1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
775
776
777
778
779
780
781
782
783
784
785
786
787
788
789
790
791
792
793
794
795
796
797
798
799
800
801
802
803
804
805
806
807
808
809
810
811
812
813
814
815
816
817
818
819
820
821
822
823
824
825
826
827
828
829
830
831
832
833
834
835
836
837
838
839
840
841
842
843
844
845
846
847
848
849
850
851
852
853
854
855
856
857
858
859
860
861
862
863
864
865
866
867
868
869
870
871
872
873
874
875
876
877
878
879
880
881
882
883
884
885
886
887
888
889
890
891
892
893
894
895
896
897
898
899
900
901
902
903
904
905
906
907
908
909
910
911
912
913
914
915
916
917
918
919
920
921
922
923
924
925
926
927
928
929
930
931
932
933
934
935
936
937
938
939
940
941
942
943
944
945
946
947
948
949
950
951
952
953
954
955
956
957
958
959
960
961
962
963
964
965
966
967
968
969
970
971
972
973
974
975
976
977
978
979
980
981
982
983
984
985
986
987
988
989
990
991
992
993
994
995
996
997
998
999
1000
1001
1002
1003
1004
1005
1006
1007
1008
1009
1010
1011
1012
1013
1014
1015
1016
1017
1018
1019
1020
1021
1022
1023
1024
1025
1026
1027
1028
1029
1030
1031
1032
1033
1034
1035
1036
1037
1038
1039
1040
1041
1042
1043
1044
1045
1046
1047
1048
1049
1050
1051
1052
1053
1054
1055
1056
1057
1058
1059
1060
1061
1062
1063
1064
1065
1066
1067
1068
1069
1070
1071
1072
1073
1074
1075
1076
1077
1078
1079
1080
1081
1082
1083
1084
1085
1086
1087
1088
1089
1090
1091
1092
1093
1094
1095
1096
1097
1098
1099
1100
1101
1102
1103
1104
1105
1106
1107
1108
1109
1110
1111
1112
1113
1114
1115
1116
1117
1118
1119
1120
1121
1122
1123
1124
1125
1126
1127
1128
1129
1130
1131
1132
1133
1134
1135
1136
1137
1138
1139
1140
1141
1142
1143
1144
1145
1146
1147
1148
1149
1150
1151
1152
1153
1154
1155
1156
1157
1158
1159
1160
1161
1162
1163
1164
1165
1166
1167
1168
1169
1170
1171
1172
1173
1174
1175
1176
1177
1178
1179
1180
1181
1182
1183
1184
1185
1186
1187
1188
1189
1190
1191
1192
1193
1194
1195
1196
1197
1198
1199
1200
1201
1202
1203
1204
1205
1206
1207
1208
1209
1210
1211
1212
1213
1214
1215
1216
1217
1218
1219
1220
1221
1222
1223
1224
1225
1226
1227
1228
1229
1230
1231
1232
1233
1234
1235
1236
1237
1238
1239
1240
1241
1242
1243
1244
1245
1246
1247
1248
1249
1250
1251
1252
1253
1254
1255
1256
1257
1258
1259
1260
1261
1262
1263
1264
1265
1266
1267
1268
1269
1270
1271
1272
1273
1274
1275
1276
1277
1278
1279
1280
1281
1282
1283
1284
1285
1286
1287
1288
1289
1290
1291
1292
1293
1294
1295
1296
1297
1298
1299
1300
1301
1302
1303
1304
1305
1306
1307
1308
1309
1310
1311
1312
1313
1314
1315
1316
1317
1318
1319
1320
1321
1322
1323
1324
1325
1326
1327
1328
1329
1330
1331
1332
1333
1334
1335
1336
1337
1338
1339
1340
1341
1342
1343
1344
1345
1346
1347
1348
1349
1350
1351
1352
1353
1354
1355
1356
1357
1358
1359
1360
1361
1362
1363
1364
1365
1366
1367
1368
1369
1370
1371
1372
1373
1374
1375
1376
1377
1378
1379
1380
1381
1382
1383
1384
1385
1386
1387
1388
1389
1390
1391
1392
1393
1394
1395
1396
1397
1398
1399
1400
1401
1402
1403
1404
1405
1406
1407
1408
1409
1410
1411
1412
1413
1414
1415
1416
1417
1418
1419
1420
1421
1422
1423
1424
1425
1426
1427
1428
1429
1430
1431
1432
1433
1434
1435
1436
1437
1438
1439
1440
1441
1442
1443
1444
1445
1446
1447
1448
1449
1450
1451
1452
1453
1454
1455
1456
1457
1458
1459
1460
1461
1462
1463
1464
1465
1466
1467
1468
1469
1470
1471
1472
1473
1474
1475
1476
1477
1478
1479
1480
1481
1482
1483
1484
1485
1486
1487
1488
1489
1490
1491
1492
1493
1494
1495
1496
1497
1498
1499
1500
1501
1502
1503
1504
1505
1506
1507
1508
1509
1510
1511
1512
1513
1514
1515
1516
1517
1518
1519
1520
1521
1522
1523
1524
1525
1526
1527
1528
1529
1530
1531
1532
1533
1534
1535
1536
1537
1538
1539
1540
1541
1542
1543
1544
1545
1546
1547
1548
1549
1550
1551
1552
1553
1554
1555
1556
1557
1558
1559
1560
1561
1562
1563
1564
1565
1566
1567
1568
1569
1570
1571
1572
1573
1574
1575
1576
1577
1578
1579
1580
1581
1582
1583
1584
1585
1586
1587
1588
1589
1590
1591
1592
1593
1594
1595
1596
1597
1598
1599
1600
1601
1602
1603
1604
1605
1606
1607
1608
1609
1610
1611
1612
1613
1614
1615
1616
1617
1618
1619
1620
1621
1622
1623
1624
1625
1626
1627
1628
1629
1630
1631
1632
1633
1634
1635
1636
1637
1638
1639
1640
1641
1642
1643
1644
1645
1646
1647
1648
1649
1650
1651
1652
1653
1654
1655
1656
1657
1658
1659
1660
1661
1662
1663
1664
1665
1666
1667
1668
1669
1670
1671
1672
1673
1674
1675
1676
1677
1678
1679
1680
1681
1682
1683
1684
1685
1686
1687
1688
1689
1690
1691
1692
1693
1694
1695
1696
1697
1698
1699
1700
1701
1702
1703
1704
1705
1706
1707
1708
1709
1710
1711
1712
1713
1714
1715
1716
1717
1718
1719
1720
1721
1722
1723
1724
1725
1726
1727
1728
1729
1730
1731
1732
1733
1734
1735
1736
1737
1738
1739
1740
1741
1742
1743
1744
1745
1746
1747
1748
1749
1750
1751
1752
1753
1754
1755
1756
1757
1758
1759
1760
1761
1762
1763
1764
1765
1766
1767
1768
1769
1770
1771
1772
1773
1774
1775
1776
1777
1778
1779
1780
1781
1782
1783
1784
1785
1786
1787
1788
1789
1790
1791
1792
1793
1794
1795
1796
1797
1798
1799
1800
1801
1802
1803
1804
1805
1806
1807
1808
1809
1810
1811
1812
1813
1814
1815
1816
1817
1818
1819
1820
1821
1822
1823
1824
1825
1826
1827
1828
1829
1830
1831
1832
1833
1834
1835
1836
1837
1838
1839
1840
1841
1842
1843
1844
1845
1846
1847
1848
1849
1850
1851
1852
1853
1854
1855
1856
1857
1858
1859
1860
1861
1862
1863
1864
1865
1866
1867
1868
1869
1870
1871
1872
1873
1874
1875
1876
1877
1878
1879
1880
1881
1882
1883
1884
1885
1886
1887
1888
1889
1890
1891
1892
1893
1894
1895
1896
1897
1898
1899
1900
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
2031
2032
2033
2034
2035
2036
2037
2038
2039
2040
2041
2042
2043
2044
2045
2046
2047
2048
2049
2050
2051
2052
2053
2054
2055
2056
2057
2058
2059
2060
2061
2062
2063
2064
2065
2066
2067
2068
2069
2070
2071
2072
2073
2074
2075
2076
2077
2078
2079
2080
2081
2082
2083
2084
2085
2086
2087
2088
2089
2090
2091
2092
2093
2094
2095
2096
2097
2098
2099
2100
2101
2102
2103
2104
2105
2106
2107
2108
2109
2110
2111
2112
2113
2114
2115
2116
2117
2118
2119
2120
2121
2122
2123
2124
2125
2126
2127
2128
2129
2130
2131
2132
2133
2134
2135
2136
2137
2138
2139
2140
2141
2142
2143
2144
2145
2146
2147
2148
2149
2150
2151
2152
2153
2154
2155
2156
2157
2158
2159
2160
2161
2162
2163
2164
2165
2166
2167
2168
2169
2170
2171
2172
2173
2174
2175
2176
2177
2178
2179
2180
2181
2182
2183
2184
2185
2186
2187
2188
2189
2190
2191
2192
2193
2194
2195
2196
2197
2198
2199
2200
2201
2202
2203
2204
2205
2206
2207
2208
2209
2210
2211
2212
2213
2214
2215
2216
2217
2218
2219
2220
2221
2222
2223
2224
2225
2226
2227
2228
2229
2230
2231
2232
2233
2234
2235
2236
2237
2238
2239
2240
2241
2242
2243
2244
2245
2246
2247
2248
2249
2250
2251
2252
2253
2254
2255
2256
2257
2258
2259
2260
2261
2262
2263
2264
2265
2266
2267
2268
2269
2270
2271
2272
2273
2274
2275
2276
2277
2278
2279
2280
2281
2282
2283
2284
2285
2286
2287
2288
2289
2290
2291
2292
2293
2294
2295
2296
2297
2298
2299
2300
2301
2302
2303
2304
2305
2306
2307
2308
2309
2310
2311
2312
2313
2314
2315
2316
2317
2318
2319
2320
2321
2322
2323
2324
2325
2326
2327
2328
2329
2330
2331
2332
2333
2334
2335
2336
2337
2338
2339
2340
2341
2342
2343
2344
2345
2346
2347
2348
2349
2350
2351
2352
2353
2354
2355
2356
2357
2358
2359
2360
2361
2362
2363
2364
2365
2366
2367
2368
2369
2370
2371
2372
2373
2374
2375
2376
2377
2378
2379
2380
2381
2382
2383
2384
2385
2386
2387
2388
2389
2390
2391
2392
2393
2394
2395
2396
2397
2398
2399
2400
2401
2402
2403
2404
2405
2406
2407
2408
2409
2410
2411
2412
2413
2414
2415
2416
2417
2418
2419
2420
2421
2422
2423
2424
2425
2426
2427
2428
2429
2430
2431
2432
2433
2434
2435
2436
2437
2438
2439
2440
2441
2442
2443
2444
2445
2446
2447
2448
2449
2450
2451
2452
2453
2454
2455
2456
2457
2458
2459
2460
2461
2462
2463
2464
2465
2466
2467
2468
2469
2470
2471
2472
2473
2474
2475
2476
2477
2478
2479
2480
2481
2482
2483
2484
2485
2486
2487
2488
2489
2490
2491
2492
2493
2494
2495
2496
2497
2498
2499
2500
2501
2502
2503
2504
2505
2506
2507
2508
2509
2510
2511
2512
2513
2514
2515
2516
2517
2518
2519
2520
2521
2522
2523
2524
2525
2526
2527
2528
2529
2530
2531
2532
2533
2534
2535
2536
2537
2538
2539
2540
2541
2542
2543
2544
2545
2546
2547
2548
2549
2550
2551
2552
2553
2554
2555
2556
2557
2558
2559
2560
2561
2562
2563
2564
2565
2566
2567
2568
2569
2570
2571
2572
2573
2574
2575
2576
2577
2578
2579
2580
2581
2582
2583
2584
2585
2586
2587
2588
2589
2590
2591
2592
2593
2594
2595
2596
2597
2598
2599
2600
2601
2602
2603
2604
2605
2606
2607
2608
2609
2610
2611
2612
2613
2614
2615
2616
2617
2618
2619
2620
2621
2622
2623
2624
2625
2626
2627
2628
2629
2630
2631
2632
2633
2634
2635
2636
2637
2638
2639
2640
2641
2642
2643
2644
2645
2646
2647
2648
2649
2650
2651
2652
2653
2654
2655
2656
2657
2658
2659
2660
2661
2662
2663
2664
2665
2666
2667
2668
2669
2670
2671
2672
2673
2674
2675
2676
2677
2678
2679
2680
2681
2682
2683
2684
2685
2686
2687
2688
2689
2690
2691
2692
2693
2694
2695
2696
2697
2698
2699
2700
2701
2702
2703
2704
2705
2706
2707
2708
2709
2710
2711
2712
2713
2714
2715
2716
2717
2718
2719
2720
2721
2722
2723
2724
2725
2726
2727
2728
2729
2730
2731
2732
2733
2734
2735
2736
2737
2738
2739
2740
2741
2742
2743
2744
2745
2746
2747
2748
2749
2750
2751
2752
2753
2754
2755
2756
2757
2758
2759
2760
2761
2762
2763
2764
2765
2766
2767
2768
2769
2770
2771
2772
2773
2774
2775
2776
2777
2778
2779
2780
2781
2782
2783
2784
2785
2786
2787
2788
2789
2790
2791
2792
2793
2794
2795
2796
2797
2798
2799
2800
2801
2802
2803
2804
2805
2806
2807
2808
2809
2810
2811
2812
2813
2814
2815
2816
2817
2818
2819
2820
2821
2822
2823
2824
2825
2826
2827
2828
2829
2830
2831
2832
2833
2834
2835
2836
2837
2838
2839
2840
2841
2842
2843
2844
2845
2846
2847
2848
2849
2850
2851
2852
2853
2854
2855
2856
2857
2858
2859
2860
2861
2862
2863
2864
2865
2866
2867
2868
2869
2870
2871
2872
2873
2874
2875
2876
2877
2878
2879
2880
2881
2882
2883
2884
2885
2886
2887
2888
2889
2890
2891
2892
2893
2894
2895
2896
2897
2898
2899
2900
2901
2902
2903
2904
2905
2906
2907
2908
2909
2910
2911
2912
2913
2914
2915
2916
2917
2918
2919
2920
2921
2922
2923
2924
2925
2926
2927
2928
2929
2930
2931
2932
2933
2934
2935
2936
2937
2938
2939
2940
2941
2942
2943
2944
2945
2946
2947
2948
2949
2950
2951
2952
2953
2954
2955
2956
2957
2958
2959
2960
2961
2962
2963
2964
2965
2966
2967
2968
2969
2970
2971
2972
2973
2974
2975
2976
2977
2978
2979
2980
2981
2982
2983
2984
2985
2986
2987
2988
2989
2990
2991
2992
2993
2994
2995
2996
2997
2998
2999
3000
3001
3002
3003
3004
3005
3006
3007
3008
3009
3010
3011
3012
3013
3014
3015
3016
3017
3018
3019
3020
3021
3022
3023
3024
3025
3026
3027
3028
3029
3030
3031
3032
3033
3034
3035
3036
3037
3038
3039
3040
3041
3042
3043
3044
3045
3046
3047
3048
3049
3050
3051
3052
3053
3054
3055
3056
3057
3058
3059
3060
3061
3062
3063
3064
3065
3066
3067
3068
3069
3070
3071
3072
3073
3074
3075
3076
3077
3078
3079
3080
3081
3082
3083
3084
3085
3086
3087
3088
3089
3090
3091
3092
3093
3094
3095
3096
3097
3098
3099
3100
3101
3102
3103
3104
3105
3106
3107
3108
3109
3110
3111
3112
3113
3114
3115
3116
3117
3118
3119
3120
3121
3122
3123
3124
3125
3126
3127
3128
3129
3130
3131
3132
3133
3134
3135
3136
3137
3138
3139
3140
3141
3142
3143
3144
3145
3146
3147
3148
3149
3150
3151
3152
3153
3154
3155
3156
3157
3158
3159
3160
3161
3162
3163
3164
3165
3166
3167
3168
3169
3170
3171
3172
3173
3174
3175
3176
3177
3178
3179
3180
3181
3182
3183
3184
3185
3186
3187
3188
3189
3190
3191
3192
3193
3194
3195
3196
3197
3198
3199
3200
3201
3202
3203
3204
3205
3206
3207
3208
3209
3210
3211
3212
3213
3214
3215
3216
3217
3218
3219
3220
3221
3222
3223
3224
3225
3226
3227
3228
3229
3230
3231
3232
3233
3234
3235
3236
3237
3238
3239
3240
3241
3242
3243
3244
3245
3246
3247
3248
3249
3250
3251
3252
3253
3254
3255
3256
3257
3258
3259
3260
3261
3262
3263
3264
3265
3266
3267
3268
3269
3270
3271
3272
3273
3274
3275
3276
3277
3278
3279
3280
3281
3282
3283
3284
3285
3286
3287
3288
3289
3290
3291
3292
3293
3294
3295
3296
3297
3298
3299
3300
3301
3302
3303
3304
3305
3306
3307
3308
3309
3310
3311
3312
3313
3314
3315
3316
3317
3318
3319
3320
3321
3322
3323
3324
3325
3326
3327
3328
3329
3330
3331
3332
3333
3334
3335
3336
3337
3338
3339
3340
3341
3342
3343
3344
3345
3346
3347
3348
3349
3350
3351
3352
3353
3354
3355
3356
3357
3358
3359
3360
3361
3362
3363
3364
3365
3366
3367
3368
3369
3370
3371
3372
3373
3374
3375
3376
3377
3378
3379
3380
3381
3382
3383
3384
3385
3386
3387
3388
3389
3390
3391
3392
3393
3394
3395
3396
3397
3398
3399
3400
3401
3402
3403
3404
3405
3406
3407
3408
3409
3410
3411
3412
3413
3414
3415
3416
3417
3418
3419
3420
3421
3422
3423
3424
3425
3426
3427
3428
3429
3430
3431
3432
3433
3434
3435
3436
3437
3438
3439
3440
3441
3442
3443
3444
3445
3446
3447
3448
3449
3450
3451
3452
3453
3454
3455
3456
3457
3458
3459
3460
3461
3462
3463
3464
3465
3466
3467
3468
3469
3470
3471
3472
3473
3474
3475
3476
3477
3478
3479
3480
3481
3482
3483
3484
3485
3486
3487
3488
3489
3490
3491
3492
3493
3494
3495
3496
3497
3498
3499
3500
3501
3502
3503
3504
3505
3506
3507
3508
3509
3510
3511
3512
3513
3514
3515
3516
3517
3518
3519
3520
3521
3522
3523
3524
3525
3526
3527
3528
3529
3530
3531
3532
3533
3534
3535
3536
3537
3538
3539
3540
3541
3542
3543
3544
3545
3546
3547
3548
3549
3550
3551
3552
3553
3554
3555
3556
3557
3558
3559
3560
3561
3562
3563
3564
3565
3566
3567
3568
3569
3570
3571
3572
3573
3574
3575
3576
3577
3578
3579
3580
3581
3582
3583
3584
3585
3586
3587
3588
3589
3590
3591
3592
3593
3594
3595
3596
3597
3598
3599
3600
3601
3602
3603
3604
3605
3606
3607
3608
3609
3610
3611
3612
3613
3614
3615
3616
3617
3618
3619
3620
3621
3622
3623
3624
3625
3626
3627
3628
3629
3630
3631
3632
3633
3634
3635
3636
3637
3638
3639
3640
3641
3642
3643
3644
3645
3646
3647
3648
3649
3650
3651
3652
3653
3654
3655
3656
3657
3658
3659
3660
3661
3662
3663
3664
3665
3666
3667
3668
3669
3670
3671
3672
3673
3674
3675
3676
3677
3678
3679
3680
3681
3682
3683
3684
3685
3686
3687
3688
3689
3690
3691
3692
3693
3694
3695
3696
3697
3698
3699
3700
3701
3702
3703
3704
3705
3706
3707
3708
3709
3710
3711
3712
3713
3714
3715
3716
3717
3718
3719
3720
3721
3722
3723
3724
3725
3726
3727
3728
3729
3730
3731
3732
3733
3734
3735
3736
3737
3738
3739
3740
3741
3742
3743
3744
3745
3746
3747
3748
3749
3750
3751
3752
3753
3754
3755
3756
3757
3758
3759
3760
3761
3762
3763
3764
3765
3766
3767
3768
3769
3770
3771
3772
3773
3774
3775
3776
3777
3778
3779
3780
3781
3782
3783
3784
3785
3786
3787
3788
3789
3790
3791
3792
3793
3794
3795
3796
3797
3798
3799
3800
3801
3802
3803
3804
3805
3806
3807
3808
3809
3810
3811
3812
3813
3814
3815
3816
3817
3818
3819
3820
3821
3822
3823
3824
3825
3826
3827
3828
3829
3830
3831
3832
3833
3834
3835
3836
3837
3838
3839
3840
3841
3842
3843
3844
3845
3846
3847
3848
3849
3850
3851
3852
3853
3854
3855
3856
3857
3858
3859
3860
3861
3862
3863
3864
3865
3866
3867
3868
3869
3870
3871
3872
3873
3874
3875
3876
3877
3878
3879
3880
3881
3882
3883
3884
3885
3886
3887
3888
3889
3890
3891
3892
3893
3894
3895
3896
3897
3898
3899
3900
3901
3902
3903
3904
3905
3906
3907
3908
3909
3910
3911
3912
3913
3914
3915
3916
3917
3918
3919
3920
3921
3922
3923
3924
3925
3926
3927
3928
3929
3930
3931
3932
3933
3934
3935
3936
3937
3938
3939
3940
3941
3942
3943
3944
3945
3946
3947
3948
3949
3950
3951
3952
3953
3954
3955
3956
3957
3958
3959
3960
3961
3962
3963
3964
3965
3966
3967
3968
3969
3970
3971
3972
3973
3974
3975
3976
3977
3978
3979
3980
3981
3982
3983
3984
3985
3986
3987
3988
3989
3990
3991
3992
3993
3994
3995
3996
3997
3998
3999
4000
4001
4002
4003
4004
4005
4006
4007
4008
4009
4010
4011
4012
4013
4014
4015
4016
4017
4018
4019
4020
4021
4022
4023
4024
4025
4026
4027
4028
4029
4030
4031
4032
4033
4034
4035
4036
4037
4038
4039
4040
4041
4042
4043
4044
4045
4046
4047
4048
4049
4050
4051
4052
4053
4054
4055
4056
4057
4058
4059
4060
4061
4062
4063
4064
4065
4066
4067
4068
4069
4070
4071
4072
4073
4074
4075
4076
4077
4078
4079
4080
4081
4082
4083
4084
4085
4086
4087
4088
4089
4090
4091
4092
4093
4094
4095
4096
4097
4098
4099
4100
4101
4102
4103
4104
4105
4106
4107
4108
4109
4110
4111
4112
4113
4114
4115
4116
4117
4118
4119
4120
4121
4122
4123
4124
4125
4126
4127
4128
4129
4130
4131
4132
4133
4134
4135
4136
4137
4138
4139
4140
4141
4142
4143
4144
4145
4146
4147
4148
4149
4150
4151
4152
4153
4154
4155
4156
4157
4158
4159
4160
4161
4162
4163
4164
4165
4166
4167
4168
4169
4170
4171
4172
4173
4174
4175
4176
4177
4178
4179
4180
4181
4182
4183
4184
4185
4186
4187
4188
4189
4190
4191
4192
4193
4194
4195
4196
4197
4198
4199
4200
4201
4202
4203
4204
4205
4206
4207
4208
4209
4210
4211
4212
4213
4214
4215
4216
4217
4218
4219
4220
4221
4222
4223
4224
4225
4226
4227
4228
4229
4230
4231
4232
4233
4234
4235
4236
4237
4238
4239
4240
4241
4242
4243
4244
4245
4246
4247
4248
4249
4250
4251
4252
4253
4254
4255
4256
4257
4258
4259
4260
4261
4262
4263
4264
4265
4266
4267
4268
4269
4270
4271
4272
4273
4274
4275
4276
4277
4278
4279
4280
4281
4282
4283
4284
4285
4286
4287
4288
4289
4290
4291
4292
4293
4294
4295
4296
4297
4298
4299
4300
4301
4302
4303
4304
4305
4306
4307
4308
4309
4310
4311
4312
4313
4314
4315
4316
4317
4318
4319
4320
4321
4322
4323
4324
4325
4326
4327
4328
4329
4330
4331
4332
4333
4334
4335
4336
4337
4338
4339
4340
4341
4342
4343
4344
4345
4346
4347
4348
4349
4350
4351
4352
4353
4354
4355
4356
4357
4358
4359
4360
4361
4362
4363
4364
4365
4366
4367
4368
4369
4370
4371
4372
4373
4374
4375
4376
4377
4378
4379
4380
4381
4382
4383
4384
4385
4386
4387
4388
4389
4390
4391
4392
4393
4394
4395
4396
4397
4398
4399
4400
4401
4402
4403
4404
4405
4406
4407
4408
4409
4410
4411
4412
4413
4414
4415
4416
4417
4418
4419
4420
4421
4422
4423
4424
4425
4426
4427
4428
4429
4430
4431
4432
4433
4434
4435
4436
4437
4438
4439
4440
4441
4442
4443
4444
4445
4446
4447
4448
4449
4450
4451
4452
4453
4454
4455
4456
4457
4458
4459
4460
4461
4462
4463
4464
4465
4466
4467
4468
4469
4470
4471
4472
4473
4474
4475
4476
4477
4478
4479
4480
4481
4482
4483
4484
4485
4486
4487
4488
4489
4490
4491
4492
4493
4494
4495
4496
4497
4498
4499
4500
4501
4502
4503
4504
4505
4506
4507
4508
4509
4510
4511
4512
4513
4514
4515
4516
4517
4518
4519
4520
4521
4522
4523
4524
4525
4526
4527
4528
4529
4530
4531
4532
4533
4534
4535
4536
4537
4538
4539
4540
4541
4542
4543
4544
4545
4546
4547
4548
4549
4550
4551
4552
4553
4554
4555
4556
4557
4558
4559
4560
4561
4562
4563
4564
4565
4566
4567
4568
4569
4570
4571
4572
4573
4574
4575
4576
4577
4578
4579
4580
4581
4582
4583
4584
4585
4586
4587
4588
4589
4590
4591
4592
4593
4594
4595
4596
4597
4598
4599
4600
4601
4602
4603
4604
4605
4606
4607
4608
4609
4610
4611
4612
4613
4614
4615
4616
4617
4618
4619
4620
4621
4622
4623
4624
4625
4626
4627
4628
4629
4630
4631
4632
4633
4634
4635
4636
4637
4638
4639
4640
4641
4642
4643
4644
4645
4646
4647
4648
4649
4650
4651
4652
4653
4654
4655
4656
4657
4658
4659
4660
4661
4662
4663
4664
4665
4666
4667
4668
4669
4670
4671
4672
4673
4674
4675
4676
4677
4678
4679
4680
4681
4682
4683
4684
4685
4686
4687
4688
4689
4690
4691
4692
4693
4694
4695
4696
4697
4698
4699
4700
4701
4702
4703
4704
4705
4706
4707
4708
4709
4710
4711
4712
4713
4714
4715
4716
4717
4718
4719
4720
4721
4722
4723
4724
4725
4726
4727
4728
4729
4730
4731
4732
4733
4734
4735
4736
4737
4738
4739
4740
4741
4742
4743
4744
4745
4746
4747
4748
4749
4750
4751
4752
4753
4754
4755
4756
4757
4758
4759
4760
4761
4762
4763
4764
4765
4766
4767
4768
4769
4770
4771
4772
4773
4774
4775
4776
4777
4778
4779
4780
4781
4782
4783
4784
4785
4786
4787
4788
4789
4790
4791
4792
4793
4794
4795
4796
4797
4798
4799
4800
4801
4802
4803
4804
4805
4806
4807
4808
4809
4810
4811
4812
4813
4814
4815
4816
4817
4818
4819
4820
4821
4822
4823
4824
4825
4826
4827
4828
4829
4830
4831
4832
4833
4834
4835
4836
4837
4838
4839
4840
4841
4842
4843
4844
4845
4846
4847
4848
4849
4850
4851
4852
4853
4854
4855
4856
4857
4858
4859
4860
4861
4862
4863
4864
4865
4866
4867
4868
4869
4870
4871
4872
4873
4874
4875
4876
4877
4878
4879
4880
4881
4882
4883
4884
4885
4886
4887
4888
4889
4890
4891
4892
4893
4894
4895
4896
4897
4898
4899
4900
4901
4902
4903
4904
4905
4906
4907
4908
4909
4910
4911
4912
4913
4914
4915
4916
4917
4918
4919
4920
4921
4922
4923
4924
4925
4926
4927
4928
4929
4930
4931
4932
4933
4934
4935
4936
4937
4938
4939
4940
4941
4942
4943
4944
4945
4946
4947
4948
4949
4950
4951
4952
4953
4954
4955
4956
4957
4958
4959
4960
4961
4962
4963
4964
4965
4966
4967
4968
4969
4970
4971
4972
4973
4974
4975
4976
4977
4978
4979
4980
4981
4982
4983
4984
4985
4986
4987
4988
4989
4990
4991
4992
4993
4994
4995
4996
4997
4998
4999
5000
5001
5002
5003
5004
5005
5006
5007
5008
5009
5010
5011
5012
5013
5014
5015
5016
5017
5018
5019
5020
5021
5022
5023
5024
5025
5026
5027
5028
5029
5030
5031
5032
5033
5034
5035
5036
5037
5038
5039
5040
5041
5042
5043
5044
5045
5046
5047
5048
5049
5050
5051
5052
5053
5054
5055
5056
5057
5058
5059
5060
5061
5062
5063
5064
5065
5066
5067
5068
5069
5070
5071
5072
5073
5074
5075
5076
5077
5078
5079
5080
5081
5082
5083
5084
5085
5086
5087
5088
5089
5090
5091
5092
5093
5094
5095
5096
5097
5098
5099
5100
5101
5102
5103
5104
5105
5106
5107
5108
5109
5110
5111
5112
5113
5114
5115
5116
5117
5118
5119
5120
5121
5122
5123
5124
5125
5126
5127
5128
5129
5130
5131
5132
5133
5134
5135
5136
5137
5138
5139
5140
5141
5142
5143
5144
5145
5146
5147
5148
5149
5150
5151
5152
5153
5154
5155
5156
5157
5158
5159
5160
5161
5162
5163
5164
5165
5166
5167
5168
5169
5170
5171
5172
5173
5174
5175
5176
5177
5178
5179
5180
5181
5182
5183
5184
5185
5186
5187
5188
5189
5190
5191
5192
5193
5194
5195
5196
5197
5198
5199
5200
5201
5202
5203
5204
5205
5206
5207
5208
5209
5210
5211
5212
5213
5214
5215
5216
5217
5218
5219
5220
5221
5222
5223
5224
5225
5226
5227
5228
5229
5230
5231
5232
5233
5234
5235
5236
5237
5238
5239
5240
5241
5242
5243
5244
5245
5246
5247
5248
5249
5250
5251
5252
5253
5254
5255
5256
5257
5258
5259
5260
5261
5262
5263
5264
5265
5266
5267
5268
5269
5270
5271
5272
5273
5274
5275
5276
5277
5278
5279
5280
5281
5282
5283
5284
5285
5286
5287
5288
5289
5290
5291
5292
5293
5294
5295
5296
5297
5298
5299
5300
5301
5302
5303
5304
5305
5306
5307
5308
5309
5310
5311
5312
5313
5314
5315
5316
5317
5318
5319
5320
5321
5322
5323
5324
5325
5326
5327
5328
5329
5330
5331
5332
5333
5334
5335
5336
5337
5338
5339
5340
5341
5342
5343
5344
5345
5346
5347
5348
5349
5350
5351
5352
5353
5354
5355
5356
5357
5358
5359
5360
5361
5362
5363
5364
5365
5366
5367
5368
5369
5370
5371
5372
5373
5374
5375
5376
5377
5378
5379
5380
5381
5382
5383
5384
5385
5386
5387
5388
5389
5390
5391
5392
5393
5394
5395
5396
5397
5398
5399
5400
5401
5402
5403
5404
5405
5406
5407
5408
5409
5410
5411
5412
5413
5414
5415
5416
5417
5418
5419
5420
5421
5422
5423
5424
5425
5426
5427
5428
5429
5430
5431
5432
5433
5434
5435
5436
5437
5438
5439
5440
5441
5442
5443
5444
5445
5446
5447
5448
5449
5450
5451
5452
5453
5454
5455
5456
5457
5458
5459
5460
5461
5462
5463
5464
5465
5466
5467
5468
5469
5470
5471
5472
5473
5474
5475
5476
5477
5478
5479
5480
5481
5482
5483
5484
5485
5486
5487
5488
5489
5490
5491
5492
5493
5494
5495
5496
5497
5498
5499
5500
5501
5502
5503
5504
5505
5506
5507
5508
5509
5510
5511
5512
5513
5514
5515
5516
5517
5518
5519
5520
5521
5522
5523
5524
5525
5526
5527
5528
5529
5530
5531
5532
5533
5534
5535
5536
5537
5538
5539
5540
5541
5542
5543
5544
5545
5546
5547
5548
5549
5550
5551
5552
5553
5554
5555
5556
5557
5558
5559
5560
5561
5562
5563
5564
5565
5566
5567
5568
5569
5570
5571
5572
5573
5574
5575
5576
5577
5578
5579
5580
5581
5582
5583
5584
5585
5586
5587
5588
5589
5590
5591
5592
5593
5594
5595
5596
5597
5598
5599
5600
5601
5602
5603
5604
5605
5606
5607
5608
5609
5610
5611
5612
5613
5614
5615
5616
5617
5618
5619
5620
5621
5622
5623
5624
5625
5626
5627
5628
5629
5630
5631
5632
5633
5634
5635
5636
5637
5638
5639
5640
5641
5642
5643
5644
5645
5646
5647
5648
5649
5650
5651
5652
5653
5654
5655
5656
5657
5658
5659
5660
5661
5662
5663
5664
5665
5666
5667
5668
5669
5670
5671
5672
5673
5674
5675
5676
5677
5678
5679
5680
5681
5682
5683
5684
5685
5686
5687
5688
5689
5690
5691
5692
5693
5694
5695
5696
5697
5698
5699
5700
5701
5702
5703
5704
5705
5706
5707
5708
5709
5710
5711
5712
5713
5714
5715
5716
5717
5718
5719
5720
5721
5722
5723
5724
5725
5726
5727
5728
5729
5730
5731
5732
5733
5734
5735
5736
5737
5738
5739
5740
5741
5742
5743
5744
5745
5746
5747
5748
5749
5750
5751
5752
5753
5754
5755
5756
5757
5758
5759
5760
5761
5762
5763
5764
5765
5766
5767
5768
5769
5770
5771
5772
5773
5774
5775
5776
5777
5778
5779
5780
5781
5782
5783
5784
5785
5786
5787
5788
5789
5790
5791
5792
5793
5794
5795
5796
5797
5798
5799
5800
5801
5802
5803
5804
5805
5806
5807
5808
5809
5810
5811
5812
5813
5814
5815
5816
5817
5818
5819
5820
5821
5822
5823
5824
5825
5826
5827
5828
5829
5830
5831
5832
5833
5834
5835
5836
5837
5838
5839
5840
5841
5842
5843
5844
5845
5846
5847
5848
5849
5850
5851
5852
5853
5854
5855
5856
5857
5858
5859
5860
5861
5862
5863
5864
5865
5866
5867
5868
5869
5870
5871
5872
