfbMarkRectAsModified. 95You should make sure that the cursor is not drawn before drawing yourself 96by calling rfbUndrawCursor. You can also draw the cursor using rfbDrawCursor, 97but it hardly seems necessary. For cursor details, see below. 98 99Utility functions 100----------------- 101 102Whenever you draw something, you have to call 103 rfbMarkRectAsModified(screen,x1,y1,x2,y2). 104This tells LibVNCServer to send updates to all connected clients. 105 106Before you draw something, be sure to call 107 rfbUndrawCursor(screen). 108This tells LibVNCServer to hide the cursor. 109Remark: There are vncviewers out there, which know a cursor encoding, so 110that network traffic is low, and also the cursor doesn't need to be 111drawn the cursor everytime an update is sent. LibVNCServer handles 112all the details. Just set the cursor and don't bother any more. 113 114To set the mouse coordinates (or emulate mouse clicks), call 115 defaultPtrAddEvent(buttonMask,x,y,cl); 116IMPORTANT: do this at the end of your function, because this actually draws 117the cursor if no cursor encoding is active. 118 119What is the difference between rfbScreenInfoPtr and rfbClientPtr? 120----------------------------------------------------------------- 121 122The rfbScreenInfoPtr is a pointer to a rfbScreenInfo structure, which 123holds information about the server, like pixel format, io functions, 124frame buffer etc. 125 126The rfbClientPtr is a pointer to an rfbClientRec structure, which holds 127information about a client, like pixel format, socket of the 128connection, etc. 129 130A server can have several clients, but needn't have any. So, if you 131have a server and three clients are connected, you have one instance 132of a rfbScreenInfo and three instances of rfbClientRec's. 133 134The rfbClientRec structure holds a member 135 rfbScreenInfoPtr screen 136which points to the server and a member 137 rfbClientPtr next 138to the next client. 139 140The rfbScreenInfo structure holds a member 141 rfbClientPtr rfbClientHead 142which points to the first client. 143 144So, to access the server from the client structure, you use client->screen. 145To access all clients from a server, get screen->rfbClientHead and 146iterate using client->next. 147 148If you change client settings, be sure to use the provided iterator 149 rfbGetClientIterator(rfbScreen) 150with 151 rfbClientIteratorNext(iterator) 152and 153 rfbReleaseClientIterator 154to prevent thread clashes. 155 156Other options 157------------- 158 159These options have to be set between rfbGetScreen and rfbInitServer. 160 161If you already have a socket to talk to, just set rfbScreen->inetdSock 162(originally this is for inetd handling, but why not use it for your purpose?). 163 164To also start an HTTP server (running on port 5800+display_number), you have 165to set rfbScreen->httpdDir to a directory containing vncviewer.jar and 166index.vnc (like the included "webclients" directory). 167 168Hooks and IO functions 169---------------------- 170 171There exist the following IO functions as members of rfbScreen: 172kbdAddEvent, kbdReleaseAllKeys, ptrAddEvent and setXCutText 173 174kbdAddEvent(rfbBool down,rfbKeySym key,rfbClientPtr cl) 175 is called when a key is pressed. 176kbdReleaseAllKeys(rfbClientPtr cl) 177 is not called at all (maybe in the future). 178ptrAddEvent(int buttonMask,int x,int y,rfbClientPtr cl) 179 is called when the mouse moves or a button is pressed. 180 WARNING: if you want to have proper cursor handling, call 181 defaultPtrAddEvent(buttonMask,x,y,cl) 182 in your own function. This sets the coordinates of the cursor. 183setXCutText(char* str,int len,rfbClientPtr cl) 184 is called when the selection changes. 185 186There are only two hooks: 187newClientHook(rfbClientPtr cl) 188 is called when a new client has connected. 189displayHook 190 is called just before a frame buffer update is sent. 191 192You can also override the following methods: 193getCursorPtr(rfbClientPtr cl) 194 This could be used to make an animated cursor (if you really want ...) 195setTranslateFunction(rfbClientPtr cl) 196 If you insist on colour maps or something more obscure, you have to 197 implement this. Default is a trueColour mapping. 198 199Cursor handling 200--------------- 201 202The screen holds a pointer 203 rfbCursorPtr cursor 204to the current cursor. Whenever you set it, remember that any dynamically 205created cursor (like return value from rfbMakeXCursor) is not free'd! 206 207The rfbCursor structure consists mainly of a mask and a source. The mask 208describes, which pixels are drawn for the cursor (a cursor needn't be 209rectangular). The source describes, which colour those pixels should have. 210 211The standard is an XCursor: a cursor with a foreground and a background 212colour (stored in backRed,backGreen,backBlue and the same for foreground 213in a range from 0-0xffff). Therefore, the arrays "mask" and "source" 214contain pixels as single bits stored in bytes in MSB order. The rows are 215padded, such that each row begins with a new byte (i.e. a 10x4 216cursor's mask has 2x4 bytes, because 2 bytes are needed to hold 10 bits). 