5873
5874
5875
5876
5877
5878
5879
5880
5881
5882
5883
5884
5885
5886
5887
5888
5889
5890
5891
5892
5893
5894
5895
5896
5897
5898
5899
5900
5901
5902
5903
5904
5905
5906
5907
5908
5909
5910
5911
5912
5913
5914
5915
5916
5917
5918
5919
5920
5921
5922
5923
5924
5925
5926
5927
5928
5929
5930
5931
5932
5933
5934
5935
5936
5937
5938
5939
5940
5941
5942
5943
5944
5945
5946
5947
5948
5949
5950
5951
5952
5953
5954
5955
5956
5957
5958
5959
5960
5961
5962
5963
5964
5965
5966
5967
5968
5969
5970
5971
5972
5973
5974
5975
5976
5977
5978
5979
5980
5981
5982
5983
5984
5985
5986
5987
5988
5989
5990
5991
5992
5993
5994
5995
5996
5997
5998
5999
6000
6001
6002
6003
6004
6005
6006
6007
6008
6009
6010
6011
6012
6013
6014
6015
6016
6017
6018
6019
6020
6021
6022
6023
6024
6025
6026
6027
6028
6029
6030
6031
6032
6033
6034
6035
6036
6037
6038
6039
6040
6041
6042
6043
6044
6045
6046
6047
6048
6049
6050
6051
6052
6053
6054
6055
6056
6057
6058
6059
6060
6061
6062
6063
6064
6065
6066
6067
6068
6069
6070
6071
6072
6073
6074
6075
6076
6077
6078
6079
6080
6081
6082
6083
6084
6085
6086
6087
6088
6089
6090
6091
6092
6093
6094
6095
6096
6097
6098
6099
6100
6101
6102
6103
6104
6105
6106
6107
6108
6109
6110
6111
6112
6113
6114
6115
6116
6117
6118
6119
6120
6121
6122
6123
6124
6125
6126
6127
6128
6129
6130
6131
6132
6133
6134
6135
6136
6137
6138
6139
6140
6141
6142
6143
6144
6145
6146
6147
6148
6149
6150
6151
6152
6153
6154
6155
6156
6157
6158
6159
6160
6161
6162
6163
6164
6165
6166
6167
6168
6169
6170
6171
6172
6173
6174
6175
6176
6177
6178
6179
6180
6181
6182
6183
6184
6185
6186
6187
6188
6189
6190
6191
6192
6193
6194
6195
6196
6197
6198
6199
6200
6201
6202
6203
6204
6205
6206
6207
6208
6209
6210
6211
6212
6213
6214
6215
6216
6217
6218
6219
6220
6221
6222
6223
6224
6225
6226
6227
6228
6229
6230
6231
6232
6233
6234
6235
6236
6237
6238
6239
6240
6241
6242
6243
6244
6245
6246
6247
6248
6249
6250
6251
6252
6253
6254
6255
6256
6257
6258
6259
6260
6261
6262
6263
6264
6265
6266
6267
6268
6269
6270
6271
6272
6273
6274
6275
6276
6277
6278
6279
6280
6281
6282
6283
6284
6285
6286
6287
6288
6289
6290
6291
6292
6293
6294
6295
6296
6297
6298
6299
6300
6301
6302
6303
6304
6305
6306
6307
6308
6309
6310
6311
6312
6313
6314
6315
6316
6317
6318
6319
6320
6321
6322
6323
6324
6325
6326
6327
6328
6329
6330
6331
6332
6333
6334
6335
6336
6337
6338
6339
6340
6341
6342
6343
6344
6345
6346
6347
6348
6349
6350
6351
6352
6353
6354
6355
6356
6357
6358
6359
6360
6361
6362
6363
6364
6365
6366
6367
6368
6369
6370
6371
6372
6373
6374
6375
6376
6377
6378
6379
6380
6381
6382
6383
6384
6385
6386
6387
6388
6389
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6397
6398
6399
6400
6401
6402
6403
6404
6405
6406
6407
6408
6409
6410
6411
6412
6413
6414
6415
6416
6417
6418
6419
6420
6421
6422
6423
6424
6425
6426
6427
6428
6429
6430
6431
6432
6433
6434
6435
6436
6437
6438
6439
6440
6441
6442
6443
6444
6445
6446
6447
6448
6449
6450
6451
6452
6453
6454
6455
6456
6457
6458
6459
6460
6461
6462
6463
6464
6465
6466
6467
6468
6469
6470
6471
6472
6473
6474
6475
6476
6477
6478
6479
6480
6481
6482
6483
6484
6485
6486
6487
6488
6489
6490
6491
6492
6493
6494
6495
6496
6497
6498
6499
6500
6501
6502
6503
6504
6505
6506
6507
6508
6509
6510
6511
6512
6513
6514
6515
|
.\" This file was automatically generated from x11vnc -help output.
.TH X11VNC "1" "December 2009" "x11vnc " "User Commands"
.SH NAME
x11vnc - allow VNC connections to real X11 displays
version: 0.9.9, lastmod: 2009-12-18
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B x11vnc
[OPTION]...
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
Typical usage is:
.IP
Run this command in a shell on the remote machine "far-host"
with X session you wish to view:
.IP
x11vnc -display :0
.IP
Then run this in another window on the machine you are sitting at:
.IP
vncviewer far-host:0
.PP
Once x11vnc establishes connections with the X11 server and starts listening
as a VNC server it will print out a string: PORT=XXXX where XXXX is typically
5900 (the default VNC server port). One would next run something like
this on the local machine: "vncviewer hostname:N" where "hostname" is
the name of the machine running x11vnc and N is XXXX - 5900, i.e. usually
"vncviewer hostname:0".
.PP
By default x11vnc will not allow the screen to be shared and it will exit
as soon as the client disconnects. See \fB-shared\fR and \fB-forever\fR below to override
these protections. See the FAQ for details how to tunnel the VNC connection
through an encrypted channel such as
.IR ssh (1).
In brief:
.IP
ssh \fB-t\fR \fB-L\fR 5900:localhost:5900 far-host 'x11vnc \fB-localhost\fR \fB-display\fR :0'
.PP
% vncviewer -encodings 'copyrect tight zrle hextile' localhost:0
.PP
Also, use of a VNC password (-rfbauth or \fB-passwdfile)\fR is strongly recommended.
.PP
For additional info see: http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/
and http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/faq.html
.PP
Config file support: if the file $HOME/.x11vncrc exists then each line in
it is treated as a single command line option. Disable with \fB-norc.\fR For
each option name, the leading character "-" is not required. E.g. a line
that is either "forever" or "\fB-forever\fR" may be used and are equivalent.
Likewise "wait 100" or "\fB-wait\fR \fI100\fR" are acceptable and equivalent lines.
The "#" character comments out to the end of the line in the usual way
(backslash it for a literal). Leading and trailing whitespace is trimmed off.
Lines may be continued with a "\\" as the last character of a line (it
becomes a space character).
.PP
.SH OPTIONS
.PP
\fB-display\fR \fIdisp\fR
.IP
X11 server display to connect to, usually :0. The X
server process must be running on same machine and
support MIT-SHM. Equivalent to setting the DISPLAY
environment variable to \fIdisp\fR.
.IP
See the description below of the "\fB-display\fR \fIWAIT:...\fR"
extensions, where alias "\fB-find\fR" will find the user's
display automatically, and "\fB-create\fR" will create a
Xvfb session if no session is found.
.PP
\fB-auth\fR \fIfile\fR
.IP
Set the X authority file to be \fIfile\fR, equivalent to
setting the XAUTHORITY environment variable to \fIfile\fR
before startup. Same as \fB-xauth\fR file. See
.IR Xsecurity (7)
,
.IR xauth (1)
man pages for more info.
.IP
Use '-auth guess' to have x11vnc use its \fB-findauth\fR
mechanism (described below) to try to guess the
XAUTHORITY filename and use it.
.IP
XDM/GDM/KDM: if you are running x11vnc as root and want
to find the XAUTHORITY before anyone has logged into an
X session yet, use: x11vnc \fB-env\fR FD_XDM=1 \fB-auth\fR guess ...
(This will also find the XAUTHORITY if a user is already
logged into the X session.) When running as root,
FD_XDM=1 will be tried if the initial \fB-auth\fR guess fails.
.PP
\fB-N\fR
.IP
If the X display is :N, try to set the VNC display to
also be :N This just sets the \fB-rfbport\fR option to 5900+N
The program will exit immediately if that port is not
available. The \fB-N\fR option only works with normal \fB-display\fR
usage, e.g. :0 or :8, \fB-N\fR is ignored in the \fB-display\fR
WAIT:..., \fB-create,\fR \fB-find,\fR \fB-svc,\fR \fB-redirect,\fR etc modes.
.PP
\fB-autoport\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
Automatically probe for a free VNC port starting at n.
The default is to start probing at 5900. Use this to
stay away from other VNC servers near 5900.
.PP
\fB-rfbport\fR \fIstr\fR
.IP
The VNC port to listen on (a libvncserver option), e.g.
5900, 5901, etc. If specified as "\fB-rfbport\fR \fIPROMPT\fR"
then the x11vnc \fB-gui\fR is used to prompt the user to
enter the port number.
.PP
\fB-reopen\fR
.IP
If the X server connection is disconnected, try to
reopen the X display (up to one time.) This is of use
for display managers like GDM (KillInitClients option)
that kill x11vnc just after the user logs into the
X session. Note: the reopened state may be unstable.
Set X11VNC_REOPEN_DISPLAY=n to reopen n times and
set X11VNC_REOPEN_SLEEP_MAX to the number of seconds,
default 10, to keep trying to reopen the display (once
per second.)
.IP
Update: as of 0.9.9, x11vnc tries to automatically avoid
being killed by the display manager by delaying creating
windows or using XFIXES. So you shouldn't need to use
KillInitClients=false as long as you log in quickly
enough (within 45 seconds of connecting.) You can
disable this by setting X11VNC_AVOID_WINDOWS=never.
You can also set it to the number of seconds to delay.
.PP
\fB-reflect\fR \fIhost:N\fR
.IP
Instead of connecting to and polling an X display,
connect to the remote VNC server host:N and be a
reflector/repeater for it. This is useful for trying
to manage the case of many simultaneous VNC viewers
(e.g. classroom broadcasting) where, e.g. you put
a repeater on each network switch, etc, to improve
performance by distributing the load and network
traffic. Implies \fB-shared\fR (use \fB-noshared\fR as a later
option to disable). See the discussion below under
\fB-rawfb\fR vnc:host:N for more details.
.PP
\fB-id\fR \fIwindowid\fR
.IP
Show the X window corresponding to \fIwindowid\fR not
the entire display. New windows like popup menus,
transient toplevels, etc, may not be seen or may be
clipped. Disabling SaveUnders or BackingStore in the
X server may help show them. x11vnc may crash if the
window is initially partially obscured, changes size,
is iconified, etc. Some steps are taken to avoid this
and the \fB-xrandr\fR mechanism is used to track resizes. Use
.IR xwininfo (1)
to get the window id, or use "\fB-id\fR \fIpick\fR"
to have x11vnc run
.IR xwininfo (1)
for you and extract
the id. The \fB-id\fR option is useful for exporting very
simple applications (e.g. the current view on a webcam).
.PP
\fB-sid\fR \fIwindowid\fR
.IP
As \fB-id,\fR but instead of using the window directly it
shifts a root view to it: this shows SaveUnders menus,
etc, although they will be clipped if they extend beyond
the window.
.PP
\fB-appshare\fR
.IP
Simple application sharing based on the \fB-id/-sid\fR
mechanism. Every new toplevel window that the
application creates induces a new viewer window via
a reverse connection. The \fB-id/-sid\fR and \fB-connect\fR
options are required. Run 'x11vnc \fB-appshare\fR \fB-help'\fR
for more info.
.PP
\fB-clip\fR \fIWxH+X+Y\fR
.IP
Only show the sub-region of the full display that
corresponds to the rectangle geometry with size WxH and
offset +X+Y. The VNC display has size WxH (i.e. smaller
than the full display). This also works for \fB-id/-sid\fR
mode where the offset is relative to the upper left
corner of the selected window. An example use of this
option would be to split a large (e.g. Xinerama) display
into two parts to be accessed via separate viewers by
running a separate x11vnc on each part.
.IP
Use '-clip xinerama0' to clip to the first xinerama
sub-screen (if xinerama is active). xinerama1 for the
2nd sub-screen, etc. This way you don't need to figure
out the WxH+X+Y of the desired xinerama sub-screen.
screens are sorted in increasing distance from the
(0,0) origin (I.e. not the Xserver's order).
.PP
\fB-flashcmap\fR
.IP
In 8bpp indexed color, let the installed colormap flash
as the pointer moves from window to window (slow).
Also try the \fB-8to24\fR option to avoid flash altogether.
.PP
\fB-shiftcmap\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
Rare problem, but some 8bpp displays use less than 256
colorcells (e.g. 16-color grayscale, perhaps the other
bits are used for double buffering) *and* also need to
shift the pixels values away from 0, .., ncells. \fIn\fR
indicates the shift to be applied to the pixel values.
To see the pixel values set DEBUG_CMAP=1 to print out
a colormap histogram. Example: \fB-shiftcmap\fR 240
.PP
\fB-notruecolor\fR
.IP
For 8bpp displays, force indexed color (i.e. a colormap)
even if it looks like 8bpp TrueColor (rare problem).
.PP
\fB-advertise_truecolor\fR
.IP
If the X11 display is indexed color, lie to clients
when they first connect by telling them it is truecolor.
To workaround RealVNC: inPF has colourMap but not 8bpp
Use '-advertise_truecolor reset' to reset client fb too.
.PP
\fB-visual\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
This option probably does not do what you think.
It simply *forces* the visual used for the framebuffer;
this may be a bad thing... (e.g. messes up colors or
cause a crash). It is useful for testing and for some
workarounds. n may be a decimal number, or 0x hex.
Run
.IR xdpyinfo (1)
for the values. One may also use
"TrueColor", etc. see <X11/X.h> for a list. If the
string ends in ":m" then for better or for worse
the visual depth is forced to be m. You may want to
use \fB-noshm\fR when using this option (so XGetImage may
automatically translate the pixel data).
.PP
\fB-overlay\fR
.IP
Handle multiple depth visuals on one screen, e.g. 8+24
and 24+8 overlay visuals (the 32 bits per pixel are
packed with 8 for PseudoColor and 24 for TrueColor).
.IP
Currently \fB-overlay\fR only works on Solaris via
.IR XReadScreen (3X11)
and IRIX using
.IR XReadDisplay (3).
On Solaris there is a problem with image "bleeding"
around transient popup menus (but not for the menu
itself): a workaround is to disable SaveUnders
by passing the "\fB-su\fR" argument to Xsun (in
/etc/dt/config/Xservers).
.IP
Use \fB-overlay\fR as a workaround for situations like these:
Some legacy applications require the default visual to
be 8bpp (8+24), or they will use 8bpp PseudoColor even
when the default visual is depth 24 TrueColor (24+8).
In these cases colors in some windows will be incorrect
in x11vnc unless \fB-overlay\fR is used. Another use of
\fB-overlay\fR is to enable showing the exact mouse cursor
shape (details below).
.IP
Under \fB-overlay,\fR performance will be somewhat slower
due to the extra image transformations required.
For optimal performance do not use \fB-overlay,\fR but rather
configure the X server so that the default visual is
depth 24 TrueColor and try to have all apps use that
visual (e.g. some apps have \fB-use24\fR or \fB-visual\fR options).
.PP
\fB-overlay_nocursor\fR
.IP
Sets \fB-overlay,\fR but does not try to draw the exact mouse
cursor shape using the overlay mechanism.
.PP
\fB-8to24\fR \fI[opts]\fR
.IP
Try this option if \fB-overlay\fR is not supported on your
OS, and you have a legacy 8bpp app that you want to
view on a multi-depth display with default depth 24
(and is 32 bpp) OR have a default depth 8 display with
depth 24 overlay windows for some apps. This option
may not work on all X servers and hardware (tested
on XFree86/Xorg mga driver and Xsun). The "opts"
string is not required and is described below.
.IP
This mode enables a hack where x11vnc monitors windows
within 3 levels from the root window. If it finds
any that are 8bpp it extracts the indexed color
pixel values using XGetImage() and then applies a
transformation using the colormap(s) to create TrueColor
RGB values that it in turn inserts into bits 1-24 of
the framebuffer. This creates a depth 24 "view"
of the display that is then exported via VNC.
.IP
Conversely, for default depth 8 displays, the depth
24 regions are read by XGetImage() and everything is
transformed and inserted into a depth 24 TrueColor
framebuffer.
.IP
Note that even if there are *no* depth 24 visuals or
windows (i.e. pure 8bpp), this mode is potentially
an improvement over \fB-flashcmap\fR because it avoids the
flashing and shows each window in the correct color.
.IP
This method works OK, but may still have bugs and it
does hog resources. If there are multiple 8bpp windows
using different colormaps, one may have to iconify all
but one for the colors to be correct.
.IP
There may be painting errors for clipping and switching
between windows of depths 8 and 24. Heuristics are
applied to try to minimize the painting errors. One can
also press 3 Alt_L's in a row to refresh the screen
if the error does not repair itself. Also the option
\fB-fixscreen\fR 8=3.0 or \fB-fixscreen\fR V=3.0 may be used to
periodically refresh the screen at the cost of bandwidth
(every 3 sec for this example).
.IP
The [opts] string can contain the following settings.
Multiple settings are separated by commas.
.IP
For for some X servers with default depth 24 a
speedup may be achieved via the option "nogetimage".
This enables a scheme were XGetImage() is not used
to retrieve the 8bpp data. Instead, it assumes that
the 8bpp data is in bits 25-32 of the 32bit X pixels.
There is no requirement that the X server should put
the data there for our poll requests, but some do and
so the extra steps to retrieve it can be skipped.
Tested with mga driver with XFree86/Xorg. For the
default depth 8 case this option is ignored.
.IP
To adjust how often XGetImage() is used to poll the
non-default visual regions for changes, use the option
"poll=t" where "t" is a floating point time.
(default: 0.05)
.IP
Setting the option "level2" will limit the search
for non-default visual windows to two levels from the
root window. Do this on slow machines where you know
the window manager only imposes one extra window between
the app window and the root window.
.IP
Also for very slow machines use "cachewin=t"
where t is a floating point amount of time to cache
XGetWindowAttributes results. E.g. cachewin=5.0.
This may lead to the windows being unnoticed for this
amount of time when deiconifying, painting errors, etc.
.IP
While testing on a very old SS20 these options gave
tolerable response: \fB-8to24\fR poll=0.2,cachewin=5.0. For
this machine \fB-overlay\fR is supported and gives better
response.
.IP
Debugging for this mode can be enabled by setting
"dbg=1", "dbg=2", or "dbg=3".
.PP
\fB-24to32\fR
.IP
Very rare problem: if the framebuffer (X display
or \fB-rawfb)\fR is 24bpp instead of the usual 32bpp, then
dynamically transform the pixels to 32bpp. This will be
slower, but can be used to work around problems where
VNC viewers cannot handle 24bpp (e.g. "main: setPF:
not 8, 16 or 32 bpp?"). See the FAQ for more info.
.IP
In the case of \fB-rawfb\fR mode, the pixels are directly
modified by inserting a 0 byte to pad them out to 32bpp.
For X displays, a kludge is done that is equivalent to
"\fB-noshm\fR \fI\fB-visual\fR TrueColor:32\fR". (If better performance
is needed for the latter, feel free to ask).
.PP
\fB-scale\fR \fIfraction\fR
.IP
Scale the framebuffer by factor \fIfraction\fR. Values
less than 1 shrink the fb, larger ones expand it. Note:
the image may not be sharp and response may be slower.
If \fIfraction\fR contains a decimal point "." it
is taken as a floating point number, alternatively
the notation "m/n" may be used to denote fractions
exactly, e.g. \fB-scale\fR 2/3
.IP
To scale asymmetrically in the horizontal and vertical
directions, specify a WxH geometry to stretch to:
e.g. '-scale 1024x768', or also '-scale 0.9x0.75'
.IP
Scaling Options: can be added after \fIfraction\fR via
":", to supply multiple ":" options use commas.
If you just want a quick, rough scaling without
blending, append ":nb" to \fIfraction\fR (e.g. \fB-scale\fR
1/3:nb). No blending is the default for 8bpp indexed
color, to force blending for this case use ":fb".
.IP
To disable \fB-scrollcopyrect\fR and \fB-wirecopyrect\fR under
\fB-scale\fR use ":nocr". If you need to to enable them use
":cr" or specify them explicitly on the command line.
If a slow link is detected, ":nocr" may be applied
automatically. Default: :cr
.IP
More esoteric options: for compatibility with vncviewers
the scaled width is adjusted to be a multiple of 4:
to disable this use ":n4". ":in" use interpolation
scheme even when shrinking, ":pad" pad scaled width
and height to be multiples of scaling denominator
(e.g. 3 for 2/3).
.PP
\fB-geometry\fR \fIWxH\fR
.IP
Same as \fB-scale\fR WxH
.PP
\fB-scale_cursor\fR \fIfrac\fR
.IP
By default if \fB-scale\fR is supplied the cursor shape is
scaled by the same factor. Depending on your usage,
you may want to scale the cursor independently of the
screen or not at all. If you specify \fB-scale_cursor\fR
the cursor will be scaled by that factor. When using
\fB-scale\fR mode to keep the cursor at its "natural" size
use "\fB-scale_cursor\fR \fI1\fR". Most of the ":" scaling
options apply here as well.
.PP
\fB-viewonly\fR
.IP
All VNC clients can only watch (default off).
.PP
\fB-shared\fR
.IP
VNC display is shared, i.e. more than one viewer can
connect at the same time (default off).
.PP
\fB-once\fR
.IP
Exit after the first successfully connected viewer
disconnects, opposite of \fB-forever.\fR This is the Default.
.PP
\fB-forever\fR
.IP
Keep listening for more connections rather than exiting
as soon as the first client(s) disconnect. Same as \fB-many\fR
.PP
\fB-loop\fR
.IP
Create an outer loop restarting the x11vnc process
whenever it terminates. \fB-bg\fR and \fB-inetd\fR are ignored
in this mode (however see \fB-loopbg\fR below).
.IP
Useful for continuing even if the X server terminates
and restarts (at that moment the process will need
permission to reconnect to the new X server of course).
.IP
Use, e.g., \fB-loop100\fR to sleep 100 millisecs between
restarts, etc. Default is 2000ms (i.e. 2 secs) Use,
e.g. \fB-loop300,5\fR to sleep 300 ms and only loop 5 times.
.IP
If \fB-loopbg\fR (plus any numbers) is specified instead,
the "\fB-bg\fR" option is implied and the mode approximates
.IR inetd (8)
usage to some degree. In this case when
it goes into the background any listening sockets
(i.e. ports 5900, 5800) are closed, so the next one
in the loop can use them. This mode will only be of
use if a VNC client (the only client for that process)
is already connected before the process goes into the
background, for example, usage of \fB-display\fR WAIT:..,
\fB-svc,\fR and \fB-connect\fR can make use of this "poor man's"
inetd mode. The default wait time is 500ms in this
mode. This usage could use useful: \fB-svc\fR \fB-bg\fR \fB-loopbg\fR
.PP
\fB-timeout\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
Exit unless a client connects within the first n seconds
after startup.
.IP
If there have been no connection attempts after n
seconds x11vnc exits immediately. If a client is
trying to connect but has not progressed to the normal
operating state, x11vnc gives it a few more seconds
to finish and exits if it does not make it to the
normal state.
.IP
For reverse connections via \fB-connect\fR or \fB-connect_or_exit\fR
a timeout of n seconds will be set for all reverse
connects. If the connect timeout alarm goes off,
x11vnc will exit immediately.
.PP
\fB-sleepin\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
At startup sleep n seconds before proceeding (e.g. to
allow redirs and listening clients to start up)
.IP
If a range is given: '-sleepin min-max', a random value
between min and max is slept. E.g. '-sleepin 0-20' and
\'-sleepin 10-30'. Floats are allowed too.
.PP
\fB-inetd\fR
.IP
Launched by
.IR inetd (8):
stdio instead of listening socket.
Note: if you are not redirecting stderr to a log file
(via shell 2> or \fB-o\fR option) you MUST also specify the \fB-q\fR
option, otherwise the stderr goes to the viewer which
will cause it to abort. Specifying both \fB-inetd\fR and \fB-q\fR
and no \fB-o\fR will automatically close the stderr.
.PP
\fB-tightfilexfer\fR
.IP
Enable the TightVNC file transfer extension. Note that
that when the \fB-viewonly\fR option is supplied all file
transfers are disabled. Also clients that log in
viewonly cannot transfer files. However, if the remote
control mechanism is used to change the global or
per-client viewonly state the filetransfer permissions
will NOT change.
.IP
IMPORTANT: please understand if \fB-tightfilexfer\fR is
specified and you run x11vnc as root for, say, inetd
or display manager (gdm, kdm, ...) access and you do
not have it switch users via the \fB-users\fR option, then
VNC Viewers that connect are able to do filetransfer
reads and writes as *root*.
.IP
Also, tightfilexfer is disabled in \fB-unixpw\fR mode.
.PP
\fB-ultrafilexfer\fR
.IP
Note: to enable UltraVNC filetransfer and to get it to
work you probably need to supply these libvncserver
options: "\fB-rfbversion\fR \fI3.6 \fB-permitfiletransfer\fR"\fR
"\fB-ultrafilexfer\fR" is an alias for this combination.
.IP
IMPORTANT: please understand if \fB-ultrafilexfer\fR is
specified and you run x11vnc as root for, say, inetd
or display manager (gdm, kdm, ...) access and you do
not have it switch users via the \fB-users\fR option, then
VNC Viewers that connect are able to do filetransfer
reads and writes as *root*.
.IP
Note that sadly you cannot do both \fB-tightfilexfer\fR and
\fB-ultrafilexfer\fR at the same time because the latter
requires setting the version to 3.6 and tightvnc will
not do filetransfer when it sees that version number.
.PP
\fB-http\fR
.IP
Instead of using \fB-httpdir\fR (see below) to specify
where the Java vncviewer applet is, have x11vnc try
to *guess* where the directory is by looking relative
to the program location and in standard locations
(/usr/local/share/x11vnc/classes, etc). Under \fB-ssl\fR or
\fB-stunnel\fR the ssl classes subdirectory is sought.
.PP
\fB-http_ssl\fR
.IP
As \fB-http,\fR but force lookup for ssl classes subdir.
.PP
\fB-avahi\fR
.IP
Use the Avahi/mDNS ZeroConf protocol to advertise
this VNC server to the local network. (Related terms:
Rendezvous, Bonjour). Depending on your setup, you
may need to start avahi-daemon and open udp port 5353
in your firewall.
.IP
If the avahi API cannot be found at build time, a helper
program like avahi-
.IR publish (1)
or dns-
.IR sd (1)
will be tried
.PP
\fB-mdns\fR
.IP
Same as \fB-avahi.\fR
.PP
\fB-zeroconf\fR
.IP
Same as \fB-avahi.\fR
.PP
\fB-connect\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
For use with "vncviewer -listen" reverse connections.
If \fIstring\fR has the form "host" or "host:port"
the connection is made once at startup.
.IP
Use commas for a list of host's and host:port's.
E.g. \fB-connect\fR host1,host2 or host1:0,host2:5678.
Note that to reverse connect to multiple hosts at the
same time you will likely need to also supply: \fB-shared\fR
.IP
Note that unlike most vnc servers, x11vnc will require a
password for reverse as well as for forward connections.
(provided password auth has been enabled, \fB-rfbauth,\fR etc)
If you do not want to require a password for reverse
connections set X11VNC_REVERSE_CONNECTION_NO_AUTH=1 in
your environment before starting x11vnc.
.IP
If \fIstring\fR contains "/" it is instead interpreted
as a file to periodically check for new hosts.
The first line is read and then the file is truncated.
Be careful about the location of this file if x11vnc
is running as root (e.g. via
.IR gdm (1)
, etc).
.IP
Repeater mode: Some services provide an intermediate
"vnc repeater": http://www.uvnc.com/addons/repeater.html
(and also http://koti.mbnet.fi/jtko/ for linux port)
that acts as a proxy/gateway. Modes like these require
an initial string to be sent for the reverse connection
before the VNC protocol is started. Here are the ways
to do this:
.IP
\fB-connect\fR pre=some_string+host:port
\fB-connect\fR pre128=some_string+host:port
\fB-connect\fR repeater=ID:1234+host:port
\fB-connect\fR repeater=23.45.67.89::5501+host:port
.IP
SSVNC notation is also supported:
.IP
\fB-connect\fR repeater://host:port+ID:1234
.IP
As with normal \fB-connect\fR usage, if the repeater port is
not supplied 5500 is assumed.
.IP
The basic idea is between the special tag, e.g. "pre="
and "+" is the pre-string to be sent. Note that in
this case host:port is the repeater server, NOT the
vnc viewer. Somehow the pre-string tells the repeater
server how to find the vnc viewer and connect you to it.
.IP
In the case pre=some_string+host:port, "some_string"
is simply sent. In the case preNNN=some_string+host:port
"some_string" is sent in a null padded buffer of
length NNN. repeater= is the same as pre250=, this is
the ultravnc repeater buffer size.
.IP
Strings like "\\n" and "\\r", etc. are expanded to
newline and carriage return. "\\c" is expanded to
"," since the connect string is comma separated.
.IP
See also the \fB-proxy\fR option below for additional ways
to plumb reverse connections.
.PP
\fB-connect_or_exit\fR \fIstr\fR
.IP
As with \fB-connect,\fR except if none of the reverse
connections succeed, then x11vnc shuts down immediately
.IP
By the way, if you do not want x11vnc to listen on
ANY interface use \fB-rfbport\fR 0 which is handy for the
\fB-connect_or_exit\fR mode.
.PP
\fB-proxy\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
Use proxy in string (e.g. host:port) as a proxy for
making reverse connections (-connect or \fB-connect_or_exit\fR
options).
.IP
Web proxies are supported, but note by default most of
them only support destination connections to ports 443
or 563, so this might not be very useful (the viewer
would need to listen on that port or the router would
have to do a port redirection).
.IP
A web proxy may be specified by either "host:port"
or "http://host:port" (the port is required even if
it is the common choices 80 or 8080)
.IP
SOCKS4, SOCKS4a, and SOCKS5 are also supported.
SOCKS proxies normally do not have restrictions on the
destination port number.
.IP
Use a format like this: socks://host:port or
socks5://host:port. Note that ssh \fB-D\fR does not support
SOCKS4a, so use socks5://. For socks:// SOCKS4 is used
on a numerical IP and "localhost", otherwise SOCKS4a
is used (and so the proxy tries to do the DNS lookup).
.IP
An experimental mode is "\fB-proxy\fR \fIhttp://host:port/...\fR"
Note the "/" after the port that distinguishes it from
a normal web proxy. The port must be supplied even if
it is the default 80. For this mode a GET is done to
the supplied URL with the string host=H&port=P appended.
H and P will be the \fB-connect\fR reverse connect host
and port. Use the string "__END__" to disable the
appending. The basic idea here is that maybe some cgi
script provides the actual viewer hookup and tunnelling.
How to actually achieve this within cgi, php, etc. is
not clear... A custom web server or apache module
would be straight-forward.
.IP
Another experimental mode is "\fB-proxy\fR \fIssh://user@host\fR"
in which case a SSH tunnel is used for the proxying.
"user@" is not needed unless your unix username is
different on "host". For a non-standard SSH port
use ssh://user@host:port. If proxies are chained (see
next paragraph) then the ssh one must be the first one.
If ssh-agent is not active, then the ssh password needs
to be entered in the terminal where x11vnc is running.
Examples:
.IP
\fB-connect\fR localhost:0 \fB-proxy\fR ssh://me@friends-pc:2222
.IP
\fB-connect\fR snoopy:0 \fB-proxy\fR ssh://ssh.company.com
.IP
Multiple proxies may be chained together in case one
needs to ricochet off of a number of hosts to finally
reach the VNC viewer. Up to 3 may be chained, separate
them by commas in the order they are to be connected to.
E.g.: http://host1:port1,socks5://host2:port2 or three
like: first,second,third
.PP
\fB-vncconnect,\fR \fB-novncconnect\fR
.IP
Monitor the VNC_CONNECT X property set by the standard
VNC program
.IR vncconnect (1).
When the property is
set to "host" or "host:port" establish a reverse
connection. Using
.IR xprop (1)
instead of vncconnect may
work (see the FAQ). The \fB-remote\fR control mechanism uses
X11VNC_REMOTE channel, and this option disables/enables
it as well. Default: \fB-vncconnect\fR
.IP
To use different names for these X11 properties (e.g. to
have separate communication channels for multiple
x11vnc's on the same display) set the VNC_CONNECT or
X11VNC_REMOTE env. vars. to the string you want, for
example: \fB-env\fR X11VNC_REMOTE=X11VNC_REMOTE_12345
Both sides of the channel must use the same unique name.
The same can be done for the internal X11VNC_TICKER
property (heartbeat and timestamp) if desired.
.PP
\fB-allow\fR \fIhost1[,host2..]\fR
.IP
Only allow client connections from hosts matching
the comma separated list of hostnames or IP addresses.
Can also be a numerical IP prefix, e.g. "192.168.100."
to match a simple subnet, for more control build
libvncserver with libwrap support (See the FAQ). If the
list contains a "/" it instead is a interpreted
as a file containing addresses or prefixes that is
re-read each time a new client connects. Lines can be
commented out with the "#" character in the usual way.
.IP
\fB-allow\fR applies in \fB-ssl\fR mode, but not in \fB-stunnel\fR mode.
.PP
\fB-localhost\fR
.IP
Basically the same as "\fB-allow\fR \fI127.0.0.1\fR".
.IP
Note: if you want to restrict which network interface
x11vnc listens on, see the \fB-listen\fR option below.
E.g. "\fB-listen\fR \fIlocalhost\fR" or "\fB-listen\fR \fI192.168.3.21\fR".
As a special case, the option "\fB-localhost\fR" implies
"\fB-listen\fR \fIlocalhost\fR".
.IP
A rare case, but for non-localhost \fB-listen\fR usage, if
you use the remote control mechanism (-R) to change
the \fB-listen\fR interface you may need to manually adjust
the \fB-allow\fR list (and vice versa) to avoid situations
where no connections (or too many) are allowed.
.IP
If you do not want x11vnc to listen on ANY interface
(evidently you are using \fB-connect\fR or \fB-connect_or_exit,\fR
or plan to use remote control: \fB-R\fR connect:host), use
\fB-rfbport\fR 0
.PP
\fB-nolookup\fR
.IP
Do not use gethostbyname() or gethostbyaddr() to look up
host names or IP numbers. Use this if name resolution
is incorrectly set up and leads to long pauses as name
lookups time out, etc.
.PP
\fB-input\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
Fine tuning of allowed user input. If \fIstring\fR does
not contain a comma "," the tuning applies only to
normal clients. Otherwise the part before "," is
for normal clients and the part after for view-only
clients. "K" is for Keystroke input, "M" for
Mouse-motion input, "B" for Button-click input, "C"
is for Clipboard input, and "F" is for File transfer
(ultravnc only). Their presence in the string enables
that type of input. E.g. "\fB-input\fR \fIM\fR" means normal
users can only move the mouse and "\fB-input\fR \fIKMBCF,M\fR"
lets normal users do anything and enables view-only
users to move the mouse. This option is ignored when
a global \fB-viewonly\fR is in effect (all input is discarded
in that case).
.PP
\fB-grabkbd\fR
.IP
When VNC viewers are connected, attempt to the grab
the keyboard so a (non-malicious) user sitting at the
physical display is not able to enter keystrokes.
This method uses
.IR XGrabKeyboard (3X11)
and so it is
not secure and does not rule out the person at the
physical display injecting keystrokes by flooding the
server with them, grabbing the keyboard himself, etc.
Some degree of cooperation from the person at the
display is assumed. This is intended for remote
help-desk or educational usage modes.
.PP
\fB-grabptr\fR
.IP
As \fB-grabkbd,\fR but for the mouse pointer using
.IR XGrabPointer (3X11).
Unfortunately due to the way the X
server works, the mouse can still be moved around by the
user at the physical display, but he will not be able to
change window focus with it. Also some window managers
that call
.IR XGrabServer (3X11)
for resizes, etc, will
act on the local user's input. Again, some degree of
cooperation from the person at the display is assumed.
.PP
\fB-grabalways\fR
.IP
Apply both \fB-grabkbd\fR and \fB-grabptr\fR even when no VNC
viewers are connected. If you only want one of them,
use the \fB-R\fR remote control to turn the other back on,
e.g. \fB-R\fR nograbptr.
.PP
\fB-viewpasswd\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
Supply a 2nd password for view-only logins. The \fB-passwd\fR
(full-access) password must also be supplied.
.PP
\fB-passwdfile\fR \fIfilename\fR
.IP
Specify the libvncserver password via the first line
of the file \fIfilename\fR (instead of via \fB-passwd\fR on
the command line where others might see it via
.IR ps (1)
).
.IP
See the descriptions below for how to supply multiple
passwords, view-only passwords, to specify external
programs for the authentication, and other features.
.IP
If the filename is prefixed with "rm:" it will be
removed after being read. Perhaps this is useful in
limiting the readability of the file. In general, the
password file should not be readable by untrusted users
(BTW: neither should the VNC \fB-rfbauth\fR file: it is NOT
encrypted, only obscured with a fixed key).
.IP
If the filename is prefixed with "read:" it will
periodically be checked for changes and reread. It is
guaranteed to be reread just when a new client connects
so that the latest passwords will be used.
.IP
If \fIfilename\fR is prefixed with "cmd:" then the
string after the ":" is run as an external command:
the output of the command will be interpreted as if it
were read from a password file (see below). If the
command does not exit with 0, then x11vnc terminates
immediately. To specify more than 1000 passwords this
way set X11VNC_MAX_PASSWDS before starting x11vnc.
The environment variables are set as in \fB-accept.\fR
.IP
Note that due to the VNC protocol only the first 8
characters of a password are used (DES key).
.IP
If \fIfilename\fR is prefixed with "custom:" then a
custom password checker is supplied as an external
command following the ":". The command will be run
when a client authenticates. If the command exits with
0 the client is accepted, otherwise it is rejected.
The environment variables are set as in \fB-accept.\fR
.IP
The standard input to the custom command will be a
decimal digit "len" followed by a newline. "len"
specifies the challenge size and is usually 16 (the
VNC spec). Then follows len bytes which is the random
challenge string that was sent to the client. This is
then followed by len more bytes holding the client's
response (i.e. the challenge string encrypted via DES
with the user password in the standard situation).
.IP
The "custom:" scheme can be useful to implement
dynamic passwords or to implement methods where longer
passwords and/or different encryption algorithms
are used. The latter will require customizing the VNC
client as well. One could create an MD5SUM based scheme
for example.
.IP
File format for \fB-passwdfile:\fR
.IP
If multiple non-blank lines exist in the file they are
all taken as valid passwords. Blank lines are ignored.
Password lines may be "commented out" (ignored) if
they begin with the character "#" or the line contains
the string "__SKIP__". Lines may be annotated by use
of the "__COMM__" string: from it to the end of the
line is ignored. An empty password may be specified
via the "__EMPTY__" string on a line by itself (note
your viewer might not accept empty passwords).
.IP
If the string "__BEGIN_VIEWONLY__" appears on a
line by itself, the remaining passwords are used for
viewonly access. For compatibility, as a special case
if the file contains only two password lines the 2nd
one is automatically taken as the viewonly password.
Otherwise the "__BEGIN_VIEWONLY__" token must be
used to have viewonly passwords. (tip: make the 3rd
and last line be "__BEGIN_VIEWONLY__" to have 2
full-access passwords)
.PP
\fB-showrfbauth\fR \fIfilename\fR
.IP
Print to the screen the obscured VNC password kept in
the rfbauth file \fIfilename\fR and then exit.
.PP
\fB-unixpw\fR \fI[list]\fR
.IP
Use Unix username and password authentication. x11vnc
will use the
.IR su (1)
program to verify the user's
password. [list] is an optional comma separated list
of allowed Unix usernames. If the [list] string begins
with the character "!" then the entire list is taken
as an exclude list. See below for per-user options
that can be applied.
.IP
A familiar "login:" and "Password:" dialog is
presented to the user on a black screen inside the
vncviewer. The connection is dropped if the user fails
to supply the correct password in 3 tries or does not
send one before a 45 second timeout. Existing clients
are view-only during this period.
.IP
If the first character received is "Escape" then the
unix username will not be displayed after "login:"
as it is typed. This could be of use for VNC viewers
that automatically type the username and password.
.IP
Since the detailed behavior of
.IR su (1)
can vary from
OS to OS and for local configurations, test the mode
before deployment to make sure it is working properly.
x11vnc will attempt to be conservative and reject a
login if anything abnormal occurs.
.IP
One case to note: FreeBSD and the other BSD's by
default it is impossible for the user running x11vnc to
validate his *own* password via
.IR su (1)
(commenting out
the pam_self.so entry in /etc/pam.d/su eliminates this
behavior). So the x11vnc login will always *FAIL* for
this case (even when the correct password is supplied).
.IP
A possible workaround for this on *BSD would be to
start x11vnc as root with the "\fB-users\fR \fI+nobody\fR" option
to immediately switch to user nobody where the su'ing
will proceed normally.
.IP
Another source of potential problems are PAM modules
that prompt for extra info, e.g. password aging modules.
These logins will fail as well even when the correct
password is supplied.
.IP
**IMPORTANT**: to prevent the Unix password being sent
in *clear text* over the network, one of two schemes
will be enforced: 1) the \fB-ssl\fR builtin SSL mode, or 2)
require both \fB-localhost\fR and \fB-stunnel\fR be enabled.
.IP
Method 1) ensures the traffic is encrypted between
viewer and server. A PEM file will be required, see the
discussion under \fB-ssl\fR below (under some circumstances
a temporary one can be automatically generated).
.IP
Method 2) requires the viewer connection to appear
to come from the same machine x11vnc is running on
(e.g. from a ssh \fB-L\fR port redirection). And that the
\fB-stunnel\fR SSL mode be used for encryption over the
network. (see the description of \fB-stunnel\fR below).
.IP
Note: as a convenience, if you
.IR ssh (1)
in and start
x11vnc it will check if the environment variable
SSH_CONNECTION is set and appears reasonable. If it
does, then the \fB-ssl\fR or \fB-stunnel\fR requirement will be
dropped since it is assumed you are using ssh for the
encrypted tunnelling. \fB-localhost\fR is still enforced.
Use \fB-ssl\fR or \fB-stunnel\fR to force SSL usage even if
SSH_CONNECTION is set.
.IP
To override the above restrictions you can set
environment variables before starting x11vnc:
.IP
Set UNIXPW_DISABLE_SSL=1 to disable requiring either
\fB-ssl\fR or \fB-stunnel\fR (as under SSH_CONNECTION.) Evidently
you will be using a different method to encrypt the
data between the vncviewer and x11vnc: perhaps
.IR ssh (1)
or an IPSEC VPN. \fB-localhost\fR is still enforced (however,
see the next paragraph.)
.IP
Set UNIXPW_DISABLE_LOCALHOST=1 to disable the \fB-localhost\fR
requirement in \fB-unixpw\fR modes. One should never do this
(i.e. allow the Unix passwords to be sniffed on the
network.) This also disables the localhost requirement
for reverse connections (see below.)
.IP
Note that use of \fB-localhost\fR with
.IR ssh (1)
(and no \fB-unixpw)\fR
is roughly the same as requiring a Unix user login
(since a Unix password or the user's public key
authentication is used by sshd on the machine where
x11vnc runs and only local connections from that machine
are accepted).
.IP
Regarding reverse connections (e.g. \fB-R\fR connect:host
and \fB-connect\fR host), when the \fB-localhost\fR constraint is
in effect then reverse connections can only be used
to connect to the same machine x11vnc is running on
(default port 5500). Please use a ssh or stunnel port
redirection to the viewer machine to tunnel the reverse
connection over an encrypted channel.
.IP
In \fB-inetd\fR mode the Method 1) will be enforced (not
Method 2). With \fB-ssl\fR in effect reverse connections
are disabled. If you override this via env. var, be
sure to also use encryption from the viewer to inetd.
Tip: you can also have your own stunnel spawn x11vnc
in \fB-inetd\fR mode (thereby bypassing inetd). See the FAQ
for details.
.IP
The user names in the comma separated [list] may have
per-user options after a ":", e.g. "fred:opts"
where "opts" is a "+" separated list of
"viewonly", "fullaccess", "input=XXXX", or
"deny", e.g. "karl,wally:viewonly,boss:input=M".
For "input=" it is the K,M,B,C described under \fB-input.\fR
.IP
If an item in the list is "*" that means those
options apply to all users. It ALSO implies all users
are allowed to log in after supplying a valid password.
Use "deny" to explicitly deny some users if you use
"*" to set a global option. If [list] begins with the
"!" character then "*" is ignored for checking if
the user is allowed, but the option values associated
with it do apply as normal.
.IP
There are also some utilities for testing password
if [list] starts with the "%" character. See the
quick_pw() function in the source for details.
.IP
Use \fB-nounixpw\fR to disable unixpw mode if it was enabled
earlier in the cmd line (e.g. \fB-svc\fR mode)
.PP
\fB-unixpw_nis\fR \fI[list]\fR
.IP
As \fB-unixpw\fR above, however do not use
.IR su (1)
but rather
use the traditional
.IR getpwnam (3)
+
.IR crypt (3)
method to
verify passwords. All of the above \fB-unixpw\fR options and
constraints apply.
.IP
This mode requires that the encrypted passwords be
readable. Encrypted passwords stored in /etc/shadow
will be inaccessible unless x11vnc is run as root.
.IP
This is called "NIS" mode simply because in most
NIS setups user encrypted passwords are accessible
(e.g. "ypcat passwd") by an ordinary user and so that
user can authenticate ANY user.
.IP
NIS is not required for this mode to work (only that
.IR getpwnam (3)
return the encrypted password is required),
but it is unlikely it will work (as an ordinary user)
for most modern environments unless NIS is available.
On the other hand, when x11vnc is run as root it will
be able to to access /etc/shadow even if NIS is not
available (note running as root is often done when
running x11vnc from inetd and xdm/gdm/kdm).
.IP
Looked at another way, if you do not want to use the
.IR su (1)
method provided by \fB-unixpw\fR (i.e. su_verify()), you
can run x11vnc as root and use \fB-unixpw_nis.\fR Any users
with passwords in /etc/shadow can then be authenticated.
.IP
In \fB-unixpw_nis\fR mode, under no circumstances is x11vnc's
user password verifying function based on su called
(i.e. the function su_verify() that runs /bin/su
in a pseudoterminal to verify passwords.) However,
if \fB-unixpw_nis\fR is used in conjunction with the \fB-find\fR
and \fB-create\fR \fB-display\fR WAIT:... modes then, if x11vnc is
running as root, /bin/su may be called externally to
run the find or create commands.
.PP
\fB-unixpw_cmd\fR \fIcmd\fR
.IP
As \fB-unixpw\fR above, however do not use
.IR su (1)
but rather
run the externally supplied command \fIcmd\fR. The first
line of its stdin will be the username and the second
line the received password. If the command exits
with status 0 (success) the VNC user will be accepted.
It will be rejected for any other return status.
.IP
Dynamic passwords and non-unix passwords, e.g. LDAP,
can be implemented this way by providing your own custom
helper program. Note that the remote viewer is given 3
tries to enter the correct password, and so the program
may be called in a row that many (or more) times.
.IP
If a list of allowed users is needed to limit who can
log in, use \fB-unixpw\fR [list] in addition to this option.
.IP
In FINDDISPLAY and FINDCREATEDISPLAY modes the \fIcmd\fR
will also be run with the RFB_UNIXPW_CMD_RUN env. var.
non-empty and set to the corresponding display
find/create command. The first two lines of input are
the username and passwd as in the normal case described
above. To support FINDDISPLAY and FINDCREATEDISPLAY,
\fIcmd\fR should run the requested command as the user
(and most likely refusing to run it if the password is
not correct.) Here is an example script (note it has
a hardwired bogus password "abc"!)
.IP
#!/bin/sh
# Example x11vnc \fB-unixpw_cmd\fR script.
# Read the first two lines of stdin (user and passwd)
read user
read pass
.IP
debug=0
if [ $debug = 1 ]; then
echo "user: $user" 1>&2
echo "pass: $pass" 1>&2
env | egrep \fB-i\fR 'rfb|vnc' 1>&2
fi
.IP
# Check if the password is valid.
# (A real example would use ldap lookup, etc!)
if [ "X$pass" != "Xabc" ]; then
exit 1 # incorrect password
fi
.IP
if [ "X$RFB_UNIXPW_CMD_RUN" = "X" ]; then
exit 0 # correct password
else
# Run the requested command (finddisplay)
if [ $debug = 1 ]; then
echo "run: $RFB_UNIXPW_CMD_RUN" 1>&2
fi
exec /bin/su - "$user" \fB-c\fR "$RFB_UNIXPW_CMD_RUN"
fi
.IP
In \fB-unixpw_cmd\fR mode, under no circumstances is x11vnc's
user password verifying function based on su called
(i.e. the function su_verify() that runs /bin/su in a
pseudoterminal to verify passwords.) It is up to the
supplied unixpw_cmd to do user switching if desired
and if it has the permissions to do so.
.PP
\fB-find\fR
.IP
Find the user's display using FINDDISPLAY. This is an
alias for "\fB-display\fR \fIWAIT:cmd=FINDDISPLAY\fR".
.IP
For this and the next few options see \fB-display\fR WAIT:...
below for all of the details.
.PP
\fB-finddpy\fR
.IP
Run the FINDDISPLAY program, print out the found
display (if any) and exit. Output is like: DISPLAY=:0.0
DISPLAY=:0.0,XPID=12345 or DISPLAY=:0.0,VT=7. XPID is
the process ID of the found X server. VT is the Linux
virtual terminal of the X server.
.PP
\fB-listdpy\fR
.IP
Have the FINDDISPLAY program list all of your displays
(i.e. all the X displays on the local machine that you
have access rights to).
.PP
\fB-findauth\fR \fI[disp]\fR
.IP
Apply the \fB-find/-finddpy\fR heuristics to try to guess
the XAUTHORITY file for DISPLAY 'disp'. If 'disp'
is not supplied, then the value in the \fB-display\fR on
the cmdline is used; failing that $DISPLAY is used;
and failing that ":0" is used.
.IP
If nothing is printed out, that means no XAUTHORITY was
found for 'disp'; i.e. failure. If "XAUTHORITY="
is printed out, that means use the default (i.e. do
not set XAUTHORITY). If "XAUTHORITY=/path/to/file"
is printed out, then use that file.
.IP
XDM/GDM/KDM: if you are running x11vnc as root and want
to find the XAUTHORITY before anyone has logged into an
X session yet, use: x11vnc \fB-env\fR FD_XDM=1 \fB-findauth\fR ...
(This will also find the XAUTHORITY if a user is already
logged into the X session.) When running as root,
FD_XDM=1 will be tried if the initial \fB-findauth\fR fails.
.PP
\fB-create\fR
.IP
First try to find the user's display using FINDDISPLAY,
if that doesn't succeed create an X session via the
FINDCREATEDISPLAY method. This is an alias for
"\fB-display\fR \fIWAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY-Xvfb\fR".
.IP
SSH NOTE: for both \fB-find\fR and \fB-create\fR you can (should!)
add the "\fB-localhost\fR" option to force SSH tunnel access.
.PP
\fB-xdummy\fR
.IP
As in \fB-create,\fR except Xdummy instead of Xvfb.
.PP
\fB-xvnc\fR
.IP
As in \fB-create,\fR except Xvnc instead of Xvfb.
.PP
\fB-xvnc_redirect\fR
.IP
As in \fB-create,\fR except Xvnc.redirect instead of Xvfb.
.PP
\fB-svc\fR
.IP
Terminal services mode based on SSL access. Alias for
\fB-display\fR WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY-Xvfb \fB-unixpw\fR \fB-users\fR
unixpw= \fB-ssl\fR SAVE Also "\fB-service\fR".
.PP
\fB-svc_xdummy\fR
.IP
As \fB-svc\fR except Xdummy instead of Xvfb.
.PP
\fB-svc_xvnc\fR
.IP
As \fB-svc\fR except Xvnc instead of Xvfb.
.PP
\fB-xdmsvc\fR
.IP
Display manager Terminal services mode based on SSL.
Alias for \fB-display\fR WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY-Xvfb.xdmcp
\fB-unixpw\fR \fB-users\fR unixpw= \fB-ssl\fR SAVE Also "\fB-xdm_service\fR".
.IP
To create a session a user will have to first log in
to the \fB-unixpw\fR dialog and then log in again to the
XDM/GDM/KDM prompt. Subsequent re-connections will
only require the \fB-unixpw\fR password. See the discussion
under \fB-display\fR WAIT:... for more details about XDM,
etc configuration.
.IP
Remember to enable XDMCP in the xdm-config, gdm.conf,
or kdmrc configuration file. See \fB-display\fR WAIT: for
more info.
.PP
\fB-sshxdmsvc\fR
.IP
Display manager Terminal services mode based on SSH.
Alias for \fB-display\fR WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY-Xvfb.xdmcp
\fB-localhost.\fR
.IP
The \fB-localhost\fR option constrains connections to come
in via a SSH tunnel (which will require a login).
To create a session a user will also have to log into
the XDM GDM KDM prompt. Subsequent re-connections will
only only require the SSH login. See the discussion
under \fB-display\fR WAIT:... for more details about XDM,
etc configuration.
.IP
Remember to enable XDMCP in the xdm-config, gdm.conf,
or kdmrc configuration file. See \fB-display\fR WAIT: for
more info.
.PP
\fB-unixpw_system_greeter\fR
.IP
Present a "Press 'Escape' for System Greeter" option
to the connecting VNC client in combined \fB-unixpw\fR
and xdmcp FINDCREATEDISPLAY modes (e.g. \fB-xdmsvc).\fR
.IP
Normally in a \fB-unixpw\fR mode the VNC client must
supply a valid username and password to gain access.
However, if \fB-unixpw_system_greeter\fR is supplied AND
the FINDCREATEDISPLAY command matches 'xdmcp', then
the user has the option to press Escape and then get a
XDM/GDM/KDM login/greeter panel instead. They will then
supply a username and password directly to the greeter.
.IP
Otherwise, in xdmcp FINDCREATEDISPLAY mode the user
must supply his username and password TWICE. First to
the initial unixpw login dialog, and second to the
subsequent XDM/GDM/KDM greeter. Note that if the user
re-connects and supplies his username and password in
the unixpw dialog the xdmcp greeter is skipped and
he is connected directly to his existing X session.
So the \fB-unixpw_system_greeter\fR option avoids the extra
password at X session creation time.
.IP
Example: x11vnc \fB-xdmsvc\fR \fB-unixpw_system_greeter\fR
See \fB-unixpw\fR and \fB-display\fR WAIT:... for more info.
.IP
The special options after a colon at the end of the
username (e.g. user:solid) described under \fB-display\fR
WAIT: are also applied in this mode if they are typed
in before the user hits Escape. The username is ignored
but the colon options are not.
.IP
The default message is 2 lines in a small font, set
the env. var. X11VNC_SYSTEM_GREETER1=true for a 1 line
message in a larger font.
.IP
If the user pressed Escape the FINDCREATEDISPLAY command
will be run with the env. var. X11VNC_XDM_ONLY=1.
.IP
Remember to enable XDMCP in the xdm-config, gdm.conf,
or kdmrc configuration file. See \fB-display\fR WAIT: for
more info.
.PP
\fB-redirect\fR \fIport\fR
.IP
As in FINDCREATEDISPLAY-Xvnc.redirect mode except
redirect immediately (i.e. without X session finding
or creation) to a VNC server listening on port. You
can also supply host:port to redirect to a different
machine.
.IP
If 0 <= port < 200 it is taken as a VNC display (5900 is
added to get the actual port), if port < 0 then \fB-port\fR
is used.
.IP
Probably the only reason to use the \fB-redirect\fR option
is in conjunction with SSL support, e.g. \fB-ssl\fR SAVE.
This provides an easy way to add SSL encryption to a VNC
server that does not support SSL (e.g. Xvnc or vnc.so)
In fact, the protocol does not even need to be VNC,
and so "\fB-rfbport\fR \fIport1 \fB-ssl\fR SAVE \fB-redirect\fR host:port2\fR"
can act as a replacement for
.IR stunnel (1).