217 218It is however very easy to make a cursor like this: 219 220char* cur=" " 221 " xx " 222 " x " 223 " "; 224char* mask="xxxx" 225 "xxxx" 226 "xxxx" 227 "xxx "; 228rfbCursorPtr c=rfbMakeXCursor(4,4,cur,mask); 229 230You can even set "mask" to NULL in this call and LibVNCServer will calculate 231a mask for you (dynamically, so you have to free it yourself). 232 233There is also an array named "richSource" for colourful cursors. They have 234the same format as the frameBuffer (i.e. if the server is 32 bit, 235a 10x4 cursor has 4x10x4 bytes). 236 237History 238------- 239 240LibVNCServer is based on Tridia VNC and OSXvnc, which in turn are based on 241the original code from ORL/AT&T. 242 243When I began hacking with computers, my first interest was speed. So, when I 244got around assembler, I programmed the floppy to do much of the work, because 245it's clock rate was higher than that of my C64. This was my first experience 246with client/server techniques. 247 248When I came around Xwindows (much later), I was at once intrigued by the 249elegance of such connectedness between the different computers. I used it 250a lot - not the least priority lay on games. However, when I tried it over 251modem from home, it was no longer that much fun. 252 253When I started working with ASP (Application Service Provider) programs, I 254tumbled across Tarantella and Citrix. Being a security fanatic, the idea of 255running a server on windows didn't appeal to me, so Citrix went down the 256basket. However, Tarantella has it's own problems (security as well as the 257high price). But at the same time somebody told me about this "great little 258administrator's tool" named VNC. Being used to windows programs' sizes, the 259surprise was reciprocal inverse to the size of VNC! 260 261At the same time, the program "rdesktop" (a native Linux client for the 262Terminal Services of Windows servers) came to my attention. There where even 263works under way to make a protocol converter "rdp2vnc" out of this. However, 264my primary goal was a slow connection and rdp2vnc could only speak RRE 265encoding, which is not that funny with just 5kB/s. Tim Edmonds, the original 266author of rdp2vnc, suggested that I adapt it to Hextile Encoding, which is 267better. I first tried that, but had no success at all (crunchy pictures). 268 269Also, I liked the idea of an HTTP server included and possibly other 270encodings like the Tight Encodings from Const Kaplinsky. So I started looking 271for libraries implementing a VNC server where I could steal what I can't make. 272I found some programs based on the demo server from AT&T, which was also the 273basis for rdp2vnc (can only speak Raw and RRE encoding). There were some 274rumors that GGI has a VNC backend, but I didn't find any code, so probably 275there wasn't a working version anyway. 276 277All of a sudden, everything changed: I read on freshmeat that "OSXvnc" was 278released. I looked at the code and it was not much of a problem to work out 279a simple server - using every functionality there is in Xvnc. It became clear 280to me that I *had* to build a library out of it, so everybody can use it. 281Every change, every new feature can propagate to every user of it. 282 283It also makes everything easier: 284 You don't care about the cursor, once set (or use the standard cursor). 285You don't care about those sockets. You don't care about encodings. 286You just change your frame buffer and inform the library about it. Every once 287in a while you call rfbProcessEvents and that's it. 288 289Basics 290------ 291 292VNC (Virtual network computing) works like this: You set up a server and can 293connect to it via vncviewers. The communication uses a protocol named RFB 294(Remote Frame Buffer). If the server supports HTTP, you can also connect 295using a java enabled browser. In this case, the server sends back a 296vncviewer applet with the correct settings. 297 298There exist several encodings for VNC, which are used to compress the regions 299which have changed before they are sent to the client. A client need not be 300able to understand every encoding, but at least Raw encoding. Which encoding 301it understands is negotiated by the RFB protocol. 302 303The following encodings are known to me: 304Raw, RRE, CoRRE, Hextile, CopyRect from the original AT&T code and 305Tight, ZLib, LastRect, XCursor, RichCursor from Const Kaplinsky et al. 306 307If you are using a modem, you want to try the "new" encodings. Especially 308with my 56k modem I like ZLib or Tight with Quality 0. In my tests, it even 309beats Tarantella. 310 311There is the possibility to set a password, which is also negotiated by the 312RFB protocol, but IT IS NOT SECURE. Anybody sniffing your net can get the 313password. You really should tunnel through SSH. 314 315Windows or: why do you do that to me? 316-------------------------------------------- 317 318If you love products from Redmod, you better skip this paragraph. 319I am always amazed how people react whenever Microsoft(tm) puts in some 320features into their products which were around for a long time. Especially 321reporters seem to not know dick about what they are reporting about! But 322what is everytime annoying again, is that they don't do it right. Every 323concept has it's new name (remember what enumerators used to be until 324Mickeysoft(tm) claimed that enumerators are what we thought were iterators. 