.IP
This mode only allows one redirected connection.
The \fB-forever\fR option does not apply. Use \fB-inetd\fR or
\fB-loop\fR for persistant service.
.PP
\fB-display\fR \fIWAIT:...\fR
.IP
A special usage mode for the normal \fB-display\fR option.
Useful with \fB-unixpw,\fR but can be used independently
of it. If the display string begins with WAIT: then
x11vnc waits until a VNC client connects before opening
the X display (or \fB-rawfb\fR device).
.IP
This could be useful for delaying opening the display
for certain usage modes (say if x11vnc is started at
boot time and no X server is running or users logged
in yet).
.IP
If the string is, e.g. WAIT:0.0 or WAIT:1, i.e. "WAIT"
in front of a normal X display, then that indicated
display is used.
.IP
One can also insert a geometry between colons, e.g.
WAIT:1280x1024:... to set the size of the display the
VNC client first attaches to since some VNC viewers
will not automatically adjust to a new framebuffer size.
.IP
A more interesting case is like this:
.IP
WAIT:cmd=/usr/local/bin/find_display
.IP
in which case the command after "cmd=" is run to
dynamically work out the DISPLAY and optionally the
XAUTHORITY data. The first line of the command output
must be of the form DISPLAY=<xdisplay>. On Linux
if the virtual terminal is known append ",VT=n" to
this string and the
.IR chvt (1)
program will also be run.
Any remaining output is taken as XAUTHORITY data.
It can be either of the form XAUTHORITY=<file> or raw
xauthority data for the display. For example;
.IP
xauth extract - $DISPLAY"
.IP
In the case of \fB-unixpw\fR (and \fB-unixpw_nis\fR only if x11vnc
is running as root), then the cmd= command is run
as the user who just authenticated via the login and
password prompt.
.IP
In the case of \fB-unixpw_cmd,\fR the commands will also be
run as the logged-in user, as long as the user-supplied
helper program supports RFB_UNIXPW_CMD_RUN (see the
\fB-unixpw_cmd\fR option.)
.IP
Also in the case of \fB-unixpw,\fR the user logging in can
place a colon at the end of her username and supply
a few options: scale=, scale_cursor= (or sc=), solid
(or so), id=, clear_mods (or cm), clear_keys (or
ck), clear_all (or ca), repeat, speeds= (or sp=),
readtimeout= (or rd=), viewonly (or vo), nodisplay=
(or nd=), rotate= (or ro=), or noncache (or nc),
all separated by commas if there is more than one.
After the user logs in successfully, these options will
be applied to the VNC screen. For example,
.IP
login: fred:scale=3/4,sc=1,repeat
Password: ...
.IP
login: runge:sp=modem,rd=120,solid
.IP
for convenience m/n implies scale= e.g. fred:3/4 If you
type and enter your password incorrectly, to retrieve
your long "login:" line press the Up arrow once
(before typing anything else).
.IP
In the login panel, press F1 to get a list of the
available options that you can add after the username.
.IP
Another option is "geom=WxH" or "geom=WxHxD" (or
ge=). This only has an effect in FINDCREATEDISPLAY
mode when a virtual X server such as Xvfb is going
to be created. It sets the width and height of
the new display, and optionally the color depth as
well. You can also supply "gnome", "kde", "twm",
"fvwm", "mwm", "dtwm", "wmaker", "xfce",
"enlightenment", "Xsession", or "failsafe"
(same as "xterm") to have the created display use
that mode for the user session.
.IP
Specify "tag=..." to set the unique FD_TAG desktop
session tag described below. Note: this option will
be ignored if the FD_TAG env. var. is already set or
if the viewer-side supplied value is not completely
composed of alphanumeric or '_' or '-' characters.
.IP
To disable the option setting set the environment
variable X11VNC_NO_UNIXPW_OPTS=1 before starting x11vnc.
To set any other options, the user can use the gui
(x11vnc \fB-gui\fR connect) or the remote control method
(x11vnc \fB-R\fR opt:val) during his VNC session.
.IP
The combination of \fB-display\fR WAIT:cmd=... and \fB-unixpw\fR
allows automatic pairing of an unix authenticated VNC
user with his desktop. This could be very useful on
SunRays and also any system where multiple users share
a given machine. The user does not need to remember
special ports or passwords set up for his desktop
and VNC.
.IP
A nice way to use WAIT:cmd=... is out of
.IR inetd (8)
(it automatically forks a new x11vnc for each user).
You can have the x11vnc inetd spawned process run as,
say, root or nobody. When run as root (for either inetd
or display manager), you can also supply the option
"\fB-users\fR \fIunixpw=\fR" to have the x11vnc process switch to
the user as well. Note: there will be a 2nd SSL helper
process that will not switch, but it is only encoding
and decoding the encrypted stream at that point.
.IP
Automatic Finding of User X Sessions:
.IP
As a special case, WAIT:cmd=FINDDISPLAY will run a
script that works on most Unixes to determine a user's
DISPLAY variable and xauthority data (see
.IR who (1)
).
.IP
The option "\fB-find\fR" is an alias for this mode.
.IP
To have this default script printed to stdout (e.g. for
customization) run with WAIT:cmd=FINDDISPLAY-print To
have the script run to print what display it would find
use "\fB-finddpy\fR" or WAIT:cmd=FINDDISPLAY-run
.IP
The standard script runs
.IR xdpyinfo (1)
run on potential
displays. If your X server(s) have a login greeter
that exclusively grabs the Xserver, then xdpyinfo
blocks forever and this mode will not work. See
www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/faq.html#faq-display-manager
for how to disable this for dtgreet on Solaris and
possibly for other greeters.
.IP
In \fB-find/cmd=FINDDISPLAY\fR mode, if you set FD_XDM=1,
e.g. 'x11vnc \fB-env\fR FD_XDM=1 \fB-find\fR ...' and x11vnc is
running as root (e.g. inetd) then it will try to find
the XAUTHORITY file of a running XDM/GDM/KDM login
greeter (i.e. no user has logged into an X session yet.)
.IP
As another special case, WAIT:cmd=HTTPONCE will allow
x11vnc to service one http request and then exit.
This is usually done in \fB-inetd\fR mode to run on, say,
port 5800 and allow the Java vncviewer to be downloaded
by client web browsers. For example:
.IP
5815 stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd /.../x11vnc \\
\fB-inetd\fR \fB-q\fR \fB-http_ssl\fR \fB-prog\fR /.../x11vnc \\
\fB-display\fR WAIT:cmd=HTTPONCE
.IP
Where /.../x11vnc is the full path to x11vnc.
It is used in the Apache SSL-portal example (see FAQ).
.IP
In this mode you can set X11VNC_SKIP_DISPLAY to a
comma separated list of displays (e.g. ":0,:1") to
ignore in the finding process. The ":" is optional.
Ranges n-m e.g. 0-20 can also be supplied. This string
can also be set by the connecting user via "nd="
using "+" instead of "," If "nd=all" or you set
X11VNC_SKIP_DISPLAY=all then all display finding fails
as if you set X11VNC_FINDDISPLAY_ALWAYS_FAILS=1 (below.)
.IP
Automatic Creation of User X Sessions:
.IP
An interesting option is WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY
that is like FINDDISPLAY in that is uses the same method
to find an existing display. However, if it does not
find one it will try to *start* up an X server session
for the user. This is the only time x11vnc tries to
actually start up an X server.
.IP
The option "\fB-create\fR" is an alias for this mode.
.IP
It will start looking for an open display number at :20
Override via X11VNC_CREATE_STARTING_DISPLAY_NUMBER=n
.IP
By default FINDCREATEDISPLAY will try Xvfb and then
Xdummy:
.IP
The Xdummy wrapper is part of the x11vnc source code
(x11vnc/misc/Xdummy) It should be available in PATH and
have run "Xdummy \fB-install"\fR once to create the shared
library. Xdummy requires root permission and only works
on Linux. (Note: specify FD_XDUMMY_NOROOT=1 to skip
a check for the root id; evidently your
.IR sudo (1)
will
take care of everything. The \fB-xdummy\fR and \fB-svc_xdummy\fR
options imply FD_XDUMMY_NOROOT=1).
.IP
Xvfb is available on most platforms and does not
require root.
.IP
When x11vnc exits (i.e. user disconnects) the X
server session stays running in the background.
The FINDDISPLAY will find it directly next time.
The user must exit the X session in the usual way for
it to terminate (or kill the X server process if all
else fails).
.IP
So this is a somewhat odd mode for x11vnc in that it
will start up and poll virtual X servers! This can
be used from, say,
.IR inetd (8)
to provide a means of
definitely getting a desktop (either real or virtual)
on the machine. E.g. a desktop service:
.IP
5900 stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd /.../x11vnc
\fB-inetd\fR \fB-q\fR \fB-http\fR \fB-ssl\fR SAVE \fB-unixpw\fR \fB-users\fR unixpw=\\
\fB-passwd\fR secret \fB-prog\fR /.../x11vnc \\
\fB-display\fR WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY
.IP
Where /.../x11vnc is the full path to x11vnc.
.IP
See the \fB-svc/-service\fR option alias above.
.IP
If for some reason you do not want x11vnc to ever
try to find an existing display set the env. var
X11VNC_FINDDISPLAY_ALWAYS_FAILS=1 (also \fB-env\fR ...)
This is the same as setting X11VNC_SKIP_DISPLAY=all or
supplying "nd=all" after "username:"
.IP
Use WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY-print to print out the
script that is used for this.
.IP
You can specify the preferred X server order via e.g.,
WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY-Xdummy,Xvfb,X and/or leave
out ones you do not want. The the case "X" means try
to start up a real, hardware X server using
.IR xinit (1)
or
.IR startx (1).
If there is already an X server running
the X case may only work on Linux (see
.IR startx (1)
).
.IP
"Xvnc" will start up a VNC X server (real-
or tight-vnc, e.g. use if Xvfb is not available).
"Xsrv" will start up the server program in the
variable "FD_XSRV" if it is non-empty. You can make
this be a wrapper script if you like (it must handle :N,
\fB-geometry,\fR and \fB-depth\fR and other X server options).
.IP
You can set the environment variable FD_GEOM (or
X11VNC_CREATE_GEOM) to WxH or WxHxD to set the width
and height and optionally the color depth of the
created display. You can also set FD_SESS to be the
session (short name of the windowmanager: kde, gnome,
twm, failsafe, etc.). FD_OPTS contains extra options
to pass to the X server. You can also set FD_PROG to
be the full path to the session/windowmanager program.
.IP
More FD tricks: FD_CUPS=port or FD_CUPS=host:port
will set the cups printing environment. Similarly for
FD_ESD=port or FD_ESD=host:port for esddsp sound
redirection. FD_XDUMMY_NOROOT means the Xdummy
server does not need to be started as root (e.g. it
will sudo automatically). Set FD_EXTRA to a command
to be run a few seconds after the X server starts up.
Set FD_TAG to be a unique name for the session, it is
set as an X property, that makes FINDDISPLAY only find
sessions with that tag value.
.IP
If you want the FINDCREATEDISPLAY session to contact an
XDMCP login manager (xdm/gdm/kdm) on the same machine,
then use "Xvfb.xdmcp" instead of "Xvfb", etc.
The user will have to supply his username and password
one more time (but he gets to select his desktop type
so that can be useful). For this to work, you will
need to enable localhost XDMCP (udp port 177) for the
display manager. This seems to be:
.IP
for gdm in gdm.conf: Enable=true in section [xdmcp]
for kdm in kdmrc: Enable=true in section [Xdmcp]
for xdm in xdm-config: DisplayManager.requestPort: 177
.IP
See the shorthand options above "\fB-svc\fR", "\fB-xdmsvc\fR"
and "\fB-sshxdmsvc\fR" that specify the above options for
some useful cases.
.IP
If you set the env. var WAITBG=1 x11vnc will go into
the background once listening in wait mode.
.IP
Another special mode is FINDCREATEDISPLAY-Xvnc.redirect,
(or FINDDISPLAY-Xvnc.redirect). In this case it will
start up Xvnc as above if needed, but instead of
polling it in its normal way, it simply does a socket
redirection of the connected VNC viewer to the Xvnc.
.IP
So in Xvnc.redirect x11vnc does no VNC but merely
transfers the data back and forth. This should be
faster then x11vnc's polling method, but not as fast
as connecting directly to the Xvnc with the VNC Viewer.
The idea here is to take advantage of x11vnc's display
finding/creating scheme, SSL, and perhaps a few others.
Most of x11vnc's options do not apply in this mode.
.IP
Xvnc.redirect should also work for the vnc.so X server
module for the h/w display however it will work only
for finding the display and the user must already be
logged into the X console.
.PP
\fB-vencrypt\fR \fImode\fR
.IP
The VeNCrypt extension to the VNC protocol allows
encrypted SSL/TLS connections. If the \fB-ssl\fR mode is
enabled, then VeNCrypt is enabled as well BY DEFAULT
(they both use a SSL/TLS tunnel, only the protocol
handshake is a little different.)
.IP
To control when and how VeNCrypt is used, specify the
mode string. If mode is "never", then VeNCrypt is
not used. If mode is "support" (the default) then
VeNCrypt is supported. If mode is "only", then the
similar and older ANONTLS protocol is not simultaneously
supported. x11vnc's normal SSL mode (vncs://) will be
supported under \fB-ssl\fR unless you set mode to "force".
.IP
If mode is prefixed with "nodh:", then Diffie Hellman
anonymous key exchange is disabled. If mode is prefixed
with "nox509:", then X509 key exchange is disabled.
.IP
To disable all Anonymous Diffie-Hellman access
(susceptible to Man-In-The-Middle attack) you will need
to supply "\fB-vencrypt\fR \fInodh:support \fB-anontls\fR never\fR"
or "\fB-vencrypt\fR \fInodh:only\fR"
.IP
If mode is prefixed with "newdh:", then new Diffie
Hellman parameters are generated for each connection
(this can be time consuming: 1-60 secs; see \fB-dhparams\fR
below for a faster way) rather than using the
fixed values in the program. Using fixed, publicly
known values is not known to be a security problem.
This setting applies to ANONTLS as well.
.IP
Long example: \fB-vencrypt\fR newdh:nox509:support
.IP
Also, if mode is prefixed with "plain:", then
if \fB-unixpw\fR mode is active the VeNCrypt "*Plain"
username+passwd method is enabled for Unix logins.
Otherwise in \fB-unixpw\fR mode the normal login panel is
provided.
.IP
You *MUST* supply the \fB-ssl\fR option for VeNCrypt to
be active. The \fB-vencrypt\fR option only fine-tunes its
operation.
.PP
\fB-anontls\fR \fImode\fR
.IP
The ANONTLS extension to the VNC protocol allows
encrypted SSL/TLS connections. If the \fB-ssl\fR mode is
enabled, then ANONTLS is enabled as well BY DEFAULT
(they both use a SSL/TLS tunnel, only the protocol
handshake is a little different.)
.IP
ANONTLS is an older SSL/TLS mode introduced by vino.
.IP
It is referred to as 'TLS' for its registered VNC
security-type name, but we use the more descriptive
\'ANONTLS' here because it provides only Anonymous
Diffie-Hellman encrypted connections, and hence no
possibility for certificate authentication.
.IP
To control when and how ANONTLS is used, specify the
mode string. If mode is "never", then ANONTLS is not
used. If mode is "support" (the default) then ANONTLS
is supported. If mode is "only", then the similar
VeNCrypt protocol is not simultaneously supported.
x11vnc's normal SSL mode (vncs://) will be supported
under \fB-ssl\fR unless you set mode to "force".
.IP
If mode is prefixed with "newdh:", then new Diffie
Hellman parameters are generated for each connection
(this can be time consuming: 1-60 secs; see \fB-dhparams\fR
below for a faster way) rather than using the
fixed values in the program. Using fixed, publicly
known values is not known to be a security problem.
This setting applies to VeNCrypt as well. See the
description of "plain:" under \fB-vencrypt.\fR
.IP
Long example: \fB-anontls\fR newdh:plain:support
.IP
You *MUST* supply the \fB-ssl\fR option for ANONTLS to
be active. The \fB-anontls\fR option only fine-tunes its
operation.
.PP
\fB-sslonly\fR
.IP
Same as: "\fB-vencrypt\fR \fInever \fB-anontls\fR never\fR" i.e. it
disables the VeNCrypt and ANONTLS encryption methods
and only allows standard SSL tunneling. You must also
supply the \fB-ssl\fR ... option (see below.)
.PP
\fB-dhparams\fR \fIfile\fR
.IP
For some operations a set of Diffie Hellman parameters
(prime and generator) is needed. If so, use the
parameters in \fIfile\fR. In particular, the VeNCrypt and
ANONTLS anonymous DH mode need them. By default a
fixed set is used. If you do not want to do that you
can specify "newdh:" to the \fB-vencrypt\fR and \fB-anontls\fR
options to generate a new set each session. If that
is too slow for you, use \fB-dhparams\fR file to a set you
created manually via "openssl dhparam \fB-out\fR file 1024"
.PP
\fB-nossl\fR
.IP
Disable the \fB-ssl\fR option (see below). Since \fB-ssl\fR is off
by default \fB-nossl\fR would only be used on the commandline
to unset any *earlier* \fB-ssl\fR option (or \fB-svc...)\fR
.PP
\fB-ssl\fR \fI[pem]\fR
.IP
Use the openssl library (www.openssl.org) to provide a
built-in encrypted SSL/TLS tunnel between VNC viewers
and x11vnc. This requires libssl support to be
compiled into x11vnc at build time. If x11vnc is not
built with libssl support it will exit immediately when
\fB-ssl\fR is prescribed. See the \fB-stunnel\fR option below for
an alternative.
.IP
The VNC Viewer-side needs to support SSL/TLS as well.
See this URL and also the discussion below for
ideas on how to enable SSL support for the viewer:
http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/faq.html#faq-ssl-tun
nel-viewers . x11vnc provides an SSL enabled Java
viewer applet in the classes/ssl directory (-http or
\fB-httpdir\fR options.) The SSVNC viewer package supports
SSL tunnels too.
.IP
If the VNC Viewer supports VeNCrypt or ANONTLS (vino's
encryption mode) they are also supported by the \fB-ssl\fR
mode (see the \fB-vencrypt\fR and \fB-anontls\fR options for more
info; use \fB-sslonly\fR to disable both of them.)
.IP
Use "\fB-ssl\fR \fI/path/to/mycert.pem\fR" to specify an SSL
certificate file in PEM format to use to identify and
provide a key for this server. See
.IR openssl (1)
for more
info about PEMs and the \fB-sslGenCert\fR and "\fB-ssl\fR \fISAVE\fR"
options below for how to create them.
.IP
The connecting VNC viewer SSL tunnel can (at its option)
authenticate this server if it has the public key part
of the certificate (or a common certificate authority,
CA, is a more sophisticated way to verify this server's
cert, see \fB-sslGenCA\fR below). This authentication is
done to prevent Man-In-The-Middle attacks. Otherwise,
if the VNC viewer simply accepts this server's key
WITHOUT verification, the traffic is protected from
passive sniffing on the network, but *NOT* from
Man-In-The-Middle attacks. There are hacker tools
like dsniff/webmitm and cain that implement SSL
Man-In-The-Middle attacks.
.IP
If [pem] is empty or the string "SAVE" then the
.IR openssl (1)
command must be available to generate the
certificate the first time. A self-signed certificate
is generated (see \fB-sslGenCA\fR and \fB-sslGenCert\fR for use
of a Certificate Authority.) It will be saved to the
file ~/.vnc/certs/server.pem. On subsequent calls if
that file already exists it will be used directly.
.IP
Use "SAVE_NOPROMPT" to avoid being prompted to
protect the generated key with a passphrase. However in
\fB-inetd\fR and \fB-bg\fR modes there will be no prompting for a
passphrase in either case.
.IP
If [pem] is "SAVE_PROMPT" the server.pem certificate
will be created based on your answers to its prompts for
all info such as OrganizationalName, CommonName, etc.
.IP
Use "SAVE-<string>" and "SAVE_PROMPT-<string>"
to refer to the file ~/.vnc/certs/server-<string>.pem
instead (it will be generated if it does not already
exist). E.g. "SAVE-charlie" will store to the file
~/.vnc/certs/server-charlie.pem
.IP
Examples: x11vnc \fB-ssl\fR SAVE \fB-display\fR :0 ...
x11vnc \fB-ssl\fR SAVE-someother \fB-display\fR :0 ...
.IP
If [pem] is "TMP" and the
.IR openssl (1)
utility
command exists in PATH, then a temporary, self-signed
certificate will be generated for this session. If
.IR openssl (1)
cannot be used to generate a temporary
certificate x11vnc exits immediately. The temporary
cert will be discarded when x11vnc exits.
.IP
If successful in using
.IR openssl (1)
to generate a
temporary certificate in "SAVE" or "TMP" creation
modes, the public part of it will be displayed to stderr
(e.g. one could copy it to the client-side to provide
authentication of the server to VNC viewers.)
.IP
NOTE: In "TMP" mode, unless you safely copy the
public part of the temporary Cert to the viewer for
authenticate *every time* (unlikely...), then only
passive sniffing attacks are prevented and you are
still open to Man-In-The-Middle attacks. This is
why the default "SAVE" mode is preferred (and more
sophisticated CA mode too). Only with saved keys AND
the VNC viewer authenticating them (via the public
certificate), are Man-In-The-Middle attacks prevented.
.IP
If [pem] is "ANON" then the Diffie-Hellman anonymous
key exchange method is used. In this mode there
are *no* SSL certificates and so it is not possible
to authenticate either the VNC server or VNC client.
Thus only passive network sniffing attacks are avoided:
the "ANON" method is susceptible to Man-In-The-Middle
attacks. "ANON" is not recommended; instead use
a SSL PEM you created or the default "SAVE" method.
.IP
See \fB-ssldir\fR below to use a directory besides the
default ~/.vnc/certs
.IP
If your x11vnc binary was not compiled with OpenSSL
library support, use of the \fB-ssl\fR option will induce an
immediate failure and exit. For such binaries, consider
using the \fB-stunnel\fR option for SSL encrypted connections.
.IP
Misc Info: In temporary cert creation mode "TMP", set
the env. var. X11VNC_SHOW_TMP_PEM=1 to have x11vnc print
out the entire certificate, including the PRIVATE KEY
part, to stderr. There are better ways to get/save this
info. See "SAVE" above and "\fB-sslGenCert\fR" below.
.PP
\fB-ssltimeout\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
Set SSL read timeout to n seconds. In some situations
(i.e. an iconified viewer in Windows) the viewer stops
talking and the connection is dropped after the default
timeout (25s for about the first minute, 43200s later).
Set to zero to poll forever. Set to a negative value
to use the builtin setting.
.IP
Note that this value does NOT apply to the *initial* ssl
init connection. The default timeout for that is 20sec.
Use \fB-env\fR SSL_INIT_TIMEOUT=n to modify it.
.PP
\fB-sslnofail\fR
.IP
Exit at the first SSL connection failure. Useful when
scripting SSL connections (e.g. x11vnc is started via
ssh) and you do not want x11vnc waiting around for more
connections, tying up ports, etc.
.PP
\fB-ssldir\fR \fI[dir]\fR
.IP
Use [dir] as an alternate ssl certificate and key
management toplevel directory. The default is
~/.vnc/certs
.IP
This directory is used to store server and other
certificates and keys and also other materials. E.g. in
the simplest case, "\fB-ssl\fR \fISAVE\fR" will store the x11vnc
server cert in [dir]/server.pem
.IP
Use of alternate directories via \fB-ssldir\fR allows you to
manage multiple VNC Certificate Authority (CA) keys.
Another use is if ~/.vnc/cert is on an NFS share you
might want your certificates and keys to be on a local
filesystem to prevent network snooping (for example
\fB-ssldir\fR /var/lib/x11vnc-certs).
.IP
\fB-ssldir\fR affects nearly all of the other \fB-ssl*\fR options,
e.g. \fB-ssl\fR SAVE, \fB-sslGenCert,\fR etc..
.PP
\fB-sslverify\fR \fI[path]\fR
.IP
For either of the \fB-ssl\fR or \fB-stunnel\fR modes, use [path]
to provide certificates to authenticate incoming VNC
*Client* connections (normally only the server is
authenticated in SSL.) This can be used as a method
to replace standard password authentication of clients.
.IP
If [path] is a directory it contains the client (or CA)
certificates in separate files. If [path] is a file,
it contains one or more certificates. See special tokens
below. These correspond to the "CApath = dir" and
"CAfile = file" stunnel options. See the
.IR stunnel (8)
manpage for details.
.IP
Examples:
x11vnc \fB-ssl\fR \fB-sslverify\fR ~/my.crt
x11vnc \fB-ssl\fR \fB-sslverify\fR ~/my_pem_dir/
.IP
Note that if [path] is a directory, it must contain
the certs in separate files named like <HASH>.0, where
the value of <HASH> is found by running the command
"openssl x509 \fB-hash\fR \fB-noout\fR \fB-in\fR file.crt". Evidently
one uses <HASH>.1 if there is a collision...
.IP
The the key-management utility "\fB-sslCertInfo\fR \fIHASHON\fR"
and "\fB-sslCertInfo\fR \fIHASHOFF\fR" will create/delete these
hashes for you automatically (via symlink) in the HASH
subdirs it manages. Then you can point \fB-sslverify\fR to
the HASH subdir.
.IP
Special tokens: in \fB-ssl\fR mode, if [path] is not a file or
a directory, it is taken as a comma separated list of
tokens that are interpreted as follows:
.IP
If a token is "CA" that means load the CA/cacert.pem
file from the ssl directory. If a token is "clients"
then all the files clients/*.crt in the ssl directory
are loaded. Otherwise the file clients/token.crt
is attempted to be loaded. As a kludge, use a token
like ../server-foo to load a server cert if you find
that necessary.
.IP
Use \fB-ssldir\fR to use a directory different from the
~/.vnc/certs default.
.IP
Note that if the "CA" cert is loaded you do not need
to load any of the certs that have been signed by it.
You will need to load any additional self-signed certs
however.
.IP
Examples:
x11vnc \fB-ssl\fR \fB-sslverify\fR CA
x11vnc \fB-ssl\fR \fB-sslverify\fR self:fred,self:jim
x11vnc \fB-ssl\fR \fB-sslverify\fR CA,clients
.IP
Usually "\fB-sslverify\fR \fICA\fR" is the most effective.
See the \fB-sslGenCA\fR and \fB-sslGenCert\fR options below for
how to set up and manage the CA framework.
.IP
NOTE: the following utilities, \fB-sslGenCA,\fR \fB-sslGenCert,\fR
\fB-sslEncKey,\fR \fB-sslCertInfo,\fR and \fB-sslCRL\fR are provided for
completeness, but for casual usage they are overkill.
.IP
They provide VNC Certificate Authority (CA) key creation
and server / client key generation and signing. So they
provide a basic Public Key management framework for
VNC-ing with x11vnc. (note that they require
.IR openssl (1)
be installed on the system)
.IP
However, the simplest usage mode, "\fB-ssl\fR \fITMP\fR" (where
x11vnc automatically generates its own, self-signed,
temporary key and the VNC viewers always accept it,
e.g. accepting via a dialog box) is probably safe enough
for most scenarios. CA management is not needed.
.IP
To protect against Man-In-The-Middle attacks the "TMP"
mode can be improved by using "\fB-ssl\fR \fISAVE\fR" (same as
"\fB-ssl\fR", i.e. the default) to have x11vnc create a
longer term self-signed certificate, and then (safely)
copy the corresponding public key cert to the desired
client machines (care must be taken the private key part
is not stolen; you will be prompted for a passphrase).
.IP
So keep in mind no CA key creation or management
(-sslGenCA and \fB-sslGenCert)\fR is needed for either of
the above two common usage modes.
.IP
One might want to use \fB-sslGenCA\fR and \fB-sslGenCert\fR
if you had a large number of VNC client and server
workstations. That way the administrator could generate
a single CA key with \fB-sslGenCA\fR and distribute its
certificate part to all of the workstations.
.IP
Next, he could create signed VNC server keys
(-sslGenCert server ...) for each workstation or user
that then x11vnc would use to authenticate itself to
any VNC client that has the CA cert.
.IP
Optionally, the admin could also make it so the
VNC clients themselves are authenticated to x11vnc
(-sslGenCert client ...) For this \fB-sslverify\fR would be
pointed to the CA cert (and/or self-signed certs).
.IP
x11vnc will be able to use all of these cert and
key files. On the VNC client side, they will need to
be "imported" somehow. Web browsers have "Manage
Certificates" actions as does the Java applet plugin
Control Panel. stunnel can also use these files (see
the ss_vncviewer example script in the FAQ and SSVNC.)
.PP
\fB-sslCRL\fR \fIpath\fR
.IP
Set the Certificate Revocation Lists (CRL) to \fIpath\fR.
This setting applies for both \fB-ssl\fR and \fB-stunnel\fR modes.
.IP
If path is a file, the file contains one or more CRLs
in PEM format. If path is a directory, it contains
hash named files of CRLs in the usual OpenSSL manner.
See the OpenSSL and
.IR stunnel (8)
documentation for
more info.
.IP
This option only applies if \fB-sslverify\fR has been
supplied: it checks for revocation along the
certificate chain used to verify the VNC client.
The \fB-sslCRL\fR setting will be ignored when \fB-sslverify\fR is
not specified.
.IP
Note that if a CRL's expiration date has passed, all
SSL connections will fail regardless of if they are
related to the subject of the CRL or not.
.IP
Only rarely will one's x11vnc \fB-ssl\fR infrastructure be so
large that this option would be useful (since normally
maintaining the contents of the \fB-sslverify\fR file or
directory should be enough.) However, when using
x11vnc with a Certificate Authority (see \fB-sslGenCA)\fR
to authenticate Clients via SSL/TLS, the \fB-sslCRL\fR option
can be useful to revoke users' certs whose private SSL
keys were lost or stolen (e.g. laptop.) This way a new
CA cert+key does not need to be created and new signed
client keys generated and distributed to all users.
.IP
To create a CRL file with revoked certificates the
commands 'openssl ca \fB-revoke\fR ...' and 'openssl ca
\fB-gencrl\fR ...' are useful. (Run them in ~/.vnc/certs)
.PP
\fB-sslGenCA\fR \fI[dir]\fR
.IP
Generate your own Certificate Authority private key,
certificate, and other files in directory [dir].
.IP
If [dir] is not supplied, a \fB-ssldir\fR setting is used,
or otherwise ~/.vnc/certs is used.
.IP
This command also creates directories where server and
client certs and keys will be stored. The
.IR openssl (1)
program must be installed on the system and available
in PATH.
.IP
After the CA files and directories are created the
command exits; the VNC server is not run.
.IP
You will be prompted for information to put into the CA
certificate. The info does not have to be accurate just
as long as clients accept the cert for VNC connections.
You will also need to supply a passphrase of at least
4 characters for the CA private key.
.IP
Once you have generated the CA you can distribute
its certificate part, [dir]/CA/cacert.pem, to other
workstations where VNC viewers will be run. One will
need to "import" this certificate in the applications,
e.g. Web browser, Java applet plugin, stunnel, etc.
Next, you can create and sign keys using the CA with
the \fB-sslGenCert\fR option below.
.IP
Examples:
x11vnc \fB-sslGenCA\fR
x11vnc \fB-sslGenCA\fR ~/myCAdir
x11vnc \fB-ssldir\fR ~/myCAdir \fB-sslGenCA\fR
.IP
(the last two lines are equivalent)
.PP
\fB-sslGenCert\fR \fItype\fR \fIname\fR
.IP
Generate a VNC server or client certificate and private
key pair signed by the CA created previously with
\fB-sslGenCA.\fR The
.IR openssl (1)
program must be installed
on the system and available in PATH.
.IP
After the Certificate is generated the command exits;
the VNC server is not run.
.IP
The type of key to be generated is the string \fItype\fR.
It is either "server" (i.e. for use by x11vnc) or
"client" (for a VNC viewer). Note that typically
only "server" is used: the VNC clients authenticate
themselves by a non-public-key method (e.g. VNC or
unix password). \fItype\fR is required.
.IP
An arbitrary default name you want to associate with
the key is supplied by the \fIname\fR string. You can
change it at the various prompts when creating the key.
\fIname\fR is optional.
.IP
If name is left blank for clients keys then "nobody"
is used. If left blank for server keys, then the
primary server key: "server.pem" is created (this
is the saved one referenced by "\fB-ssl\fR \fISAVE\fR" when the
server is started)
.IP
If \fIname\fR begins with the string "self:" then
a self-signed certificate is created instead of one
signed by your CA key.
.IP
If \fIname\fR begins with the string "req:" then only a
key (.key) and a certificate signing *request* (.req)
are generated. You can then send the .req file to
an external CA (even a professional one, e.g. Thawte)
and then combine the .key and the received cert into
the .pem file with the same basename.
.IP
The distinction between "server" and "client" is
simply the choice of output filenames and sub-directory.
This makes it so the \fB-ssl\fR SAVE-name option can easily
pick up the x11vnc PEM file this option generates.
And similarly makes it easy for the \fB-sslverify\fR option
to pick up your client certs.
.IP
There is nothing special about the filename or directory
location of either the "server" and "client" certs.
You can rename the files or move them to wherever
you like.
.IP
Precede this option with \fB-ssldir\fR [dir] to use a
directory other than the default ~/.vnc/certs You will
need to run \fB-sslGenCA\fR on that directory first before
doing any \fB-sslGenCert\fR key creation.
.IP
Note you cannot recreate a cert with exactly the same
distiguished name (DN) as an existing one. To do so,
you will need to edit the [dir]/CA/index.txt file to
delete the line.
.IP
Similar to \fB-sslGenCA,\fR you will be prompted to fill
in some information that will be recorded in the
certificate when it is created.
.IP
Tip: if you know the fully-qualified hostname other
people will be connecting to, you can use that as the
CommonName "CN" to avoid some applications (e.g. web
browsers and java plugin) complaining that it does not
match the hostname.
.IP
You will also need to supply the CA private key
passphrase to unlock the private key created from
\fB-sslGenCA.\fR This private key is used to sign the server
or client certificate.
.IP
The "server" certs can be used by x11vnc directly by
pointing to them via the \fB-ssl\fR [pem] option. The default
file will be ~/.vnc/certs/server.pem. This one would
be used by simply typing \fB-ssl\fR SAVE. The pem file
contains both the certificate and the private key.
server.crt file contains the cert only.
.IP
The "client" cert + private key file will need
to be copied and imported into the VNC viewer
side applications (Web browser, Java plugin,
stunnel, etc.) Once that is done you can delete the
"client" private key file on this machine since
it is only needed on the VNC viewer side. The,
e.g. ~/.vnc/certs/clients/<name>.pem contains both
the cert and private key. The <name>.crt contains the
certificate only.
.IP
NOTE: It is very important to know one should
generate new keys with a passphrase. Otherwise if an
untrusted user steals the key file he could use it to
masquerade as the x11vnc server (or VNC viewer client).
You will be prompted whether to encrypt the key with
a passphrase or not. It is recommended that you do.
One inconvenience to a passphrase is that it must
be typed in EVERY time x11vnc or the client app is
started up.
.IP
Examples:
.IP
x11vnc \fB-sslGenCert\fR server
x11vnc \fB-ssl\fR SAVE \fB-display\fR :0 ...
.IP
and then on viewer using ss_vncviewer stunnel wrapper
(see the FAQ):
ss_vncviewer \fB-verify\fR ./cacert.crt hostname:0
.IP
(this assumes the cacert.crt cert from \fB-sslGenCA\fR
was safely copied to the VNC viewer machine where
ss_vncviewer is run)
.IP
Example using a name:
.IP
x11vnc \fB-sslGenCert\fR server charlie
x11vnc \fB-ssl\fR SAVE-charlie \fB-display\fR :0 ...
.IP
Example for a client certificate (rarely used):
.IP
x11vnc \fB-sslGenCert\fR client roger
scp ~/.vnc/certs/clients/roger.pem somehost:.
rm ~/.vnc/certs/clients/roger.pem
.IP
x11vnc is then started with the the option \fB-sslverify\fR
~/.vnc/certs/clients/roger.crt (or simply \fB-sslverify\fR
roger), and on the viewer user on somehost could do
for example:
.IP
ss_vncviewer \fB-mycert\fR ./roger.pem hostname:0
.IP
If you set the env. var REQ_ARGS='...' it will be
passed to openssl
.IR req (1).
A common use would be
REQ_ARGS='-days 1095' to bump up the expiration date
(3 years in this case).
.PP
\fB-sslEncKey\fR \fI[pem]\fR
.IP
Utility to encrypt an existing PEM file with a
passphrase you supply when prompted. For that key to be
used (e.g. by x11vnc) the passphrase must be supplied
each time.
.IP
The "SAVE" notation described under \fB-ssl\fR applies as
well. (precede this option with \fB-ssldir\fR [dir] to refer
a directory besides the default ~/.vnc/certs)
.IP
The
.IR openssl (1)
program must be installed on the system
and available in PATH. After the Key file is encrypted
the command exits; the VNC server is not run.
.IP
Examples:
x11vnc \fB-sslEncKey\fR /path/to/foo.pem
x11vnc \fB-sslEncKey\fR SAVE
x11vnc \fB-sslEncKey\fR SAVE-charlie
.PP
\fB-sslCertInfo\fR \fI[pem]\fR
.IP
Prints out information about an existing PEM file.
In addition the public certificate is also printed.
The
.IR openssl (1)
program must be in PATH. Basically the
command "openssl x509 \fB-text"\fR is run on the pem.
.IP
The "SAVE" notation described under \fB-ssl\fR applies
as well.
.IP
Using "LIST" will give a list of all certs being
managed (in the ~/.vnc/certs dir, use \fB-ssldir\fR to refer
to another dir). "ALL" will print out the info for
every managed key (this can be very long). Giving a
client or server cert shortname will also try a lookup
(e.g. \fB-sslCertInfo\fR charlie). Use "LISTL" or "LL"
for a long (ls \fB-l\fR style) listing.
.IP
Using "HASHON" will create subdirs [dir]/HASH and
[dir]/HASH with OpenSSL hash filenames (e.g. 0d5fbbf1.0)
symlinks pointing up to the corresponding *.crt file.
([dir] is ~/.vnc/certs or one given by \fB-ssldir.)\fR
This is a useful way for other OpenSSL applications
(e.g. stunnel) to access all of the certs without
having to concatenate them. x11vnc will not use them
unless you specifically reference them. "HASHOFF"
removes these HASH subdirs.
.IP
The LIST, LISTL, LL, ALL, HASHON, HASHOFF words can
also be lowercase, e.g. "list".
.PP
\fB-sslDelCert\fR \fI[pem]\fR
.IP
Prompts you to delete all .crt .pem .key .req files
associated with [pem]. "SAVE" and lookups as in
\fB-sslCertInfo\fR apply as well.
.PP
\fB-stunnel\fR \fI[pem]\fR
.IP
Use the
.IR stunnel (8)
(www.stunnel.org) to provide an
encrypted SSL tunnel between viewers and x11vnc.
.IP
This external tunnel method was implemented prior to the
integrated \fB-ssl\fR encryption described above. It still
works well and avoids the requirement of linking with
the OpenSSL libraries. This mode requires stunnel
to be installed on the system and available via PATH
(n.b. stunnel is often installed in sbin directories).
Version 4.x of stunnel is assumed (but see \fB-stunnel3\fR
below.)
.IP
[pem] is optional, use "\fB-stunnel\fR \fI/path/to/stunnel.pem\fR"
to specify a PEM certificate file to pass to stunnel.
See the \fB-ssl\fR option for more info on certificate files.
.IP
Whether or not your stunnel has its own certificate
depends on your stunnel configuration; stunnel often
generates one at install time. See your stunnel
documentation for details. In any event, if you want to
use this certificate you must supply the full path to it
as [pem]. Note: the file may only be readable by root.
.IP
[pem] may also be the special strings "TMP", "SAVE",
and "SAVE..." as described in the \fB-ssl\fR option.
If [pem] is not supplied, "SAVE" is assumed.
.IP
Note that the VeNCrypt, ANONTLS, and "ANON" modes
are not supported in \fB-stunnel\fR mode.
.IP
stunnel is started up as a child process of x11vnc and
any SSL connections stunnel receives are decrypted and
sent to x11vnc over a local socket. The strings
"The SSL VNC desktop is ..." and "SSLPORT=..."
are printed out at startup to indicate this.
.IP
The \fB-localhost\fR option is enforced by default to avoid
people routing around the SSL channel. Use \fB-env\fR
STUNNEL_DISABLE_LOCALHOST=1 to disable this security
requirement.
.IP
Set \fB-env\fR STUNNEL_DEBUG=1 for more debugging printout.
.IP
Your VNC viewer will also need to be able to connect
via SSL. Unfortunately not too many do this. See the
information about SSL viewers under the \fB-ssl\fR option.
.IP
Also, in the x11vnc distribution, patched TightVNC
and UltraVNC Java applet jar files are provided in
the classes/ssl directory that do SSL connections.
Enable serving them with the \fB-http,\fR \fB-http_ssl,\fR \fB-https,\fR
or \fB-httpdir\fR (see the option descriptions for more info.)
.IP
Note that for the Java viewer applet usage the
"?PORT=xxxx" in the various URLs printed at startup
will need to be supplied to the web browser to connect
properly.
.IP
Currently the automatic "single port" HTTPS mode of
\fB-ssl\fR is not fully supported in \fB-stunnel\fR mode. However,
it can be emulated via:
.IP
% x11vnc \fB-stunnel\fR \fB-http_ssl\fR \fB-http_oneport\fR ...
.IP
In general, it is also not too difficult to set up
an stunnel or other SSL tunnel on the viewer side.
A simple example on Unix using stunnel 3.x is:
.IP
% stunnel \fB-c\fR \fB-d\fR localhost:5901 \fB-r\fR remotehost:5900
% vncviewer localhost:1
.IP
For Windows, stunnel has been ported to it and there
are probably other such tools available. See the FAQ
and SSVNC for more examples.
.PP
\fB-stunnel3\fR \fI[pem]\fR
.IP
Use version 3.x stunnel command line syntax instead of
version 4.x. The \fB-http/-httpdir\fR Java applet serving
is currently not available in this mode.
.PP
\fB-enc\fR \fIcipher:keyfile\fR
.IP
Use symmetric encryption with cipher "cipher"
and secret key data in "keyfile". If keyfile is
pw=<string> then "string" is used as the key data.
.IP
NOTE: It is recommended that you use SSL via the \fB-ssl\fR
option instead of this option because SSL is well
understood and takes great care to establish unique
session keys and is more compatible with other software.
Use this option if you do not want to deal with SSL
certificates for authentication and do not want to
use SSH but want some encryption for your VNC session.
Or if you must interface with a symmetric key tunnel
that you do not have control over.
.IP
Note that this mode will NOT work with the UltraVNC DSM
plugins because they alter the RFB protocol in addition
to tunnelling with the symmetric cipher (an unfortunate
choice of implementation...)
.IP
cipher can be one of: arc4, aesv2, aes-cfb, blowfish,
aes256, or 3des. See the OpenSSL documentation for
more info. The keysize is 128 bits (except for aes256).
Here is one way to make a keyfile with that many bits:
.IP
dd if=/dev/random of=./my.key bs=16 count=1
.IP
you will need to securely share this key with the other
side of the VNC connection (See SSVNC for examples).
.IP
Example: \fB-enc\fR blowfish:./my.key
Example: \fB-enc\fR blowfish:pw=swordfish
.IP
By default 16 bytes of random salt followed by 16 bytes
of random initialization vector are sent at the very
beginning of the stream. The other side must read these
and initialize their cipher with them. These values
make the session key unique (without them the security
is minimal). Similarly, the other side must send us
its random salt and IV with those same lengths.
.IP
The salt and key data are combined to create a session
key using an md5 hash as described in
.IR EVP_BytesToKey (3).
.IP
The exact call is: EVP_BytesToKey(Cipher, EVP_md5(),
salt, keydata, len, 1, keystr, NULL); where salt is
the random data as described above, and keydata is the
shared secret key data. keystr is the resulting session
key. The cipher is then seeded with keystr and uses
the random initialization vector as its first block.
.IP
To modify the amount of random salt and initialization
vector use cipher@n,m where n is the salt length and
m the initialization vector length. E.g.
.IP
\fB-enc\fR aes-cfb@8,16:./my.key
.IP
It is not a good idea to set either one to zero,
although you may be forced to if the other side of the
tunnel is not under your control.
.IP
To skip the salt and EVP_BytesToKey MD5 entirely (no
hashing is done: the keydata is directly inserted into
the cipher) specify "-1" for the salt, e.g.
.IP
\fB-enc\fR blowfish@-1,16:./my.key
.IP
The message digest can also be changed to something
besides the default MD5. Use cipher@md+n,m where "md"
can be one of sha, sha1, md5, or ripe. For example:
.IP
\fB-enc\fR arc4@sha+8,16:./my.key
.IP
The SSVNC vnc viewer project supplies a symmetric
encryption tool named "ultravnc_dsm_helper" that can
be used on the viewer side. For example:
.IP
ssvncviewer exec='ultravnc_dsm_helper arc4 my.key 0 h:p'
.IP
where h:p is the hostname and port of the x11vnc server.
ultravnc_dsm_helper may also be used standalone to
provide a symmetric encryption tunnel for any viewer
or server (VNC or otherwise.) The cipher (1st arg)
is basically the same syntax as we use above.
.IP
Also see the 'Non-Ultra DSM' SSVNC option for the
\'UltraVNC DSM Encryption Plugin' advanced option.
.IP
For both ways of using the viewer, you can specify the
salt,ivec sizes (in GUI or, e.g. arc4@8,16).
.PP
\fB-https\fR \fI[port]\fR
.IP
Use a special, separate HTTPS port (-ssl and
\fB-stunnel\fR modes only) for HTTPS Java viewer applet
downloading. I.e. not 5900 and not 5800 (the defaults.)
.IP
BACKGROUND: In \fB-ssl\fR mode, it turns out you can use the
single VNC port (e.g. 5900) for both VNC and HTTPS
connections. (HTTPS is used to retrieve a SSL-aware
VncViewer.jar applet that is provided with x11vnc).
Since both use SSL the implementation was extended to
detect if HTTP traffic (i.e. GET) is taking place and
handle it accordingly. The URL would be, e.g.:
.IP
https://mymachine.org:5900/
.IP
This is convenient for firewalls, etc, because only one
port needs to be allowed in. However, this heuristic
adds a few seconds delay to each connection and can be
unreliable (especially if the user takes much time to
ponder the Certificate dialogs in his browser, Java VM,
or VNC Viewer applet. That's right 3 separate "Are
you sure you want to connect?" dialogs!)
.IP
END OF BACKGROUND.
.IP
USAGE: So use the \fB-https\fR option to provide a separate,
more reliable HTTPS port that x11vnc will listen on. If
[port] is not provided (or is 0), one is autoselected.
The URL to use is printed out at startup.
.IP
The SSL Java applet directory is specified via the
\fB-httpdir\fR option. If not supplied, \fB-https\fR will try
to guess the directory as though the \fB-http\fR option
was supplied.
.PP
\fB-httpsredir\fR \fI[port]\fR
.IP
In \fB-ssl\fR mode with the Java applet retrieved via HTTPS,
when the HTML file containing applet parameters
('index.vnc' or 'proxy.vnc') is sent do NOT set the
applet PORT parameter to the actual VNC port but set it
to "port" instead. If "port" is not supplied, then
the port number is guessed from the Host: HTTP header.
.IP
This is useful when an incoming TCP connection
redirection is performed by a router/gateway/firewall
from one port to an internal machine where x11vnc is
listening on a different port. The Java applet needs to
connect to the firewall/router port, not the VNC port
on the internal workstation. For example, one could
redir from mygateway.com:443 to workstation:5900.
.IP
This spares the user from having to type in
https://mygateway.com/?PORT=443 into their web
browser. Note that port 443 is the default https port;
other ports must be explicitly indicated, for example:
https://mygateway.com:8000/?PORT=8000. To avoid having
to include the PORT= in the browser URL, simply supply
"\fB-httpsredir\fR" to x11vnc.
.IP
This option does not work in \fB-stunnel\fR mode.
.IP
More tricks: set the env var X11VNC_EXTRA_HTTPS_PARAMS
to be extra URL parameters to use. This way you do
not need to specify extra PARAMS in the index.vnc file.
E.g. x11vnc \fB-env\fR X11VNC_EXTRA_HTTPS_PARAMS='?GET=1' ...
.IP
If you do not want to expose the non-SSL HTTP port to
the network (i.e. you just want the single VNC/HTTPS
port, e.g. 5900, open for connections) then specify the
option \fB-env\fR X11VNC_HTTP_LISTEN_LOCALHOST=1 This way
the connection to the libvncserver httpd server will
only be available on localhost (note that in \fB-ssl\fR mode,
HTTPS requests are redirected from SSL to the non-SSL
libvncserver HTTP server.)
.PP
\fB-http_oneport\fR
.IP
For UN-encrypted connections mode (i.e. no \fB-ssl,\fR
\fB-stunnel,\fR or \fB-enc\fR options), allow the Java VNC Viewer
applet to be downloaded thru the VNC port via HTTP.
.IP
That is to say, you can use a single port for Java
applet viewer connections by using a URL in your web
browser like this, for example:
.IP
http://hostname:5900
.IP
The regular, two-port mode, URL http://hostname:5800
will continue to work as well.
.IP
As mentioned above, this mode will NOT work with
the \fB-ssl,\fR \fB-stunnel,\fR or \fB-enc\fR encryption options.
Note that is it equivalent to '-enc none' (i.e. it
uses the same detection mechanism as for HTTPS, but
with no encryption.)
.IP
HTTPS single-port is on by default in \fB-ssl\fR encrypted
mode (and \fB-enc\fR too), so you only need \fB-http_oneport\fR
when doing non-SSL encrypted connections.
.IP
This mode could also be useful for SSH tunnels since
it means only one port needs to be redirected.
.IP
The \fB-httpsredir\fR option may also be useful for this
mode when using an SSH tunnel as well as for router
port redirections.
.IP
Note that the \fB-env\fR X11VNC_HTTP_LISTEN_LOCALHOST=1
option described above under \fB-httpsredir\fR applies for
the libvncserver httpd server in all cases (ssl or not.)
.PP
\fB-ssh\fR \fIuser@host:disp\fR
.IP
Create a remote listening port on machine "host"
via a SSH tunnel using the \fB-R\fR rport:localhost:lport
method. lport will be the local x11vnc listening port,
so a connection to rport (5900+disp) on "host"
will reach x11vnc. E.g. fred@snoopy.com:0
.IP
This could be useful if a firewall/router prevents
incoming connections to the x11vnc machine, but
the ssh machine "host" can be reached by the VNC
viewer. "user@" is not needed unless the remote unix
username differs from the current one.
.IP
By default the remote sshd is usually configured to
only listen on localhost for rport, so the viewer may
need to ssh \fB-L\fR redir to "host" as well (See SSVNC to
automate this). The sshd setting GatewayPorts enables
listening on all interfaces for rport; viewers can
reach it more easily.
.IP
"disp" is the VNC display for the remote SSH side,
e.g. 0 corresponds to port 5900, etc. If disp is
greater than 200 the value is used as the port. Use a
negative value to force a low port, e.g. host:-80 will
use port 80.
.IP
If ssh-agent is not active, then the ssh password needs
to be entered in the terminal where x11vnc is running.
.IP
By default the remote ssh will issue a 'sleep 300' to
wait for the incoming connection for 5 mins. To modify
this use user@host:disp+secs.
.IP
If the remote SSH server is on a non-standard port
(i.e. not 22) use user@host:port:disp+secs.
.IP
Note that the ssh process MAY NOT be killed when
x11vnc exits. It tries by looking at
.IR ps (1)
output.
.PP
\fB-usepw\fR
.IP
If no other password method was supplied on the command
line, first look for ~/.vnc/passwd and if found use it
with \fB-rfbauth;\fR next, look for ~/.vnc/passwdfile and
use it with \fB-passwdfile;\fR otherwise, prompt the user
for a password to create ~/.vnc/passwd and use it with
the \fB-rfbauth\fR option. If none of these succeed x11vnc
exits immediately.
.PP
\fB-storepasswd\fR \fIpass\fR \fIfile\fR
.IP
Store password \fIpass\fR as the VNC password in the
file \fIfile\fR. Once the password is stored the
program exits. Use the password via "\fB-rfbauth\fR \fIfile\fR"
.IP
If called with no arguments, "x11vnc \fB-storepasswd",\fR
the user is prompted for a password and it is stored
in the file ~/.vnc/passwd. Called with one argument,
that will be the file to store the prompted password in.
.PP
\fB-nopw\fR
.IP
Disable the big warning message when you use x11vnc
without some sort of password.
.PP
\fB-accept\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
Run a command (possibly to prompt the user at the
X11 display) to decide whether an incoming client
should be allowed to connect or not. \fIstring\fR is
an external command run via
.IR system (3)
or some special
cases described below. Be sure to quote \fIstring\fR
if it contains spaces, shell characters, etc. If the
external command returns 0 the client is accepted,
otherwise the client is rejected. See below for an
extension to accept a client view-only.
.IP
If x11vnc is running as root (say from
.IR inetd (8)
or from
display managers
.IR xdm (1)
,
.IR gdm (1)
, etc), think about the
security implications carefully before supplying this
option (likewise for the \fB-gone\fR option).
.IP
Environment: The RFB_CLIENT_IP environment variable will
be set to the incoming client IP number and the port
in RFB_CLIENT_PORT (or -1 if unavailable). Similarly,
RFB_SERVER_IP and RFB_SERVER_PORT (the x11vnc side
of the connection), are set to allow identification
of the tcp virtual circuit. The x11vnc process
id will be in RFB_X11VNC_PID, a client id number in
RFB_CLIENT_ID, and the number of other connected clients
in RFB_CLIENT_COUNT. RFB_MODE will be "accept".
RFB_STATE will be PROTOCOL_VERSION, SECURITY_TYPE,
AUTHENTICATION, INITIALISATION, NORMAL, or UNKNOWN
indicating up to which state the client has achieved.
RFB_LOGIN_VIEWONLY will be 0, 1, or -1 (unknown).
RFB_USERNAME, RFB_LOGIN_TIME, and RFB_CURRENT_TIME may
also be set.
.IP
If \fIstring\fR is "popup" then a builtin popup window
is used. The popup will time out after 120 seconds,
use "popup:N" to modify the timeout to N seconds
(use 0 for no timeout).
.IP
In the case of "popup" and when the \fB-unixpw\fR option
is specified, then a *second* window will be popped
up after the user successfully logs in via his UNIX
password. This time the user will be identified as
UNIX:username@hostname, the "UNIX:" prefix indicates
which user the viewer logged as via \fB-unixpw.\fR The first
popup is only for whether to allow him to even *try*
to login via unix password.
.IP
If \fIstring\fR is "xmessage" then an
.IR xmessage (1)
invocation is used for the command. xmessage must be
installed on the machine for this to work.
.IP
Both "popup" and "xmessage" will present an option
for accepting the client "View-Only" (the client
can only watch). This option will not be presented if
\fB-viewonly\fR has been specified, in which case the entire
display is view only.
.IP
If the user supplied command is prefixed with something
like "yes:0,no:*,view:3 mycommand ..." then this
associates the numerical command return code with
the actions: accept, reject, and accept-view-only,
respectively. Use "*" instead of a number to indicate
the default action (in case the command returns an
unexpected value). E.g. "no:*" is a good choice.
.IP
Note that x11vnc blocks while the external command
or popup is running (other clients may see no updates
during this period). So a person sitting a the physical
display is needed to respond to an popup prompt. (use
a 2nd x11vnc if you lock yourself out).
.IP
More \fB-accept\fR tricks: use "popupmouse" to only allow
mouse clicks in the builtin popup to be recognized.
Similarly use "popupkey" to only recognize
keystroke responses. These are to help avoid the
user accidentally accepting a client by typing or
clicking. All 3 of the popup keywords can be followed
by +N+M to supply a position for the popup window.
The default is to center the popup window.
.PP
\fB-afteraccept\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
As \fB-accept,\fR except to run a user supplied command after
a client has been accepted and authenticated. RFB_MODE
will be set to "afteraccept" and the other RFB_*
variables are as in \fB-accept.\fR Unlike \fB-accept,\fR the
command return code is not interpreted by x11vnc.
Example: \fB-afteraccept\fR 'killall xlock &'
.PP
\fB-gone\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
As \fB-accept,\fR except to run a user supplied command when
a client goes away (disconnects). RFB_MODE will be
set to "gone" and the other RFB_* variables are as
in \fB-accept.\fR The "popup" actions apply as well.
Unlike \fB-accept,\fR the command return code is not
interpreted by x11vnc. Example: \fB-gone\fR 'xlock &'
.PP
\fB-users\fR \fIlist\fR
.IP
If x11vnc is started as root (say from
.IR inetd (8)
or from
display managers
.IR xdm (1)
,
.IR gdm (1)
, etc), then as soon
as possible after connections to the X display are
established try to switch to one of the users in the
comma separated \fIlist\fR. If x11vnc is not running as
root this option is ignored.
.IP
Why use this option? In general it is not needed since
x11vnc is already connected to the X display and can
perform its primary functions. The option was added
to make some of the *external* utility commands x11vnc
occasionally runs work properly. In particular under
GNOME and KDE to implement the "\fB-solid\fR \fIcolor\fR" feature
external commands (gconftool-2 and dcop) unfortunately
must be run as the user owning the desktop session.
Since this option switches userid it also affects the
userid used to run the processes for the \fB-accept\fR and
\fB-gone\fR options. It also affects the ability to read
files for options such as \fB-connect,\fR \fB-allow,\fR and \fB-remap\fR
and also the ultra and tight filetransfer feature if
enabled. Note that the \fB-connect\fR file is also sometimes
written to.
.IP
So be careful with this option since in some situations
its use can decrease security.
.IP
In general the switch to a user will only take place
if the display can still be successfully opened as that
user (this is primarily to try to guess the actual owner
of the session). Example: "\fB-users\fR \fIfred,wilma,betty\fR".
Note that a malicious local user "barney" by
quickly using "xhost +" when logging in may possibly
get the x11vnc process to switch to user "fred".
What happens next?
.IP
Under display managers it may be a long time before
the switch succeeds (i.e. a user logs in). To instead
make it switch immediately regardless if the display
can be reopened prefix the username with the "+"
character. E.g. "\fB-users\fR \fI+bob\fR" or "\fB-users\fR \fI+nobody\fR".
.IP
The latter (i.e. switching immediately to user
"nobody") is the only obvious use of the \fB-users\fR option
that increases security.
.IP
Use the following notation to associate a group with
a user: user1.group1,user2.group2,... Note that
.IR initgroups (2)
will still be called first to try to
switch to ALL of a user's groups (primary and additional
groups). Only if that fails or it is not available
then the single group specified as above (or the user's
primary group if not specified) is switched to with
.IR setgid (2).
Use \fB-env\fR X11VNC_SINGLE_GROUP=1 to prevent
trying
.IR initgroups (2)
and only switch to the single
group. This sort of setting is only really needed to
make the ultra or tight filetransfer permissions work
properly. This format applies to any comma separated list
of users, even the special "=" modes described below.
.IP
In \fB-unixpw\fR mode, if "\fB-users\fR \fIunixpw=\fR" is supplied
then after a user authenticates himself via the
\fB-unixpw\fR mechanism, x11vnc will try to switch to that
user as though "\fB-users\fR \fI+username\fR" had been supplied.
If you want to limit which users this will be done for,
provide them as a comma separated list after "unixpw="
Groups can also be specified as described above.
.IP
Similarly, in \fB-ssl\fR mode, if "\fB-users\fR \fIsslpeer=\fR" is
supplied then after an SSL client authenticates with his
cert (the \fB-sslverify\fR option is required for this) x11vnc
will extract a UNIX username from the "emailAddress"
field (username@hostname.com) of the "Subject" of the
x509 SSL cert and then try to switch to that user as
though "\fB-users\fR \fI+username\fR" had been supplied. If you
want to limit which users this will be done for, provide
them as a comma separated list after "sslpeer=".
Set the env. var X11VNC_SSLPEER_CN to use the Common
Name (normally a hostname) instead of the Email field.
.IP
NOTE: for sslpeer= mode the x11vnc administrator must
take care that any client certs he adds to \fB-sslverify\fR
have the intended UNIX username in the "emailAddress"
field of the cert. Otherwise a user may be able to
log in as another. This command can be of use in
checking: "openssl x509 \fB-text\fR \fB-in\fR file.crt", see the
"Subject:" line. Also, along with the normal RFB_*
env. vars. (see \fB-accept)\fR passed to external cmd=
commands, RFB_SSL_CLIENT_CERT will be set to the
client's x509 certificate string.
.IP
The sslpeer= mode can aid finding X sessions via the
FINDDISPLAY and FINDCREATEDISPLAY mechanisms.
.IP
To immediately switch to a user *before* connections
to the X display are made or any files opened use the
"=" character: "\fB-users\fR \fI=bob\fR". That user needs to
be able to open the X display and any files of course.