325Yeah right, enumerators are also containers. They are not separated. Muddy.) 326 327There are three packages you want to get hold of: zlib, jpeg and pthreads. 328The latter is not strictly necessary, but when you put something like this 329into your source: 330 331#define MUTEX(s) 332 struct { 333 int something; 334 MUTEX(latex); 335 } 336 337Microsoft's C++ compiler doesn't do it. It complains that this is an error. 338This, however, is how I implemented mutexes in case you don't need pthreads, 339and so don't need the mutex. 340 341You can find the packages at 342http://www.gimp.org/win32/extralibs-dev-20001007.zip 343 344Thanks go to all the GIMP team! 345 346What are those other targets in the Makefile? 347--------------------------------------------- 348 349OSXvnc-server is the original OSXvnc adapted to use the library, which was in 350turn adapted from OSXvnc. As you easily can see, the OSX dependend part is 351minimal. 352 353storepasswd is the original program to save a vnc style password in a file. 354Unfortunately, authentication as every vncviewer speaks it means the server 355has to know the plain password. You really should tunnel via ssh or use 356your own PasswordCheck to build a PIN/TAN system. 357 358sratest is a test unit. Run it to assert correct behaviour of sraRegion. I 359wrote this to test my iterator implementation. 360 361blooptest is a test of pthreads. It is just the example, but with a background 362loop to hunt down thread lockups. 363 364pnmshow24 is like pnmshow, but it uses 3 bytes/pixel internally, which is not 365as efficient as 4 bytes/pixel for translation, because there is no native data 366type of that size, so you have to memcpy pixels and be real cautious with 367endianness. Anyway, it works. 368 369fontsel is a test for rfbSelectBox and rfbLoadConsoleFont. If you have Linux 370console fonts, you can browse them via VNC. Directory browsing not implemented 371yet :-( 372 373Why I don't feel bad about GPL 374------------------------------ 375 376At the beginning of this projects I would have liked to make it a BSD 377license. However, it is based on plenty of GPL'ed code, so it has to be 378a GPL. I hear BeeGee complaining: "but that's invasive, every derivative 379work, even just linking, makes my software GPL!" 380 381Yeah. That's right. It is because there are nasty jarheads out there who 382would take anybody's work and claim it their own, selling it for much too 383much money, stealing freedom and innovation from others, saying they were 384the maintainers of innovation, lying, making money with that. 385 386The people at AT&T worked really well to produce something as clean and lean 387as VNC. The managers decided that for their fame, they would release the 388program for free. But not only that! They realized that by releasing also 389the code for free, VNC would become an evolving little child, conquering 390new worlds, making it's parents very proud. As well they can be! To protect 391this innovation, they decided to make it GPL, not BSD. The principal 392difference is: You can make closed source programs deriving from BSD, not 393from GPL. You have to give proper credit with both. 394 395Now, why not BSD? Well, imagine your child being some famous actor. Along 396comes a manager who exploits your child exclusively, that is: nobody else 397can profit from the child, it itself included. Got it? 398 399What reason do you have now to use this library commercially? 400 401Several: You don't have to give away your product. Then you have effectively 402circumvented the GPL, because you have the benefits of other's work and you 403don't give back anything and you will be in hell for that. In fact, this 404library, as my other projects, is a payback for all the free software I can 405use (and sometimes, make better). For example, just now, I am using XEmacs 406on top of XFree86, all running under Linux. 407 408Better: Use a concept like MySQL. This is free software, however, they make 409money with it. If you want something implemented, you have the choice: 410Ask them to do it (and pay a fair price), or do it yourself, normally giving 411back your enhancements to the free world of computing. 412 413Learn from it: If you like the style this is written, learn how to imitate 414it. If you don't like the style, learn how to avoid those things you don't 415like. I learnt so much, just from looking at code like Linux, XEmacs, 416LilyPond, STL, etc. 417 418License 419------- 420 421This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or 422modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License 423as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 424of the License, or (at your option) any later version. 425 426This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 427but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 428MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 429GNU General Public License for more details. 430 431You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 432along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software 433Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.dfdf 434 435Contact 436------- 437 438To contact me, mail me: Johannes dot Schindelin at gmx dot de 439 440