.IP
The special user "guess=" means to examine the utmpx
database (see
.IR who (1)
) looking for a user attached to
the display number (from DISPLAY or \fB-display\fR option)
and try him/her. To limit the list of guesses, use:
"\fB-users\fR \fIguess=bob,betty\fR".
.IP
Even more sinister is the special user "lurk="
that means to try to guess the DISPLAY from the utmpx
login database as well. So it "lurks" waiting for
anyone to log into an X session and then connects to it.
Specify a list of users after the = to limit which users
will be tried. To enable a different searching mode, if
the first user in the list is something like ":0" or
":0-2" that indicates a range of DISPLAY numbers that
will be tried (regardless of whether they are in the
utmpx database) for all users that are logged in. Also
see the "\fB-display\fR \fIWAIT:...\fR" functionality. Examples:
"\fB-users\fR \fIlurk=\fR" and also "\fB-users\fR \fIlurk=:0-1,bob,mary\fR"
.IP
Be especially careful using the "guess=" and "lurk="
modes. They are not recommended for use on machines
with untrustworthy local users.
.PP
\fB-noshm\fR
.IP
Do not use the MIT-SHM extension for the polling.
Remote displays can be polled this way: be careful this
can use large amounts of network bandwidth. This is
also of use if the local machine has a limited number
of shm segments and \fB-onetile\fR is not sufficient.
.PP
\fB-flipbyteorder\fR
.IP
Sometimes needed if remotely polled host has different
endianness. Ignored unless \fB-noshm\fR is set.
.PP
\fB-onetile\fR
.IP
Do not use the new copy_tiles() framebuffer mechanism,
just use 1 shm tile for polling. Limits shm segments
used to 3.
.PP
\fB-solid\fR \fI[color]\fR
.IP
To improve performance, when VNC clients are connected
try to change the desktop background to a solid color.
The [color] is optional: the default color is "cyan4".
For a different one specify the X color (rgb.txt name,
e.g. "darkblue" or numerical "#RRGGBB").
.IP
Currently this option only works on GNOME, KDE, CDE,
XFCE, and classic X (i.e. with the background image
on the root window). The "gconftool-2", "dcop"
and "xfconf-query" external commands are run for
GNOME, KDE, and XFCE respectively. This also works
on native MacOSX. (There is no color selection for
MacOSX or XFCE.) Other desktops won't work, (send
us the corresponding commands if you find them).
If x11vnc is running as root (
.IR inetd (8)
or
.IR gdm (1)
),
the \fB-users\fR option may be needed for GNOME, KDE, XFCE.
If x11vnc guesses your desktop incorrectly, you can
force it by prefixing color with "gnome:", "kde:",
"cde:", "xfce:", or "root:".
.IP
Update: \fB-solid\fR no longer works on KDE4.
.IP
This mode works in a limited way on the Mac OS X Console
with one color ('kelp') using the screensaver writing
to the background. Look in "~/Library/Screen Savers"
for VncSolidColor.png to change the color.
.PP
\fB-blackout\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
Black out rectangles on the screen. \fIstring\fR is a
comma separated list of WxH+X+Y type geometries for
each rectangle. If one of the items on the list is the
string "noptr" the mouse pointer will not be allowed
to go into a blacked out region.
.PP
\fB-xinerama,\fR \fB-noxinerama\fR
.IP
If your screen is composed of multiple monitors
glued together via XINERAMA, and that screen is
not a rectangle this option will try to guess the
areas to black out (if your system has libXinerama).
default: \fB-xinerama\fR
.IP
In general, we have noticed on XINERAMA displays you may
need to use the "\fB-xwarppointer\fR" option if the mouse
pointer misbehaves and it is enabled by default. Use
"\fB-noxwarppointer\fR" if you do not want this.
.PP
\fB-xtrap\fR
.IP
Use the DEC-XTRAP extension for keystroke and mouse
input insertion. For use on legacy systems, e.g. X11R5,
running an incomplete or missing XTEST extension.
By default DEC-XTRAP will be used if XTEST server grab
control is missing, use \fB-xtrap\fR to do the keystroke and
mouse insertion via DEC-XTRAP as well.
.PP
\fB-xrandr\fR \fI[mode]\fR
.IP
If the display supports the XRANDR (X Resize, Rotate
and Reflection) extension, and you expect XRANDR events
to occur to the display while x11vnc is running, this
options indicates x11vnc should try to respond to
them (as opposed to simply crashing by assuming the
old screen size). See the
.IR xrandr (1)
manpage and run
\'xrandr \fB-q'\fR for more info. [mode] is optional and
described below.
.IP
Since watching for XRANDR events and trapping errors
increases polling overhead, only use this option if
XRANDR changes are expected. For example on a rotatable
screen PDA or laptop, or using a XRANDR-aware Desktop
where you resize often. It is best to be viewing with a
vncviewer that supports the NewFBSize encoding, since it
knows how to react to screen size changes. Otherwise,
libvncserver tries to do so something reasonable for
viewers that cannot do this (portions of the screen
may be clipped, unused, etc).
.IP
Note: the default now is to check for XRANDR events, but
do not trap every X call that may fail due to resize.
If a resize event is received, the full \fB-xrandr\fR mode
is enabled. To disable even checking for events supply:
\fB-noxrandr.\fR
.IP
"mode" defaults to "resize", which means create a
new, resized, framebuffer and hope all viewers can cope
with the change. "newfbsize" means first disconnect
all viewers that do not support the NewFBSize VNC
encoding, and then resize the framebuffer. "exit"
means disconnect all viewer clients, and then terminate
x11vnc.
.PP
\fB-rotate\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
Rotate and/or flip the framebuffer view exported by VNC.
This transformation is independent of XRANDR and is
done in software in main memory and so may be slower.
This mode could be useful on a handheld with portrait or
landscape modes that do not correspond to the scanline
order of the actual framebuffer. \fIstring\fR can be:
.IP
x flip along x-axis
y flip along y-axis
xy flip along x- and y-axes
+90 rotate 90 degrees clockwise
\fB-90\fR rotate 90 degrees counter-clockwise
+90x rotate 90 degrees CW, then flip along x
+90y rotate 90 degrees CW, then flip along y
.IP
these give all possible rotations and reflections.
.IP
Aliases: same as xy: yx, +180, \fB-180,\fR 180
same as \fB-90:\fR +270, 270
same as +90: 90, (ditto for 90x, 90y)
.IP
Like \fB-scale,\fR this transformation is applied at the very
end of any chain of framebuffer transformations and so
any options with geometries, e.g. \fB-blackout,\fR \fB-clip,\fR etc.
are relative to the original X (or \fB-rawfb)\fR framebuffer,
not the final one sent to VNC viewers.
.IP
If you do not want the cursor shape to be rotated
prefix \fIstring\fR with "nc:", e.g. "nc:+90",
"nc:xy", etc.
.PP
\fB-padgeom\fR \fIWxH\fR
.IP
Whenever a new vncviewer connects, the framebuffer is
replaced with a fake, solid black one of geometry WxH.
Shortly afterwards the framebuffer is replaced with the
real one. This is intended for use with vncviewers
that do not support NewFBSize and one wants to make
sure the initial viewer geometry will be big enough
to handle all subsequent resizes (e.g. under \fB-xrandr,\fR
\fB-remote\fR id:windowid, rescaling, etc.)
.IP
In \fB-unixpw\fR mode this sets the size of the login screen.
Use "once:WxH" it ignore padgeom after the login
screen is set up.
.PP
\fB-o\fR \fIlogfile\fR
.IP
Write stderr messages to file \fIlogfile\fR instead of to
the terminal. Same as "\fB-logfile\fR \fIfile\fR". To append
to the file use "\fB-oa\fR \fIfile\fR" or "\fB-logappend\fR \fIfile\fR".
If \fIlogfile\fR contains the string "%VNCDISPLAY"
it is expanded to the vnc display (the name may need
to be guessed at.) "%HOME" works too.
.PP
\fB-flag\fR \fIfile\fR
.IP
Write the "PORT=NNNN" (e.g. PORT=5900) string to
\fIfile\fR in addition to stdout. This option could be
useful by wrapper script to detect when x11vnc is ready.
.PP
\fB-rmflag\fR \fIfile\fR
.IP
Remove \fIfile\fR at exit to signal when x11vnc is done.
The file is created at startup if it does not already
exist or if \fIfile\fR is prefixed with "create:".
If the file is created, the x11vnc PID is placed in
the file. Otherwise the files contents is not changed.
Use prefix "nocreate:" to prevent creation.
.PP
\fB-rc\fR \fIfilename\fR
.IP
Use \fIfilename\fR instead of $HOME/.x11vncrc for rc file.
.PP
\fB-norc\fR
.IP
Do not process any .x11vncrc file for options.
.PP
\fB-env\fR \fIVAR=VALUE\fR
.IP
Set the environment variable 'VAR' to value 'VALUE'
at x11vnc startup. This is a convenience utility to
avoid shell script wrappers, etc. to set the env. var.
You may specify as many of these as needed on the
command line.
.PP
\fB-prog\fR \fI/path/to/x11vnc\fR
.IP
Set the full path to the x11vnc program for cases when
it cannot be determined from argv[0] (e.g. tcpd/inetd)
.PP
\fB-h,\fR \fB-help\fR
.IP
Print this help text.
-?, \fB-opts\fR Only list the x11vnc options.
.PP
\fB-V,\fR \fB-version\fR
.IP
Print program version and last modification date.
.PP
\fB-license\fR
.IP
Print out license information. Same as \fB-copying\fR and
\fB-warranty.\fR
.PP
\fB-dbg\fR
.IP
Instead of exiting after cleaning up, run a simple
"debug crash shell" when fatal errors are trapped.
.PP
\fB-q,\fR \fB-quiet\fR
.IP
Be quiet by printing less informational output to
stderr. (use \fB-noquiet\fR to undo an earlier \fB-quiet.)\fR
.IP
The \fB-quiet\fR option does not eliminate all informational
output, it only reduces it. It is ignored in most
auxiliary usage modes, e.g. \fB-storepasswd.\fR To eliminate
all output use: 2>/dev/null 1>&2, etc.
.PP
\fB-v,\fR \fB-verbose\fR
.IP
Print out more information to stderr.
.PP
\fB-bg\fR
.IP
Go into the background after screen setup. Messages to
stderr are lost unless \fB-o\fR logfile is used. Something
like this could be useful in a script:
.IP
port=`ssh -t $host "x11vnc -display :0 -bg" | grep PORT`
.IP
port=`echo "$port" | sed -e 's/PORT=//'`
.IP
port=`expr $port - 5900`
.IP
vncviewer $host:$port
.PP
\fB-modtweak,\fR \fB-nomodtweak\fR
.IP
Option \fB-modtweak\fR automatically tries to adjust the AltGr
and Shift modifiers for differing language keyboards
between client and host. Otherwise, only a single key
press/release of a Keycode is simulated (i.e. ignoring
the state of the modifiers: this usually works for
identical keyboards). Also useful in resolving cases
where a Keysym is bound to multiple keys (e.g. "<" + ">"
and "," + "<" keys). Default: \fB-modtweak\fR
.IP
If you are having trouble with with keys and \fB-xkb\fR or
\fB-noxkb,\fR and similar things don't help, try \fB-nomodtweak.\fR
.IP
On some HP-UX systems it is been noted that they have
an odd keymapping where a single keycode will have a
keysym, e.g. "#", up to three times. You can check
via "xmodmap \fB-pk"\fR or the \fB-dk\fR option. The failure
is when you try to type "#" it yields "3". If you
see this problem try setting the environment variable
MODTWEAK_LOWEST=1 to see if it helps.
.PP
\fB-xkb,\fR \fB-noxkb\fR
.IP
When in modtweak mode, use the XKEYBOARD extension (if
the X display supports it) to do the modifier tweaking.
This is powerful and should be tried if there are still
keymapping problems when using \fB-modtweak\fR by itself.
The default is to check whether some common keysyms,
e.g. !, @, [, are only accessible via \fB-xkb\fR mode and if
so then automatically enable the mode. To disable this
automatic detection use \fB-noxkb.\fR
.IP
When \fB-xkb\fR mode is active you can set these env. vars.
They apply only when there is ambiguity as to which
key to choose (i.e the mapping is not one-to-one).
NOKEYHINTS=1: for up ascii keystrokes do not use score
hints saved when the key was pressed down. NOANYDOWN=1:
for up keystrokes do not resort to searching through
keys that are currently pressed down. KEYSDOWN=N:
remember the last N keys press down for tie-breaking
when an up keystroke comes in.
.PP
\fB-capslock\fR
.IP
When in \fB-modtweak\fR (the default) or \fB-xkb\fR mode,
if a keysym in the range A-Z comes in check the X
server to see if the Caps_Lock is set. If it is do
not artificially press Shift to generate the keysym.
This will enable the CapsLock key to behave correctly
in some circumstances: namely *both* the VNC viewer
machine and the x11vnc X server are in the CapsLock
on state. If one side has CapsLock on and the other
off and the keyboard is not behaving as you think it
should you should correct the CapsLock states (hint:
pressing CapsLock inside and outside of the viewer can
help toggle them both to the correct state). However,
for best results do not use this option, but rather
*only* enable CapsLock on the VNC viewer side (i.e. by
pressing CapsLock outside of the viewer window, also
\fB-skip_lockkeys\fR below). Also try \fB-nomodtweak\fR for a
possible workaround.
.PP
\fB-skip_lockkeys,\fR \fB-noskip_lockkeys\fR
.IP
Have x11vnc ignore all Caps_Lock, Shift_Lock, Num_Lock,
Scroll_Lock keysyms received from viewers. The idea is
you press Caps_Lock on the VNC Viewer side but that does
not change the lock state in the x11vnc-side X server.
Nevertheless your capitalized letters come in over
the wire and are applied correctly to the x11vnc-side
X server. Note this mode probably won't do what you
want in \fB-nomodtweak\fR mode. Also, a kludge for KP_n
digits is always done it this mode: they are mapped to
regular digit keysyms. See also \fB-capslock\fR above.
The default is \fB-noskip_lockkeys.\fR
.PP
\fB-skip_keycodes\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
Ignore the comma separated list of decimal keycodes.
Perhaps these are keycodes not on your keyboard but
your X server thinks exist. Currently only applies
to \fB-xkb\fR mode. Use this option to help x11vnc in the
reverse problem it tries to solve: Keysym -> Keycode(s)
when ambiguities exist (more than one Keycode per
Keysym). Run 'xmodmap \fB-pk'\fR to see your keymapping.
Example: "\fB-skip_keycodes\fR \fI94,114\fR"
.PP
\fB-sloppy_keys\fR
.IP
Experimental option that tries to correct some
"sloppy" key behavior. E.g. if at the viewer you
press Shift+Key but then release the Shift before
Key that could give rise to extra unwanted characters
(usually only between keyboards of different languages).
Only use this option if you observe problems with
some keystrokes.
.PP
\fB-skip_dups,\fR \fB-noskip_dups\fR
.IP
Some VNC viewers send impossible repeated key events,
e.g. key-down, key-down, key-up, key-up all for the same
key, or 20 downs in a row for the same modifier key!
Setting \fB-skip_dups\fR means to skip these duplicates and
just process the first event. Note: some VNC viewers
assume they can send down's without the corresponding
up's and so you should not set this option for
these viewers (symptom: some keys do not autorepeat)
Default: \fB-noskip_dups\fR
.PP
\fB-add_keysyms,\fR \fB-noadd_keysyms\fR
.IP
If a Keysym is received from a VNC viewer and that
Keysym does not exist in the X server, then add the
Keysym to the X server's keyboard mapping on an unused
key. Added Keysyms will be removed periodically and
also when x11vnc exits. Default: \fB-add_keysyms\fR
.PP
\fB-clear_mods\fR
.IP
At startup and exit clear the modifier keys by sending
KeyRelease for each one. The Lock modifiers are skipped.
Used to clear the state if the display was accidentally
left with any pressed down.
.PP
\fB-clear_keys\fR
.IP
As \fB-clear_mods,\fR except try to release ANY pressed key.
Note that this option and \fB-clear_mods\fR can interfere
with a person typing at the physical keyboard.
.PP
\fB-clear_all\fR
.IP
As \fB-clear_keys,\fR except try to release any CapsLock,
NumLock, etc. locks as well.
.PP
\fB-remap\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
Read Keysym remappings from file named \fIstring\fR.
Format is one pair of Keysyms per line (can be name
or hex value) separated by a space. If no file named
\fIstring\fR exists, it is instead interpreted as this
form: key1-key2,key3-key4,... See <X11/keysymdef.h>
header file for a list of Keysym names, or use
.IR xev (1).
.IP
To map a key to a button click, use the fake Keysyms
"Button1", ..., etc. E.g: "\fB-remap\fR \fISuper_R-Button2\fR"
(useful for pasting on a laptop)
.IP
I use these if the machine I am viewing from does not
have a scrollwheel or I don't like using the one it has:
.IP
\fB-remap\fR Super_R-Button4,Menu-Button5
\fB-remap\fR KP_Add-Button4,KP_Enter-Button5
.IP
the former would be used on a PC, the latter on a
MacBook. This way those little used keys can be used
to generate bigger hops than the Up and Down arrows
provide. One can scroll through text or web pages more
quickly this way (especially if x11vnc scroll detection
is active.)
.IP
Use Button44, Button12, etc. for multiple clicks.
.IP
To disable a keysym (i.e. make it so it will not be
injected), remap it to "NoSymbol" or "None".
.IP
Dead keys: "dead" (or silent, mute) keys are keys that
do not produce a character but must be followed by a 2nd
keystroke. This is often used for accenting characters,
e.g. to put "`" on top of "a" by pressing the dead
key and then "a". Note that this interpretation
is not part of core X11, it is up to the toolkit or
application to decide how to react to the sequence.
The X11 names for these keysyms are "dead_grave",
"dead_acute", etc. However some VNC viewers send the
keysyms "grave", "acute" instead thereby disabling
the accenting. To work around this \fB-remap\fR can be used.
For example "\fB-remap\fR \fIgrave-dead_grave,acute-dead_acute\fR"
.IP
As a convenience, "\fB-remap\fR \fIDEAD\fR" applies these remaps:
.IP
g grave-dead_grave
a acute-dead_acute
c asciicircum-dead_circumflex
t asciitilde-dead_tilde
m macron-dead_macron
b breve-dead_breve
D abovedot-dead_abovedot
d diaeresis-dead_diaeresis
o degree-dead_abovering
A doubleacute-dead_doubleacute
r caron-dead_caron
e cedilla-dead_cedilla
.IP
.IP
If you just want a subset use the first letter
label, e.g. "\fB-remap\fR \fIDEAD=ga\fR" to get the first two.
Additional remaps may also be supplied via commas,
e.g. "\fB-remap\fR \fIDEAD=ga,Super_R-Button2\fR". Finally,
"DEAD=missing" means to apply all of the above as
long as the left hand member is not already in the
X11 keymap.
.PP
\fB-norepeat,\fR \fB-repeat\fR
.IP
Option \fB-norepeat\fR disables X server key auto repeat when
VNC clients are connected and VNC keyboard input is
not idle for more than 5 minutes. This works around a
repeating keystrokes bug (triggered by long processing
delays between key down and key up client events:
either from large screen changes or high latency).
Default: \fB-norepeat\fR
.IP
You can set the env. var. X11VNC_IDLE_TIMEOUT to the
number of idle seconds you want (5min = 300secs).
.IP
Note: your VNC viewer side will likely do autorepeating,
so this is no loss unless someone is simultaneously at
the real X display.
.IP
Use "\fB-norepeat\fR \fIN\fR" to set how many times norepeat will
be reset if something else (e.g. X session manager)
undoes it. The default is 2. Use a negative value
for unlimited resets.
.PP
\fB-nofb\fR
.IP
Ignore video framebuffer: only process keyboard and
pointer. Intended for use with Win2VNC and x2vnc
dual-monitor setups.
.PP
\fB-nobell\fR
.IP
Do not watch for XBell events. (no beeps will be heard)
Note: XBell monitoring requires the XKEYBOARD extension.
.PP
\fB-nosel\fR
.IP
Do not manage exchange of X selection/cutbuffer between
VNC viewers and the X server at all.
.PP
\fB-noprimary\fR
.IP
Do not poll the PRIMARY selection for changes to send
back to clients. (PRIMARY is still set on received
changes, however).
.PP
\fB-nosetprimary\fR
.IP
Do not set the PRIMARY selection for changes received
from VNC clients.
.PP
\fB-noclipboard\fR
.IP
Do not poll the CLIPBOARD selection for changes to send
back to clients. (CLIPBOARD is still set on received
changes, however).
.PP
\fB-nosetclipboard\fR
.IP
Do not set the CLIPBOARD selection for changes
received from VNC clients.
.PP
\fB-seldir\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
If direction string is "send", only send the selection
to viewers, and if it is "recv" only receive it from
viewers. To work around apps setting the selection
too frequently and messing up the other end. You can
actually supply a comma separated list of directions,
including "debug" to turn on debugging output.
.PP
\fB-cursor\fR \fI[mode],\fR \fB-nocursor\fR
.IP
Sets how the pointer cursor shape (little icon at the
mouse pointer) should be handled. The "mode" string
is optional and is described below. The default
is to show some sort of cursor shape(s). How this
is done depends on the VNC viewer and the X server.
Use \fB-nocursor\fR to disable cursor shapes completely.
.IP
Some VNC viewers support the TightVNC CursorPosUpdates
and CursorShapeUpdates extensions (cuts down on
network traffic by not having to send the cursor image
every time the pointer is moved), in which case these
extensions are used (see \fB-nocursorshape\fR and \fB-nocursorpos\fR
below to disable). For other viewers the cursor shape
is written directly to the framebuffer every time the
pointer is moved or changed and gets sent along with
the other framebuffer updates. In this case, there
will be some lag between the vnc viewer pointer and
the remote cursor position.
.IP
If the X display supports retrieving the cursor shape
information from the X server, then the default is
to use that mode. On Solaris this can be done with
the SUN_OVL extension using \fB-overlay\fR (see also the
\fB-overlay_nocursor\fR option). A similar overlay scheme
is used on IRIX. Xorg (e.g. Linux) and recent Solaris
Xsun servers support the XFIXES extension to retrieve
the exact cursor shape from the X server. If XFIXES
is present it is preferred over Overlay and is used by
default (see \fB-noxfixes\fR below). This can be disabled
with \fB-nocursor,\fR and also some values of the "mode"
option below.
.IP
Note that under XFIXES cursors with transparency (alpha
channel) will usually not be exactly represented and one
may find Overlay preferable. See also the \fB-alphacut\fR
and \fB-alphafrac\fR options below as fudge factors to try
to improve the situation for cursors with transparency
for a given theme.
.IP
The "mode" string can be used to fine-tune the
displaying of cursor shapes. It can be used the
following ways:
.IP
"\fB-cursor\fR \fIarrow\fR" - just show the standard arrow
nothing more or nothing less.
.IP
"\fB-cursor\fR \fInone\fR" - same as "\fB-nocursor\fR"
.IP
"\fB-cursor\fR \fIX\fR" - when the cursor appears to be on the
root window, draw the familiar X shape. Some desktops
such as GNOME cover up the root window completely,
and so this will not work, try "X1", etc, to try to
shift the tree depth. On high latency links or slow
machines there will be a time lag between expected and
the actual cursor shape.
.IP
"\fB-cursor\fR \fIsome\fR" - like "X" but use additional
heuristics to try to guess if the window should have
a windowmanager-like resizer cursor or a text input
I-beam cursor. This is a complete hack, but may be
useful in some situations because it provides a little
more feedback about the cursor shape.
.IP
"\fB-cursor\fR \fImost\fR" - try to show as many cursors as
possible. Often this will only be the same as "some"
unless the display has overlay visuals or XFIXES
extensions available. On Solaris and IRIX if XFIXES
is not available, \fB-overlay\fR mode will be attempted.
.PP
\fB-cursor_drag\fR
.IP
Show cursor shape changes even when the mouse is being
dragged with a mouse button down. This is useful if you
want to be able to see Drag-and-Drop cursor icons, etc.
.PP
\fB-arrow\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
Choose an alternate "arrow" cursor from a set of
some common ones. n can be 1 to 6. Default is: 1
Ignored when in XFIXES cursor-grabbing mode.
.PP
\fB-noxfixes\fR
.IP
Do not use the XFIXES extension to draw the exact cursor
shape even if it is available.
.IP
Note: To work around a crash in Xorg 1.5 and later
some people needed to use \fB-noxfixes.\fR The Xorg crash
occurred right after a Display Manager (e.g. GDM) login.
Starting with x11vnc 0.9.9 it tries to automatically
avoid using XFIXES until it is sure a window manager
is running. See the \fB-reopen\fR option for more info and
how to use X11VNC_AVOID_WINDOWS=never to disable it.
.PP
\fB-alphacut\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
When using the XFIXES extension for the cursor shape,
cursors with transparency will not usually be displayed
exactly (but opaque ones will). This option sets n as
a cutoff for cursors that have transparency ("alpha
channel" with values ranging from 0 to 255) Any cursor
pixel with alpha value less than n becomes completely
transparent. Otherwise the pixel is completely opaque.
Default 240
.PP
\fB-alphafrac\fR \fIfraction\fR
.IP
With the threshold in \fB-alphacut\fR some cursors will become
almost completely transparent because their alpha values
are not high enough. For those cursors adjust the
alpha threshold until fraction of the non-zero alpha
channel pixels become opaque. Default 0.33
.PP
\fB-alpharemove\fR
.IP
By default, XFIXES cursors pixels with transparency have
the alpha factor multiplied into the RGB color values
(i.e. that corresponding to blending the cursor with a
black background). Specify this option to remove the
alpha factor. (useful for light colored semi-transparent
cursors).
.PP
\fB-noalphablend\fR
.IP
In XFIXES mode do not send cursor alpha channel data
to libvncserver. The default is to send it. The
alphablend effect will only be visible in \fB-nocursorshape\fR
mode or for clients with cursorshapeupdates turned
off. (However there is a hack for 32bpp with depth 24,
it uses the extra 8 bits to store cursor transparency
for use with a hacked vncviewer that applies the
transparency locally. See the FAQ for more info).
.PP
\fB-nocursorshape\fR
.IP
Do not use the TightVNC CursorShapeUpdates extension
even if clients support it. See \fB-cursor\fR above.
.PP
\fB-cursorpos,\fR \fB-nocursorpos\fR
.IP
Option \fB-cursorpos\fR enables sending the X cursor position
back to all vnc clients that support the TightVNC
CursorPosUpdates extension. Other clients will be able
to see the pointer motions. Default: \fB-cursorpos\fR
.PP
\fB-xwarppointer,\fR \fB-noxwarppointer\fR
.IP
Move the pointer with
.IR XWarpPointer (3X)
instead of
the XTEST extension. Use this as a workaround
if the pointer motion behaves incorrectly, e.g.
on touchscreens or other non-standard setups.
.IP
It is also sometimes needed on XINERAMA displays and is
enabled by default if XINERAMA is found to be active.
To prevent this, use \fB-noxwarppointer.\fR
.PP
\fB-buttonmap\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
String to remap mouse buttons. Format: IJK-LMN, this
maps buttons I -> L, etc., e.g. \fB-buttonmap\fR 13-31
.IP
Button presses can also be mapped to keystrokes: replace
a button digit on the right of the dash with :<sym>:
or :<sym1>+<sym2>: etc. for multiple keys. For example,
if the viewing machine has a mouse-wheel (buttons 4 5)
but the x11vnc side does not, these will do scrolls:
.IP
\fB-buttonmap\fR 12345-123:Prior::Next:
.IP
\fB-buttonmap\fR 12345-123:Up+Up+Up::Down+Down+Down:
.IP
See <X11/keysymdef.h> header file for a list of Keysyms,
or use the
.IR xev (1)
program. Note: mapping of button
clicks to Keysyms may not work if \fB-modtweak\fR or \fB-xkb\fR is
needed for the Keysym.
.IP
If you include a modifier like "Shift_L" the
modifier's up/down state is toggled, e.g. to send
"The" use :Shift_L+t+Shift_L+h+e: (the 1st one is
shift down and the 2nd one is shift up). (note: the
initial state of the modifier is ignored and not reset)
To include button events use "Button1", ... etc.
.IP
.IP
\fB-buttonmap\fR currently does not work on MacOSX console
or in \fB-rawfb\fR mode.
.IP
Workaround: use \fB-buttonmap\fR IJ...-LM...=n to limit the
number of mouse buttons to n, e.g. 123-123=3. This will
prevent x11vnc from crashing if the X server reports
there are 5 buttons (4/5 scroll wheel), but there are
only really 3.
.PP
\fB-nodragging\fR
.IP
Do not update the display during mouse dragging events
(mouse button held down). Greatly improves response on
slow setups, but you lose all visual feedback for drags,
text selection, and some menu traversals. It overrides
any \fB-pointer_mode\fR setting.
.PP
\fB-ncache\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
Client-side caching scheme. Framebuffer memory \fIn\fR
(an integer) times that of the full display is allocated
below the actual framebuffer to cache screen contents
for rapid retrieval. So a W x H frambuffer is expanded
to a W x (n+1)*H one. Use 0 to disable.
.IP
The \fIn\fR is actually optional, the default is 10.
.IP
For this and the other \fB-ncache*\fR options below you can
abbreviate "\fB-ncache\fR" with "\fB-nc\fR". Also, "\fB-nonc\fR"
is the same as "\fB-ncache\fR \fI0\fR"
.IP
This is an experimental option, currently implemented in
an awkward way in that in the VNC Viewer you can see the
pixel cache contents if you scroll down, etc. So you
will have to set things up so you can't see that region.
If this method is successful, the changes required for
clients to do this less awkwardly will be investigated.
.IP
The SSVNC viewer does a good job at automatically hiding
the pixel cache region. Or use SSVNC's \fB-ycrop\fR option
to explicitly hide the region.
.IP
Note that this mode consumes a huge amount of memory,
both on the x11vnc server side and on the VNC Viewer
side. If n=2 then the amount of RAM used is roughly
tripled for both x11vnc and the VNC Viewer. As a rule
of thumb, note that 1280x1024 at depth 24 is about 5MB
of pixel data.
.IP
For reasonable response when cycling through 4 to 6
large (e.g. web browser) windows a value n of 6 to 12
is recommended. (that's right: ~10X more memory...)
.IP
Because of the way window backingstore and saveunders
are implemented, n must be even. It will be incremented
by 1 if it is not.
.IP
This mode also works for native MacOS X, but may not
be as effective as the X version. This is due to a
number of things, one is the drop-shadow compositing
that leaves extra areas that need to be repaired (see
\fB-ncache_pad).\fR Another is the window iconification
animations need to be avoided (see \fB-macicontime).\fR
It appears the that the 'Scale' animation mode gives
better results than the 'Genie' one. Also, window event
detection not as accurate as the X version.
.PP
\fB-ncache_cr\fR
.IP
In \fB-ncache\fR mode, try to do copyrect opaque window
moves/drags instead of wireframes (this can induce
painting errors). The wireframe will still be used when
moving a window whose save-unders has not yet been set
or has been invalidated.
.IP
Some VNC Viewers provide better response than others
with this option. On Unix, realvnc viewer gives
smoother drags than tightvnc viewer. Response may also
be choppy if the server side machine is too slow.
.IP
Sometimes on very slow modem connections, this actually
gives an improvement because no pixel data at all
(not even the box animation) is sent during the drag.
.PP
\fB-ncache_no_moveraise\fR
.IP
In \fB-ncache\fR mode, do not assume that moving a window
will cause the window manager to raise it to the top
of the stack. The default is to assume it does, and
so at the beginning of any wireframe, etc, window moves
the window will be pushed to top in the VNC viewer.
.PP
\fB-ncache_no_dtchange\fR
.IP
In \fB-ncache\fR mode, do not try to guess when the desktop
(viewport) changes to another one (i.e. another
workarea). The default is to try to guess and when
detected try to make the transistion more smoothly.
.PP
\fB-ncache_no_rootpixmap\fR
.IP
In \fB-ncache\fR mode, do not try to snapshot the desktop
background to use in guessing or reconstructing window
save-unders.
.PP
\fB-ncache_keep_anims\fR
.IP
In \fB-ncache\fR mode, do not try to disable window
manager animations and other effects (that usually
degrade ncache performance or cause painting errors).
The default is to try to disable them on KDE (but not
GNOME) when VNC clients are connected.
.IP
For other window managers or desktops that provide
animations, effects, compositing, translucency,
etc. that interfere with the \fB-ncache\fR method you will
have to disable them manually.
.PP
\fB-ncache_old_wm\fR
.IP
In \fB-ncache\fR mode, enable some heuristics for old style
window managers such as fvwm and twm.
.PP
\fB-ncache_pad\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
In \fB-ncache\fR mode, pad each window with n pixels for the
caching rectangles. This can be used to try to improve
the situation with dropshadows or other compositing
(e.g. MacOS X window manager), although it could make
things worse. The default is 0 on Unix and 24 on
MacOS X.
.PP
\fB-debug_ncache\fR
.IP
Turn on debugging and profiling output under \fB-ncache.\fR
.PP
\fB-wireframe\fR \fI[str],\fR \fB-nowireframe\fR
.IP
Try to detect window moves or resizes when a mouse
button is held down and show a wireframe instead of
the full opaque window. This is based completely on
heuristics and may not always work: it depends on your
window manager and even how you move things around.
See \fB-pointer_mode\fR below for discussion of the "bogging
down" problem this tries to avoid.
Default: \fB-wireframe\fR
.IP
Shorter aliases: \fB-wf\fR [str] and \fB-nowf\fR
.IP
The value "str" is optional and, of course, is
packed with many tunable parameters for this scheme:
.IP
Format: shade,linewidth,percent,T+B+L+R,mod,t1+t2+t3+t4
Default: 0xff,2,0,32+8+8+8,all,0.15+0.30+5.0+0.125
.IP
If you leave nothing between commas: ",," the default
value is used. If you don't specify enough commas,
the trailing parameters are set to their defaults.
.IP
"shade" indicate the "color" for the wireframe,
usually a greyscale: 0-255, however for 16 and 32bpp you
can specify an rgb.txt X color (e.g. "dodgerblue") or
a value > 255 is treated as RGB (e.g. red is 0xff0000).
"linewidth" sets the width of the wireframe in pixels.
"percent" indicates to not apply the wireframe scheme
to windows with area less than this percent of the
full screen.
.IP
"T+B+L+R" indicates four integers for how close in
pixels the pointer has to be from the Top, Bottom, Left,
or Right edges of the window to consider wireframing.
This is a speedup to quickly exclude a window from being
wireframed: set them all to zero to not try the speedup
(scrolling and selecting text will likely be slower).
.IP
"mod" specifies if a button down event in the
interior of the window with a modifier key (Alt, Shift,
etc.) down should indicate a wireframe opportunity.
It can be "0" or "none" to skip it, "1" or "all"
to apply it to any modifier, or "Shift", "Alt",
"Control", "Meta", "Super", or "Hyper" to only
apply for that type of modifier key.
.IP
"t1+t2+t3+t4" specify four floating point times in
seconds: t1 is how long to wait for the pointer to move,
t2 is how long to wait for the window to start moving
or being resized (for some window managers this can be
rather long), t3 is how long to keep a wireframe moving
before repainting the window. t4 is the minimum time
between sending wireframe "animations". If a slow
link is detected, these values may be automatically
changed to something better for a slow link.
.PP
\fB-nowireframelocal\fR
.IP
By default, mouse motion and button presses of a
user sitting at the LOCAL display are monitored for
wireframing opportunities (so that the changes will be
sent efficiently to the VNC clients). Use this option
to disable this behavior.
.PP
\fB-wirecopyrect\fR \fImode,\fR \fB-nowirecopyrect\fR
.IP
Since the \fB-wireframe\fR mechanism evidently tracks moving
windows accurately, a speedup can be obtained by
telling the VNC viewers to locally copy the translated
window region. This is the VNC CopyRect encoding:
the framebuffer update doesn't need to send the actual
new image data.
.IP
Shorter aliases: \fB-wcr\fR [mode] and \fB-nowcr\fR
.IP
"mode" can be "never" (same as \fB-nowirecopyrect)\fR
to never try the copyrect, "top" means only do it if
the window was not covered by any other windows, and
"always" means to translate the orginally unobscured
region (this may look odd as the remaining pieces come
in, but helps on a slow link). Default: "always"
.IP
Note: there can be painting errors or slow response
when using \fB-scale\fR so you may want to disable CopyRect
in this case "\fB-wirecopyrect\fR \fInever\fR" on the command
line or by remote-control. Or you can also use the
"\fB-scale\fR \fIxxx:nocr\fR" scale option.
.PP
\fB-debug_wireframe\fR
.IP
Turn on debugging info printout for the wireframe
heuristics. "\fB-dwf\fR" is an alias. Specify multiple
times for more output.
.PP
\fB-scrollcopyrect\fR \fImode,\fR \fB-noscrollcopyrect\fR
.IP
Like \fB-wirecopyrect,\fR but use heuristics to try to guess
if a window has scrolled its contents (either vertically
or horizontally). This requires the RECORD X extension
to "snoop" on X applications (currently for certain
XCopyArea and XConfigureWindow X protocol requests).
Examples: Hitting <Return> in a terminal window when the
cursor was at the bottom, the text scrolls up one line.
Hitting <Down> arrow in a web browser window, the web
page scrolls up a small amount. Or scrolling with a
scrollbar or mouse wheel.
.IP
Shorter aliases: \fB-scr\fR [mode] and \fB-noscr\fR
.IP
This scheme will not always detect scrolls, but when
it does there is a nice speedup from using the VNC
CopyRect encoding (see \fB-wirecopyrect).\fR The speedup
is both in reduced network traffic and reduced X
framebuffer polling/copying. On the other hand, it may
induce undesired transients (e.g. a terminal cursor
being scrolled up when it should not be) or other
painting errors (window tearing, bunching-up, etc).
These are automatically repaired in a short period
of time. If this is unacceptable disable the feature
with \fB-noscrollcopyrect.\fR
.IP
Screen clearing kludges: for testing at least, there
are some "magic key sequences" (must be done in less
than 1 second) to aid repairing painting errors that
may be seen when using this mode:
.IP
3 Alt_L's in a row: resend whole screen,
4 Alt_L's in a row: reread and resend whole screen,
3 Super_L's in a row: mark whole screen for polling,
4 Super_L's in a row: reset RECORD context,
5 Super_L's in a row: try to push a black screen
.IP
note: Alt_L is the Left "Alt" key (a single key)
Super_L is the Left "Super" key (Windows flag).
Both of these are modifier keys, and so should not
generate characters when pressed by themselves. Also,
your VNC viewer may have its own refresh hot-key
or button.
.IP
"mode" can be "never" (same as \fB-noscrollcopyrect)\fR
to never try the copyrect, "keys" means to try it
in response to keystrokes only, "mouse" means to
try it in response to mouse events only, "always"
means to do both. Default: "always"
.IP
Note: there can be painting errors or slow response
when using \fB-scale\fR so you may want to disable CopyRect
in this case "\fB-scrollcopyrect\fR \fInever\fR" on the command
line or by remote-control. Or you can also use the
"\fB-scale\fR \fIxxx:nocr\fR" scale option.
.PP
\fB-scr_area\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
Set the minimum area in pixels for a rectangle
to be considered for the \fB-scrollcopyrect\fR detection
scheme. This is to avoid wasting the effort on small
rectangles that would be quickly updated the normal way.
E.g. suppose an app updated the position of its skinny
scrollbar first and then shifted the large panel
it controlled. We want to be sure to skip the small
scrollbar and get the large panel. Default: 60000
.PP
\fB-scr_skip\fR \fIlist\fR
.IP
Skip scroll detection for applications matching
the comma separated list of strings in \fIlist\fR.
Some applications implement their scrolling in
strange ways where the XCopyArea, etc, also applies
to invisible portions of the window: if we CopyRect
those areas it looks awful during the scroll and
there may be painting errors left after the scroll.
Soffice.bin is the worst known offender.
.IP
Use "##" to denote the start of the application class
(e.g. "##XTerm") and "++" to denote the start
of the application instance name (e.g. "++xterm").
The string your list is matched against is of the form
"^^WM_NAME##Class++Instance<same-for-any-subwindows>"
The "xlsclients \fB-la"\fR command will provide this info.
.IP
If a pattern is prefixed with "KEY:" it only applies
to Keystroke generated scrolls (e.g. Up arrow). If it
is prefixed with "MOUSE:" it only applies to Mouse
induced scrolls (e.g. dragging on a scrollbar).
Default: ##Soffice.bin,##StarOffice,##OpenOffice
.PP
\fB-scr_inc\fR \fIlist\fR
.IP
Opposite of \fB-scr_skip:\fR this list is consulted first
and if there is a match the window will be monitored
via RECORD for scrolls irrespective of \fB-scr_skip.\fR
Use \fB-scr_skip\fR '*' to skip anything that does not match
your \fB-scr_inc.\fR Use \fB-scr_inc\fR '*' to include everything.
.PP
\fB-scr_keys\fR \fIlist\fR
.IP
For keystroke scroll detection, only apply the RECORD
heuristics to the comma separated list of keysyms in
\fIlist\fR. You may find the RECORD overhead for every
one of your keystrokes disrupts typing too much, but you
don't want to turn it off completely with "\fB-scr\fR \fImouse\fR"
and \fB-scr_parms\fR does not work or is too confusing.
.IP
The listed keysyms can be numeric or the keysym
names in the <X11/keysymdef.h> header file or from the
.IR xev (1)
program. Example: "\fB-scr_keys\fR \fIUp,Down,Return\fR".
One probably wants to have application specific lists
(e.g. for terminals, etc) but that is too icky to think
about for now...
.IP
If \fIlist\fR begins with the "-" character the list
is taken as an exclude list: all keysyms except those
list will be considered. The special string "builtin"
expands to an internal list of keysyms that are likely
to cause scrolls. BTW, by default modifier keys,
Shift_L, Control_R, etc, are skipped since they almost
never induce scrolling by themselves.
.PP
\fB-scr_term\fR \fIlist\fR
.IP
Yet another cosmetic kludge. Apply shell/terminal
heuristics to applications matching comma separated
list (same as for \fB-scr_skip/-scr_inc).\fR For example an
annoying transient under scroll detection is if you
hit Enter in a terminal shell with full text window,
the solid text cursor block will be scrolled up.
So for a short time there are two (or more) block
cursors on the screen. There are similar scenarios,
(e.g. an output line is duplicated).
.IP
These transients are induced by the approximation of
scroll detection (e.g. it detects the scroll, but not
the fact that the block cursor was cleared just before
the scroll). In nearly all cases these transient errors
are repaired when the true X framebuffer is consulted
by the normal polling. But they are distracting, so
what this option provides is extra "padding" near the
bottom of the terminal window: a few extra lines near
the bottom will not be scrolled, but rather updated
from the actual X framebuffer. This usually reduces
the annoying artifacts. Use "none" to disable.
Default: "term"
.PP
\fB-scr_keyrepeat\fR \fIlo-hi\fR
.IP
If a key is held down (or otherwise repeats rapidly) and
this induces a rapid sequence of scrolls (e.g. holding
down an Arrow key) the "scrollcopyrect" detection
and overhead may not be able to keep up. A time per
single scroll estimate is performed and if that estimate
predicts a sustainable scrollrate of keys per second
between "lo" and "hi" then repeated keys will be
DISCARDED to maintain the scrollrate. For example your
key autorepeat may be 25 keys/sec, but for a large
window or slow link only 8 scrolls per second can be
sustained, then roughly 2 out of every 3 repeated keys
will be discarded during this period. Default: "4-20"
.PP
\fB-scr_parms\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
Set various parameters for the scrollcopyrect mode.
The format is similar to that for \fB-wireframe\fR and packed
with lots of parameters:
.IP
Format: T+B+L+R,t1+t2+t3,s1+s2+s3+s4+s5
Default: 0+64+32+32,0.02+0.10+0.9,0.03+0.06+0.5+0.1+5.0
.IP
If you leave nothing between commas: ",," the default
value is used. If you don't specify enough commas,
the trailing parameters are set to their defaults.
.IP
"T+B+L+R" indicates four integers for how close in
pixels the pointer has to be from the Top, Bottom, Left,
or Right edges of the window to consider scrollcopyrect.
If \fB-wireframe\fR overlaps it takes precedence. This is a
speedup to quickly exclude a window from being watched
for scrollcopyrect: set them all to zero to not try
the speedup (things like selecting text will likely
be slower).
.IP
"t1+t2+t3" specify three floating point times in
seconds that apply to scrollcopyrect detection with
*Keystroke* input: t1 is how long to wait after a key
is pressed for the first scroll, t2 is how long to keep
looking after a Keystroke scroll for more scrolls.
t3 is how frequently to try to update surrounding
scrollbars outside of the scrolling area (0.0 to
disable)
.IP
"s1+s2+s3+s4+s5" specify five floating point times
in seconds that apply to scrollcopyrect detection with
*Mouse* input: s1 is how long to wait after a mouse
button is pressed for the first scroll, s2 is how long
to keep waiting for additional scrolls after the first
Mouse scroll was detected. s3 is how frequently to
try to update surrounding scrollbars outside of the
scrolling area (0.0 to disable). s4 is how long to
buffer pointer motion (to try to get fewer, bigger
mouse scrolls). s5 is the maximum time to spend just
updating the scroll window without updating the rest
of the screen.
.PP
\fB-fixscreen\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
Periodically "repair" the screen based on settings
in \fIstring\fR. Hopefully you won't need this option,
it is intended for cases when the \fB-scrollcopyrect\fR or
\fB-wirecopyrect\fR features leave too many painting errors,
but it can be used for any scenario. This option
periodically performs costly operations and so
interactive response may be reduced when it is on.
You can use 3 Alt_L's (the Left "Alt" key) taps in
a row (as described under \fB-scrollcopyrect)\fR instead to
manually request a screen repaint when it is needed.
.IP
\fIstring\fR is a comma separated list of one or more of
the following: "V=t", "C=t", "X=t", and "8=t".
In these "t" stands for a time in seconds (it is
a floating point even though one should usually use
values > 2 to avoid wasting resources). V sets how
frequently the entire screen should be sent to viewers
(it is like the 3 Alt_L's). C sets how long to wait
after a CopyRect to repaint the full screen. X sets
how frequently to reread the full X11 framebuffer from
the X server and push it out to connected viewers.
Use of X should be rare, please report a bug if you
find you need it. 8= applies only for \fB-8to24\fR mode: it
sets how often the non-default visual regions of the
screen (e.g. 8bpp windows) are refreshed. Examples:
\fB-fixscreen\fR V=10 \fB-fixscreen\fR C=10
.PP
\fB-debug_scroll\fR
.IP
Turn on debugging info printout for the scroll
heuristics. "\fB-ds\fR" is an alias. Specify it multiple
times for more output.
.PP
\fB-noxrecord\fR
.IP
Disable any use of the RECORD extension. This is
currently used by the \fB-scrollcopyrect\fR scheme and to
monitor X server grabs.
.PP
\fB-grab_buster,\fR \fB-nograb_buster\fR
.IP
Some of the use of the RECORD extension can leave a
tiny window for XGrabServer deadlock. This is only if
the whole-server grabbing application expects mouse or
keyboard input before releasing the grab. It is usually
a window manager that does this. x11vnc takes care to
avoid the the problem, but if caught x11vnc will freeze.
Without \fB-grab_buster,\fR the only solution is to go the
physical display and give it some input to satisfy the
grabbing app. Or manually kill and restart the window
manager if that is feasible. With \fB-grab_buster,\fR x11vnc
will fork a helper thread and if x11vnc appears to be
stuck in a grab after a period of time (20-30 sec) then
it will inject some user input: button clicks, Escape,
mouse motion, etc to try to break the grab. If you
experience a lot of grab deadlock, please report a bug.
.PP
\fB-debug_grabs\fR
.IP
Turn on debugging info printout with respect to
XGrabServer() deadlock for \fB-scrollcopyrect__mode_.\fR
.PP
\fB-debug_sel\fR
.IP
Turn on debugging info printout with respect to
PRIMARY, CLIPBOARD, and CUTBUFFER0 selections.
.PP
\fB-pointer_mode\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
Various pointer motion update schemes. "\fB-pm\fR" is
an alias. The problem is pointer motion can cause
rapid changes on the screen: consider the rapid
changes when you drag a large window around opaquely.
Neither x11vnc's screen polling and vnc compression
routines nor the bandwidth to the vncviewers can keep
up these rapid screen changes: everything will bog down
when dragging or scrolling. So a scheme has to be used
to "eat" much of that pointer input before re-polling
the screen and sending out framebuffer updates. The
mode number \fIn\fR can be 0 to 4 and selects one of
the schemes desribed below.
.IP
Note that the \fB-wireframe\fR and \fB-scrollcopyrect__mode_s\fR
complement \fB-pointer_mode\fR by detecting (and improving)
certain periods of "rapid screen change".
.IP
n=0: does the same as \fB-nodragging.\fR (all screen polling
is suspended if a mouse button is pressed.)
.IP
n=1: was the original scheme used to about Jan 2004:
it basically just skips \fB-input_skip\fR keyboard or pointer
events before repolling the screen.
.IP
n=2 is an improved scheme: by watching the current rate
of input events it tries to detect if it should try to
"eat" additional pointer events before continuing.
.IP
n=3 is basically a dynamic \fB-nodragging\fR mode: it detects
when the mouse motion has paused and then refreshes
the display.
.IP
n=4 attempts to measures network rates and latency,
the video card read rate, and how many tiles have been
changed on the screen. From this, it aggressively tries
to push screen "frames" when it decides it has enough
resources to do so. NOT FINISHED.
.IP
The default n is 2. Note that modes 2, 3, 4 will skip
\fB-input_skip\fR keyboard events (but it will not count
pointer events). Also note that these modes are not
available in \fB-threads\fR mode which has its own pointer
event handling mechanism.
.IP
To try out the different pointer modes to see which
one gives the best response for your usage, it is
convenient to use the remote control function, for
example "x11vnc \fB-R\fR pm:4" or the tcl/tk gui (Tuning ->
pointer_mode -> n).
.PP
\fB-input_skip\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
For the pointer handling when non-threaded: try to
read n user input events before scanning display. n < 0
means to act as though there is always user input.
Default: 10
.PP
\fB-allinput\fR
.IP
Have x11vnc read and process all available client input
before proceeding.
.PP
\fB-speeds\fR \fIrd,bw,lat\fR
.IP
x11vnc tries to estimate some speed parameters that
are used to optimize scheduling (e.g. \fB-pointer_mode\fR
4, \fB-wireframe,\fR \fB-scrollcopyrect)\fR and other things.
Use the \fB-speeds\fR option to set these manually.
The triple \fIrd,bw,lat\fR corresponds to video h/w
read rate in MB/sec, network bandwidth to clients in
KB/sec, and network latency to clients in milliseconds,
respectively. If a value is left blank, e.g. "-speeds
,100,15", then the internal scheme is used to estimate
the empty value(s).
.IP
Typical PC video cards have read rates of 5-10 MB/sec.
If the framebuffer is in main memory instead of video
h/w (e.g. SunRay, shadowfb, dummy driver, Xvfb), the
read rate may be much faster. "x11perf \fB-getimage500"\fR
can be used to get a lower bound (remember to factor
in the bytes per pixel). It is up to you to estimate
the network bandwith and latency to clients. For the
latency the
.IR ping (1)
command can be used.
.IP
For convenience there are some aliases provided,
e.g. "\fB-speeds\fR \fImodem\fR". The aliases are: "modem" for
6,4,200; "dsl" for 6,100,50; and "lan" for 6,5000,1
.PP
\fB-wmdt\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
For some features, e.g. \fB-wireframe\fR and \fB-scrollcopyrect,\fR
x11vnc has to work around issues for certain window
managers or desktops (currently kde and xfce).
By default it tries to guess which one, but it can
guess incorrectly. Use this option to indicate which
wm/dt. \fIstring\fR can be "gnome", "kde", "cde",
"xfce", or "root" (classic X wm). Anything else
is interpreted as "root".
.PP
\fB-debug_pointer\fR
.IP
Print debugging output for every pointer event.
.PP
\fB-debug_keyboard\fR
.IP
Print debugging output for every keyboard event.
.PP
Same as \fB-dp\fR and \fB-dk,\fR respectively. Use multiple
times for more output.
.PP
\fB-defer\fR \fItime\fR
.IP
Time in ms to delay sending updates to connected clients
(deferUpdateTime) Default: 20
.PP
\fB-wait\fR \fItime\fR
.IP
Time in ms to pause between screen polls. Used to cut
down on load. Default: 20
.PP
\fB-extra_fbur\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
Perform extra FrameBufferUpdateRequests checks to
try to be in better sync with the client's requests.
What this does is perform extra polls of the client
socket at critical times (before '-defer' and '-wait'
calls.) The default is n=1. Set to a larger number to
insert more checks or set to n=0 to disable. A downside
of these extra calls is that more mouse input may be
processed than desired.
.PP
\fB-wait_ui\fR \fIfactor\fR
.IP
Factor by which to cut the \fB-wait\fR time if there
has been recent user input (pointer or keyboard).
Improves response, but increases the load whenever you
are moving the mouse or typing. Default: 2.00
.PP
\fB-setdefer\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
When the \fB-wait_ui\fR mechanism cuts down the wait time ms,
set the defer time to the same ms value. n=1 to enable,
0 to disable, and -1 to set defer to 0 (no delay).
Similarly, 2 and -2 indicate 'urgent_update' mode should
be used to push the updates even sooner. Default: 1
.PP
\fB-nowait_bog\fR
.IP
Do not detect if the screen polling is "bogging down"
and sleep more. Some activities with no user input can
slow things down a lot: consider a large terminal window
with a long build running in it continuously streaming
text output. By default x11vnc will try to detect this
(3 screen polls in a row each longer than 0.25 sec with
no user input), and sleep up to 1.5 secs to let things
"catch up". Use this option to disable that detection.
.PP
\fB-slow_fb\fR \fItime\fR
.IP
Floating point time in seconds to delay all screen
polling. For special purpose usage where a low frame
rate is acceptable and desirable, but you want the
user input processed at the normal rate so you cannot
use \fB-wait.\fR
.PP
\fB-xrefresh\fR \fItime\fR
.IP
Floating point time in seconds to indicate how often to
do the equivalent of
.IR xrefresh (1)
to force all windows
(in the viewable area if \fB-id,\fR \fB-sid,\fR or \fB-clip\fR is used)
to repaint themselves. Use this only if applications
misbehave by not repainting themselves properly.
See also \fB-noxdamage.\fR
.PP
\fB-nap,\fR \fB-nonap\fR
.IP
Monitor activity and if it is low take longer naps
between screen polls to really cut down load when idle.
Default: take naps
.PP
\fB-sb\fR \fItime\fR
.IP
Time in seconds after NO activity (e.g. screen blank)
to really throttle down the screen polls (i.e. sleep
for about 1.5 secs). Use 0 to disable. Default: 60
.PP
\fB-readtimeout\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
Set libvncserver rfbMaxClientWait to n seconds. On
slow links that take a long time to paint the first
screen libvncserver may hit the timeout and drop the
connection. Default: 20 seconds.
.PP
\fB-ping\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
Send a 1x1 framebuffer update to all clients every n
seconds (e.g. to try to keep a network connection alive)
.PP
\fB-nofbpm,\fR \fB-fbpm\fR
.IP
If the system supports the FBPM (Frame Buffer Power
Management) extension (i.e. some Sun systems), then
prevent the video h/w from going into a reduced power
state when VNC clients are connected.
.IP
FBPM capable video h/w save energy when the workstation
is idle by going into low power states (similar to DPMS
for monitors). This interferes with x11vnc's polling
of the framebuffer data.
.IP
"\fB-nofbpm\fR" means prevent FBPM low power states whenever
VNC clients are connected, while "\fB-fbpm\fR" means to not
monitor the FBPM state at all. See the
.IR xset (1)
manpage
for details. \fB-nofbpm\fR is basically the same as running
"xset fbpm force on" periodically. Default: \fB-fbpm\fR
.PP
\fB-nodpms,\fR \fB-dpms\fR
.IP
If the system supports the DPMS (Display Power Management
Signaling) extension, then prevent the monitor from
going into a reduced power state when VNC clients
are connected.
.IP
DPMS reduced power monitor states are a good thing
and you normally want the power down to take place
(usually x11vnc has no problem exporting the display in
this state). You probably only want to use "\fB-nodpms\fR"
to work around problems with Screen Savers kicking
on in DPMS low power states. There is known problem
with kdesktop_lock on KDE where the screen saver keeps
kicking in every time user input stops for a second
or two. Specifying "\fB-nodpms\fR" works around it.
.IP
"\fB-nodpms\fR" means prevent DPMS low power states whenever
VNC clients are connected, while "\fB-dpms\fR" means to not
monitor the DPMS state at all. See the
.IR xset (1)
manpage
for details. \fB-nodpms\fR is basically the same as running
"xset dpms force on" periodically. Default: \fB-dpms\fR
.PP
\fB-forcedpms\fR
.IP
If the system supports the DPMS (Display Power
Management Signaling) extension, then try to keep the
monitor in a powered off state. This is to prevent
nosey people at the physical display from viewing what
is on the screen. Be sure to lock the screen before
disconnecting.
.IP
This method is far from bullet proof, e.g. suppose
someone attaches a non-DPMS monitor, or loads the
machine so that there is a gap of time before x11vnc
restores the powered off state? On many machines if
he floods it with keyboard and mouse input he can see
flashes of what is on the screen before the DPMS off
state is reestablished. For this to work securely
there would need to be support in the X server to do
this exactly rather than approximately with DPMS.
.PP
\fB-clientdpms\fR
.IP
As \fB-forcedpms\fR but only when VNC clients are connected.
.PP
\fB-noserverdpms\fR
.IP
The UltraVNC ServerInput extension is supported.
This allows the VNC viewer to click a button that will
cause the server (x11vnc) to try to disable keyboard
and mouse input at the physical display and put the
monitor in dpms powered off state. Use this option to
skip powering off the monitor.
.PP
\fB-noultraext\fR
.IP
Disable the following UltraVNC extensions: SingleWindow
and ServerInput. The others managed by libvncserver
(textchat, 1/n scaling, rfbEncodingUltra) are not.
.PP
\fB-chatwindow\fR
.IP
Place a local UltraVNC chat window on the X11 display
that x11vnc is polling. That way the person on the VNC
viewer-side can chat with the person at the physical
X11 console. (e.g. helpdesk w/o telephone)
.IP
For this to work the SSVNC package (version 1.0.21 or
later) MUST BE installed on the system where x11vnc runs
and the 'ssvnc' command must be available in $PATH.
The ssvncviewer is used as a chat window helper.
See http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/ssvnc.html
.IP
This option implies '-rfbversion 3.6' so as to trick
UltraVNC viewers, otherwise they assume chat is not
available. To specify a different rfbversion, place
it after the \fB-chatwindow\fR option on the cmdline.
.IP
See also the remote control 'chaton' and 'chatoff'
actions. These can also be set from the tkx11vnc GUI.
.PP
\fB-noxdamage\fR
.IP
Do not use the X DAMAGE extension to detect framebuffer
changes even if it is available. Use \fB-xdamage\fR if your
default is to have it off.
.IP
x11vnc's use of the DAMAGE extension: 1) significantly
reduces the load when the screen is not changing much,
and 2) detects changed areas (small ones by default)
more quickly.
.IP
Currently the DAMAGE extension is overly conservative
and often reports large areas (e.g. a whole terminal
or browser window) as damaged even though the actual
changed region is much smaller (sometimes just a few
pixels). So heuristics were introduced to skip large
areas and use the damage rectangles only as "hints"
for the traditional scanline polling. The following
tuning parameters are introduced to adjust this
behavior:
.PP
\fB-xd_area\fR \fIA\fR
.IP
Set the largest DAMAGE rectangle area \fIA\fR (in
pixels: width * height) to trust as truly damaged:
the rectangle will be copied from the framebuffer
(slow) no matter what. Set to zero to trust *all*
rectangles. Default: 20000
.PP
\fB-xd_mem\fR \fIf\fR
.IP
Set how long DAMAGE rectangles should be "remembered",
\fIf\fR is a floating point number and is in units of the
scanline repeat cycle time (32 iterations). The default
(1.0) should give no painting problems. Increase it if
there are problems or decrease it to live on the edge
(perhaps useful on a slow machine).
.PP
\fB-sigpipe\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
Broken pipe (SIGPIPE) handling. \fIstring\fR can be
"ignore" or "exit". For "ignore" libvncserver
will handle the abrupt loss of a client and continue,
for "exit" x11vnc will cleanup and exit at the 1st
broken connection.
.IP
This option is not really needed since libvncserver
is doing the correct thing now for quite some time.
However, for convenience you can use it to ignore other
signals, e.g. "\fB-sigpipe\fR \fIignore:HUP,INT,TERM\fR" in case
that would be useful for some sort of application.
You can also put "exit:.." in the list to have x11vnc
cleanup on the listed signals. "\fB-sig\fR" is an alias
for this option if you don't like the 'pipe'. Example:
\fB-sig\fR ignore:INT,TERM,exit:USR1
.PP
\fB-threads,\fR \fB-nothreads\fR
.IP
Whether or not to use the threaded libvncserver
algorithm [rfbRunEventLoop] if libpthread is available.
In this mode new threads (one for input and one
for output) are created to handle each new client.
Default: \fB-nothreads.\fR
.IP
Thread stability is much improved in version 0.9.8.
.IP
Multiple clients in threaded mode should be stable
for the ZRLE encoding on all platforms. The Tight and
Zlib encodings are currently only stable on Linux for
multiple clients. Compile with \fB-DTLS=__thread\fR if your
OS and compiler and linker support it.
.IP
For resizes (randr, etc.) set this env. var. to the number
of milliseconds to sleep: X11VNC_THREADS_NEW_FB_SLEEP
at various places in the do_new_fb() action. This is to
let various activities settle. Default is about 500ms.
.IP
Multiple clients in threaded mode could yield better
performance for 'class-room' broadcasting usage; also in
\fB-appshare\fR broadcast mode. See also the \fB-reflect\fR option.
.PP
\fB-fs\fR \fIf\fR
.IP
If the fraction of changed tiles in a poll is greater
than f, the whole screen is updated. Default: 0.75
.PP
\fB-gaps\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
Heuristic to fill in gaps in rows or cols of n or
less tiles. Used to improve text paging. Default: 4
.PP
\fB-grow\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
Heuristic to grow islands of changed tiles n or wider
by checking the tile near the boundary. Default: 3
.PP
\fB-fuzz\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
Tolerance in pixels to mark a tiles edges as changed.
Default: 2
.PP
\fB-debug_tiles\fR
.IP
Print debugging output for tiles, fb updates, etc.
.PP
\fB-snapfb\fR
.IP
Instead of polling the X display framebuffer (fb)
for changes, periodically copy all of X display fb
into main memory and examine that copy for changes.
(This setting also applies for non-X \fB-rawfb\fR modes).
Under some circumstances this will improve interactive
response, or at least make things look smoother, but in
others (most!) it will make the response worse. If the
video h/w fb is such that reading small tiles is very
slow this mode could help. To keep the "framerate"
up the screen size x bpp cannot be too large. Note that
this mode is very wasteful of memory I/O resources
(it makes full screen copies even if nothing changes).
It may be of use in video capture-like applications,
webcams, or where window tearing is a problem.
.PP
\fB-rawfb\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
Instead of polling X, poll the memory object specified
in \fIstring\fR.
.IP
For file polling, to memory map
.IR mmap (2)
a file use:
"map:/path/to/a/file@WxHxB", with framebuffer Width,
Height, and Bits per pixel. "mmap:..." is the
same.
.IP
If there is trouble with mmap, use "file:/..."
for slower
.IR lseek (2)
based reading.
.IP
Use "snap:..." to imply \fB-snapfb\fR mode and the "file:"
access (this is for unseekable devices that only provide
the fb all at once, e.g. a video camera provides the
whole frame).
.IP
For shared memory segments string is of the form:
"shm:N@WxHxB" which specifies a shmid N and with
WxHxB as above. See
.IR shmat (1)
and
.IR ipcs (1)
.IP
If you do not supply a type "map" is assumed if
the file exists (see the next paragraphs for some
exceptions to this.)
.IP
If string is "setup:cmd", then the command "cmd"
is run and the first line from it is read and used
as \fIstring\fR. This allows initializing the device,
determining WxHxB, etc. These are often done as root
so take care.
.IP
If the string begins with "video", see the VIDEO4LINUX
discussion below where the device may be queried for
(and possibly set) the framebuffer parameters.
.IP
If the string begins with "console", "/dev/fb",
"fb", or "vt", see the LINUX CONSOLE discussion
below where the framebuffer device is opened and
keystrokes (and possibly mouse events) are inserted
into the console.
.IP
If the string begins with "vnc", see the VNC HOST
discussion below where the framebuffer is taken as that
of another remote VNC server.
.IP
Optional suffixes are ":R/G/B" and "+O" to specify
red, green, and blue masks (in hex) and an offset into
the memory object. If the masks are not provided x11vnc
guesses them based on the bpp (if the colors look wrong,
you need to provide the masks.)
.IP
Another optional suffix is the Bytes Per Line which in
some cases is not WxB/8. Specify it as WxHxB-BPL
e.g. 800x600x16-2048. This could be a normal width
1024 at 16bpp fb, but only width 800 shows up.
.IP
So the full format is: mode:file@WxHxB:R/G/B+O-BPL
.IP
Examples:
.IP
\fB-rawfb\fR shm:210337933@800x600x32:ff/ff00/ff0000
.IP
\fB-rawfb\fR map:/dev/fb0@1024x768x32
.IP
\fB-rawfb\fR map:/tmp/Xvfb_screen0@640x480x8+3232
.IP
\fB-rawfb\fR file:/tmp/my.pnm@250x200x24+37
.IP
\fB-rawfb\fR file:/dev/urandom@128x128x8
\fB-rawfb\fR snap:/dev/video0@320x240x24 \fB-24to32\fR
\fB-rawfb\fR video0
\fB-rawfb\fR video \fB-pipeinput\fR VID
\fB-rawfb\fR console
\fB-rawfb\fR vt2
\fB-rawfb\fR vnc:somehost:0
.IP
(see
.IR ipcs (1)
and
.IR fbset (1)
for the first two examples)
.IP
In general all user input is discarded by default (see
the \fB-pipeinput\fR option for how to use a helper program
to insert). Most of the X11 (screen, keyboard, mouse)
options do not make sense and many will cause this
mode to crash, so please think twice before setting or
changing them in a running x11vnc.
.IP
If you DO NOT want x11vnc to close the X DISPLAY in
rawfb mode, prepend a "+" e.g. +file:/dev/fb0...
Keeping the display open enables the default
remote-control channel, which could be useful.
Alternatively, if you specify \fB-noviewonly,\fR then the
mouse and keyboard input are STILL sent to the X
display, this usage should be very rare, i.e. doing
something strange with /dev/fb0.
.IP
If the device is not "seekable" (e.g. webcam) try
reading it all at once in full snaps via the "snap:"
mode (note: this is a resource hog). If you are using
file: or map: AND the device needs to be reopened for
*every* snapfb snapshot, set the environment variable:
SNAPFB_RAWFB_RESET=1 as well.
.IP
If you want x11vnc to dynamically transform a 24bpp
rawfb to 32bpp (note that this will be slower) also
supply the \fB-24to32\fR option. This would be useful for,
say, a video camera that delivers the pixel data as
24bpp packed RGB. This is the default under "video"
mode if the bpp is 24.
.IP
Normally the bits per pixel, B, is 8, 16, or 32 (or
rarely 24), however there is also some support for
B < 8 (e.g. old graphics displays 4 bpp or 1 bpp).
In this case you certainly must supply the masks as
well: WxHxB:R/G/B. The pixels will be padded out to
8 bpp using depth 8 truecolor. The scheme currently
does not work with snap fb (ask if interested.) B=1
monochrome example: file:/dev/urandom@128x128x1:1/1/1
Some other like this are 128x128x2:3/3/3 128x128x4:7/7/7
.IP
For B < 8 framebuffers you can also set the env. var
RAWFB_CGA=1 to try a CGA mapping for B=4 (e.g. linux
vga16fb driver.) Note with low bpp and/or resolution
VGA and VGA16 modes on the Linux console one's attempt
to export them via x11vnc can often be thwarted due to
special color palettes, pixel packings, and even video
painting buffering. OTOH, often experimenting with the
RGB masks can yield something recognizable.
.IP
VIDEO4LINUX: on Linux some attempt is made to handle
video devices (webcams or TV tuners) automatically.
The idea is the WxHxB will be extracted from the
device itself. So if you do not supply "@WxHxB...
parameters x11vnc will try to determine them. It first
tries the v4l API if that support has been compiled in.
Otherwise it will run the v4l-
.IR info (1)
external program
if it is available.
.IP
The simplest examples are "\fB-rawfb\fR \fIvideo\fR" and "-rawfb
video1" which imply the device file /dev/video and
/dev/video1, respectively. You can also supply the
/dev if you like, e.g. "\fB-rawfb\fR \fI/dev/video0\fR"
.IP
Since the video capture device framebuffer usually
changes continuously (e.g. brightness fluctuations),
you may want to use the \fB-wait,\fR \fB-slow_fb,\fR or \fB-defer\fR
options to lower the "framerate" to cut down on
network VNC traffic.
.IP
A more sophisticated video device scheme allows
initializing the device's settings using:
.IP
\fB-rawfb\fR video:<settings>
.IP
The prefix could also be, as above, e.g. "video1:" to
specify the device file. The v4l API must be available
for this to work. Otherwise, you will need to try
to initialize the device with an external program,
e.g. xawtv, spcaview, and hope they persist when x11vnc
re-opens the device.
.IP
<settings> is a comma separated list of key=value pairs.
The device's brightness, color, contrast, and hue can
be set to percentages, e.g. br=80,co=50,cn=44,hu=60.
.IP
The device filename can be set too if needed (if it
does not start with "video"), e.g. fn=/dev/qcam.
.IP
The width, height and bpp of the framebuffer can be
set via, e.g., w=160,h=120,bpp=16.
.IP
Related to the bpp above, the pixel format can be set
via the fmt=XXX, where XXX can be one of: GREY, HI240,
RGB555, RGB565, RGB24, and RGB32 (with bpp 8, 8, 16, 16,
24, and 32 respectively). See http://www.linuxtv.org
for more info (V4L api).
.IP
For TV/rf tuner cards one can set the tuning mode
via tun=XXX where XXX can be one of PAL, NTSC, SECAM,
or AUTO.
.IP
One can switch the input channel by the inp=XXX setting,
where XXX is the name of the input channel (Television,
Composite1, S-Video, etc). Use the name that is in the
information about the device that is printed at startup.
.IP
For input channels with tuners (e.g. Television) one
can change which station is selected by the sta=XXX
setting. XXX is the station number. Currently only
the ntsc-cable-us (US cable) channels are built into
x11vnc. See the \fB-freqtab\fR option below to supply one
from xawtv. If XXX is greater than 500, then it is
interpreted as a raw frequency in KHz.
.IP
Example:
.IP
\fB-rawfb\fR video:br=80,w=320,h=240,fmt=RGB32,tun=NTSC,sta=47
.IP
one might need to add inp=Television too for the input
channel to be TV if the card doesn't come up by default
in that one.
.IP
Note that not all video capture devices will support
all of the above settings.
.IP
See the \fB-pipeinput\fR VID option below for a way to control
the settings through the VNC Viewer via keystrokes.
As a shortcut, if the string begins "Video.." instead
of "video.." then \fB-pipeinput\fR VID is implied.
.IP
As above, if you specify a "@WxHxB..." after the
<settings> string they are used verbatim: the device
is not queried for the current values. Otherwise the
device will be queried.
.IP
LINUX CONSOLE: The following describes some ways to
view and possibly interact with the Linux text/graphics
console (i.e. not X11 XFree86/Xorg)
.IP
Note: If the libvncserver LinuxVNC program is on your
system you may want to use that instead of the following
method because it will be faster and more accurate
for the Linux text console and includes mouse support.
There is, however, the basic LinuxVNC functionality in
x11vnc if you replace "console" with "vt" in the
examples below.
.IP
If the rawfb string begins with "console" the
framebuffer device /dev/fb0 is opened and /dev/tty0 is
opened too. The latter is used to inject keystrokes
(not all are supported, but the basic ones are).
You will need to be root to inject keystrokes, but
not necessarily to open /dev/fb0. /dev/tty0 refers to
the active VT, to indicate one explicitly, use, e.g.,
"console2" for /dev/tty2, etc. by indicating the
specific VT number.
.IP
For the Linux framebuffer device, /dev/fb0, (fb1,
etc) to be enabled the appropriate kernel drivers must
be loaded. E.g. vesafb or vga16fb and also by setting
the boot parameter vga=0x301 (or 0x314, 0x317, etc.)
(The vga=... method is the preferred way; set your
machines up that way.) Otherwise there will be a
\'No such device' error. You can also load a Linux
framebuffer driver specific to your make of video card
for more functionality. Once the machine is booted one
can often 'modprobe' the fb driver as root to obtain
a framebuffer device.
.IP
If you cannot get /dev/fb0 working on Linux, try
using the LinuxVNC emulation mode by "\fB-rawfb\fR \fIvtN\fR"
where N = 1, ... 6 is the Linux Virtual Terminal (aka
virtual console) you wish to view, e.g. "\fB-rawfb\fR \fIvt2\fR".
Unlike /dev/fb mode, it need not be the active Virtual
Terminal. Note that this mode can only show text and
not graphics. x11vnc polls the text in /dev/vcsaN
.IP
Set the env. var. RAWFB_VCSA_BW=1 to disable colors in
the "vtN" mode (i.e. black and white only.) If you
do not prefer the default 16bpp set RAWFB_VCSA_BPP to
8 or 32. If you need to tweak the rawfb parameters by
using the 'console_guess' string printed at startup,
be sure to indicate the snap: method.
.IP
uinput: If the Linux version appears to be 2.6 or
later and the "uinput" module appears to be present
(modprobe uinput), then the uinput method will be used
instead of /dev/ttyN. uinput allows insertion of BOTH
keystrokes and mouse input and so it preferred when
accessing graphical (e.g. QT-embedded) linux console
apps. See \fB-pipeinput\fR UINPUT below for more information
on this mode; you will have to use \fB-pipeinput\fR if you
want to tweak any UINPUT parameters. You may also want
to also use the \fB-nodragging\fR and \fB-cursor\fR none options.
Use "console0", etc or \fB-pipeinput\fR CONSOLE to force
the /dev/ttyN method.
.IP
Note you can change the Linux VT remotely using the
.IR chvt (1)
command to make the one you want be the active
one (e.g. 'chvt 3'). Sometimes switching out and back
corrects the framebuffer's graphics state. For the
"\fB-rawfb\fR \fIvtN\fR" mode there is no need to switch the VT's.
.IP
To skip input injecting entirely use "consolex"
or "vtx".
.IP
The string "/dev/fb0" (1, etc.) can be used instead
of "console". This can be used to specify a different
framebuffer device, e.g. /dev/fb1. As a shortcut the
"/dev/" can be dropped. If the name is something
nonstandard, use "console:/dev/foofb"
.IP
If you do not want x11vnc to guess the framebuffer's
WxHxB and masks automatically (sometimes the kernel
gives incorrect information), specify them with a @WxHxB
(and optional :R/G/B masks) at the end of the string.
.IP
Examples:
\fB-rawfb\fR console
\fB-rawfb\fR /dev/fb0 (same)
\fB-rawfb\fR console3 (force /dev/tty3)
\fB-rawfb\fR consolex (no keystrokes or mouse)
\fB-rawfb\fR console:/dev/nonstd
\fB-rawfb\fR console \fB-pipeinput\fR UINPUT:accel=4.0
\fB-rawfb\fR vt3 (/dev/tty3 w/o /dev/fb0)
.IP
VNC HOST: if the \fB-rawfb\fR string is of the form
"vnc:host:N" then the VNC display "N" on the remote
VNC server "host" is connected to (i.e. x11vnc acts as
a VNC client itself) and that framebuffer is exported.
.IP
This mode is really only of use if you are trying
to improve performance in the case of many (e.g. >
10) simultaneous VNC viewers, and you try a divide
and conquer scheme to reduce bandwidth and improve
responsiveness.
.IP
For example, if there will be 64 simultaneous VNC
viewers this can lead to a lot of redundant VNC traffic
to and from the server host:N, extra CPU usage,
and all viewers response can be reduced by having
to wait for writes to the slowest client to finish.
However, if you set up 8 reflectors/repeaters started
with option \fB-rawfb\fR vnc:host:N, then there are only
8 connections to host:N. Each repeater then handles
8 vnc viewer connections thereby spreading the load
around. In classroom broadcast usage, try to put the
repeaters on different switches. This mode is the same
as \fB-reflect\fR host:N. Replace "host:N" by "listen"
or "listen:port" for a reverse connection.
.IP
Overall performance will not be as good as a single
direct connection because, among other things,
there is an additional level of framebuffer polling
and pointer motion can still induce many changes per
second that must be propagated. Tip: if the remote VNC
is x11vnc doing wireframing, or an X display that does
wireframing that gives much better response than opaque
window dragging. Consider the \fB-nodragging\fR option if
the problem is severe.
.IP
The env. var. X11VNC_REFLECT_PASSWORD can be set to
the password needed to log into the vnc host server, or
to "file:path_to_file" to indicate a file containing
the password as its first line.
.IP
The VNC HOST mode implies \fB-shared.\fR Use \fB-noshared\fR as
a subsequent cmdline option to disable sharing.
.PP
\fB-freqtab\fR \fIfile\fR
.IP
For use with "\fB-rawfb\fR \fIvideo\fR" for TV tuner devices to
specify station frequencies. Instead of using the built
in ntsc-cable-us mapping of station number to frequency,
use the data in file. For stations that are not
numeric, e.g. SE20, they are placed above the highest
numbered station in the order they are found. Example:
"\fB-freqtab\fR \fI/usr/X11R6/share/xawtv/europe-west.list\fR"
You can make your own freqtab by copying the xawtv
format.
.PP
\fB-pipeinput\fR \fIcmd\fR
.IP
This option lets you supply an external command in
\fIcmd\fR that x11vnc will pipe all of the user input
events to in a simple format. In \fB-pipeinput\fR mode by
default x11vnc will not process any of the user input
events. If you prefix \fIcmd\fR with "tee:" it will
both send them to the pipe command and process them.
For a description of the format run "-pipeinput
tee:/bin/cat". Another prefix is "reopen" which
means to reopen pipe if it exits. Separate multiple
prefixes with commas.
.IP
In combination with \fB-rawfb\fR one might be able to
do amusing things (e.g. control non-X devices).
To facilitate this, if \fB-rawfb\fR is in effect then the
value is stored in X11VNC_RAWFB_STR for the pipe command
to use if it wants. Do 'env | grep X11VNC' for more.
.IP
Built-in pipeinput modes (no external program required):
.IP
If cmd is "VID" and you are using the \fB-rawfb\fR for a
video capture device, then an internal list of keyboard
mappings is used to set parameters of the video.
The mappings are:
.IP
"B" and "b" adjust the brightness up and down.
"H" and "h" adjust the hue.
"C" and "c" adjust the colour.
"N" and "n" adjust the contrast.
"S" and "s" adjust the size of the capture screen.
"I" and "i" cycle through input channels.
Up and Down arrows adjust the station (if a tuner)
F1, F2, ..., F6 will switch the video capture pixel
format to HI240, RGB565, RGB24, RGB32, RGB555, and
GREY respectively. See \fB-rawfb\fR video for details.
.IP
If cmd is "CONSOLE" or "CONSOLEn" where n
is a Linux console number, then the linux console
keystroke insertion to /dev/ttyN (see \fB-rawfb\fR console)
is performed.
.IP
If cmd begins with "UINPUT" then the Linux uinput
module is used to insert both keystroke and mouse events
to the Linux console (see \fB-rawfb\fR above). This usually
is the /dev/input/uinput device file (you may need to
create it with "mknod /dev/input/uinput c 10 223"
and insert the module with "modprobe uinput".
.IP
The UINPUT mode currently only does US keyboards (a
scan code option may be added), and not all keysyms
are supported.
.IP
You may want to use the options \fB-cursor\fR none and
\fB-nodragging\fR in this mode.
.IP
Additional tuning options may be supplied via:
UINPUT:opt1,opt2,... (a comma separated list). If an
option begins with "/" it is taken as the uinput
device file.
.IP
Which uinput is injected can be controlled by an option
string made of the characters "K", "M", and "B"
(see the \fB-input\fR option), e.g. "KM" allows keystroke
and motion but not button clicks.
.IP
A UINPUT option of the form: accel=f, or accel=fx+fy
sets the mouse motion "acceleration". This is used
to correct raw mouse relative motion into how much the
application cursor moves (x11vnc has no control over,
or knowledge of how the windowing application interprets
the raw mouse motions). Typically the acceleration
for an X display is 2 (see xset "m" option). "f"
is a floating point number, e.g. 3.0. Use "fx+fy"
if you need to supply different corrections for x and y.
.IP
Note: the default acceleration is 2.0 since it seems
both X and qt-embedded often (but not always) use
this value.
.IP
Even with a correct accel setting the mouse position
will get out of sync (probably due to a mouse
"threshold" setting where the acceleration doe not
apply, set
.IR xset (1)
). The option reset=N sets the
number of ms (default 150) after which the cursor is
attempted to be reset (by forcing the mouse to (0,
0) via small increments and then back out to (x, y)
in 1 jump), This correction seems to be needed but can
cause jerkiness or unexpected behavior with menus, etc.
Use reset=0 to disable.
.IP
If the uinput device has an absolute pointer (as opposed
to a normal mouse that is a relative pointer) you can
specify the option "abs". Note that a touchpad
on a laptop is an absolute device to some degree.
This (usually) avoids all the problems with mouse
acceleration. If x11vnc has trouble deducing the size
of the device, use "abs=WxH". Furthermore, if the
device is a touchscreen (assumed to have an absolute
pointer) use "touch" or "touch=WxH".
.IP
If you set the env. var X11VNC_UINPUT_THRESHOLDS then
the thresh=n mode will be enabled. It is currently
not working well. If |dx| <= thresh and |dy| < thresh
no acceleration is applied. Use "thresh=+n" |dx| +
|dy| < thresh to be used instead (X11?)
.IP
Example:
\fB-pipeinput\fR UINPUT:accel=4.0 \fB-cursor\fR none
.IP
You can also set the env. var X11VNC_UINPUT_DEBUG=1 or
higher to get debugging output for UINPUT mode.
.PP
\fB-macnodim\fR
.IP
For the native MacOSX server, disable dimming.
.PP
\fB-macnosleep\fR
.IP
For the native MacOSX server, disable display sleep.
.PP
\fB-macnosaver\fR
.IP
For the native MacOSX server, disable screensaver.
.PP
\fB-macnowait\fR
.IP
For the native MacOSX server, do not wait for the
user to switch back to his display.
.PP
\fB-macwheel\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
For the native MacOSX server, set the mouse wheel
speed to n (default 5).
.PP
\fB-macnoswap\fR
.IP
For the native MacOSX server, do not swap mouse
buttons 2 and 3.
.PP
\fB-macnoresize\fR
.IP
For the native MacOSX server, do not resize or reset
the framebuffer even if it is detected that the screen
resolution or depth has changed.
.PP
\fB-maciconanim\fR \fIn\fR
.IP
For the native MacOSX server, set n to the number
of milliseconds that the window iconify/deiconify
animation takes. In \fB-ncache\fR mode this value will be
used to skip the animation if possible. (default 400)
.PP
\fB-macmenu\fR
.IP
For the native MacOSX server, in \fB-ncache\fR client-side
caching mode, try to cache pull down menus (not perfect
because they have animated fades, etc.)
.PP
\fB-macuskbd\fR
.IP
For the native MacOSX server, use the original
keystroke insertion code based on a US keyboard.
.PP
\fB-gui\fR \fI[gui-opts]\fR
.IP
Start up a simple tcl/tk gui based on the the remote
control options \fB-remote/-query\fR described below.
Requires the "wish" program to be installed on the
machine. "gui-opts" is not required: the default
is to start up both the full gui and x11vnc with the
gui showing up on the X display in the environment
variable DISPLAY.
.IP
"gui-opts" can be a comma separated list of items.
Currently there are these types of items: 1) a gui
mode, a 2) gui "simplicity", 3) the X display the
gui should display on, 4) a "tray" or "icon" mode,
and 5) a gui geometry.
.IP
1) The gui mode can be "start", "conn", or "wait"
"start" is the default mode above and is not required.
"conn" means do not automatically start up x11vnc,
but instead just try to connect to an existing x11vnc
process. "wait" means just start the gui and nothing
else (you will later instruct the gui to start x11vnc
or connect to an existing one.)
.IP
2) The gui simplicity is off by default (a power-user
gui with all options is presented) To start with
something less daunting supply the string "simple"
("ez" is an alias for this). Once the gui is
started you can toggle between the two with "Misc ->
simple_gui".
.IP
3) Note the possible confusion regarding the potentially
two different X displays: x11vnc polls one, but you
may want the gui to appear on another. For example, if
you ssh in and x11vnc is not running yet you may want
the gui to come back to you via your ssh redirected X
display (e.g. localhost:10).
.IP
If you do not specify a gui X display in "gui-opts"
then the DISPLAY environment variable and \fB-display\fR
option are tried (in that order). Regarding the x11vnc
X display the gui will try to communication with, it
first tries \fB-display\fR and then DISPLAY. For example,
"x11vnc \fB-display\fR :0 \fB-gui\fR otherhost:0", will remote
control an x11vnc polling :0 and display the gui on
otherhost:0 The "tray/icon" mode below reverses this
preference, preferring to display on the x11vnc display.
.IP
4) When "tray" or "icon" is specified, the gui
presents itself as a small icon with behavior typical
of a "system tray" or "dock applet". The color
of the icon indicates status (connected clients) and
there is also a balloon status. Clicking on the icon
gives a menu from which properties, etc, can be set and
the full gui is available under "Advanced". To be
fully functional, the gui mode should be "start"
(the default).
.IP
Note that tray or icon mode will imply the \fB-forever\fR
x11vnc option (if the x11vnc server is started along
with the gui) unless \fB-connect\fR or \fB-connect_or_exit\fR has
been specified. So x11vnc (and the tray/icon gui)
will wait for more connections after the first client
disconnects. If you want only one viewer connection
include the \fB-once\fR option.
.IP
For "icon" the gui just a small standalone window.
For "tray" it will attempt to embed itself in the
"system tray" if possible. If "=setpass" is appended then
at startup the X11 user will be prompted to set the
VNC session password. If =<hexnumber> is appended
that icon will attempt to embed itself in the window
given by hexnumber. Use =noadvanced to disable the
full gui. (To supply more than one, use "+" sign).
E.g. \fB-gui\fR tray=setpass and \fB-gui\fR icon=0x3600028
.IP
Other modes: "full", the default and need not be
specified. "\fB-gui\fR \fInone\fR", do not show a gui, useful
to override a ~/.x11vncrc setting, etc.
.IP
5) When "geom=+X+Y" is specified, that geometry
is passed to the gui toplevel. This is the icon in
icon/tray mode, or the full gui otherwise. You can
also specify width and height, i.e. WxH+X+Y, but it
is not recommended. In "tray" mode the geometry is
ignored unless the system tray manager does not seem
to be running. One could imagine using something like
"\fB-gui\fR \fItray,geom=+4000+4000\fR" with a display manager
to keep the gui invisible until someone logs in...
.IP
More icon tricks, "icon=minimal" gives an icon just
with the VNC display number. You can also set the font
with "iconfont=...". The following could be useful:
"\fB-gui\fR \fIicon=minimal,iconfont=5x8,geom=24x10+0-0\fR"
.IP
General examples of the \fB-gui\fR option: "x11vnc \fB-gui",\fR
"x11vnc \fB-gui\fR ez" "x11vnc \fB-gui\fR localhost:10",
"x11vnc \fB-gui\fR conn,host:0", "x11vnc \fB-gui\fR tray,ez"
"x11vnc \fB-gui\fR tray=setpass"
.IP
If you do not intend to start x11vnc from the gui
(i.e. just remote control an existing one), then the
gui process can run on a different machine from the
x11vnc server as long as X permissions, etc. permit
communication between the two.
.IP
FONTS: On some systems the tk fonts can be too small,
jagged, or otherwise unreadable. There are 4 env vars
you can set to be the tk font you prefer:
.IP
X11VNC_FONT_BOLD main font for menus and buttons.
X11VNC_FONT_FIXED font for fixed width text.
.IP
X11VNC_FONT_BOLD_SMALL tray icon font.
X11VNC_FONT_REG_SMALL tray icon menu font.
.IP
The last two only apply for the tray icon mode.
.IP
Here are some examples:
.IP
\fB-env\fR X11VNC_FONT_BOLD='Helvetica \fB-16\fR bold'
\fB-env\fR X11VNC_FONT_FIXED='Courier \fB-14'\fR
\fB-env\fR X11VNC_FONT_REG_SMALL='Helvetica \fB-12'\fR
.IP
You can put the lines like the above (without the
quotes) in your ~/.x11vncrc file to avoid having to
specify them on the x11vnc command line.
.PP
\fB-remote\fR \fIcommand\fR
.IP
Remotely control some aspects of an already running
x11vnc server. "\fB-R\fR" and "\fB-r\fR" are aliases for
"\fB-remote\fR". After the remote control command is
sent to the running server the 'x11vnc \fB-remote\fR ...'
command exits. You can often use the \fB-query\fR command
(see below) to see if the x11vnc server processed your
\fB-remote\fR command.
.IP
The default communication channel is that of X
properties (specifically X11VNC_REMOTE), and so this
command must be run with correct settings for DISPLAY
and possibly XAUTHORITY to connect to the X server
and set the property. Alternatively, use the \fB-display\fR
and \fB-auth\fR options to set them to the correct values.
The running server cannot use the \fB-novncconnect\fR option
because that disables the communication channel.
See below for alternate channels.
.IP
For example: 'x11vnc \fB-remote\fR stop' (which is the same as
\'x11vnc \fB-R\fR stop') will close down the x11vnc server.
\'x11vnc \fB-R\fR shared' will enable shared connections, and
\'x11vnc \fB-R\fR scale:3/4' will rescale the desktop.
.IP
To use a different name for the X11 property (e.g. to
have separate communication channels for multiple
x11vnc's on the same display) set the X11VNC_REMOTE
environment variable to the string you want, for
example: \fB-env\fR X11VNC_REMOTE=X11VNC_REMOTE_12345
Both sides of the channel must use the same unique name.
.IP
To run a bunch of commands in a sequence use something
like: x11vnc \fB-R\fR 'script:firstcmd;secondcmd;...'
.IP
Use x11vnc \fB-R\fR script:file=/path/to/file to read commands
from a file (can be multi-line and use the comment '#'
character in the normal way. The ';' separator must
still be used to separate each command.)
.IP
To not try to contact another x11vnc process and instead
just run the command (or query) directly, prefix the
command with the string "DIRECT:"
.IP
.IP
The following \fB-remote/-R\fR commands are supported:
.IP
stop terminate the server, same as "quit"
"exit" or "shutdown".
.IP
ping see if the x11vnc server responds.
return is: ans=ping:<display>
.IP
ping:mystring as above, but use your own unique string.
return is: ans=ping:mystring:<xdisplay>
.IP
blacken try to push a black fb update to all
clients (due to timings a client
could miss it). Same as "zero", also
"zero:x1,y1,x2,y2" for a rectangle.
.IP
refresh send the entire fb to all clients.
.IP
reset recreate the fb, polling memory, etc.
.IP
id:windowid set \fB-id\fR window to "windowid". empty
or "root" to go back to root window
.IP
sid:windowid set \fB-sid\fR window to "windowid"
.IP
id_cmd:cmd cmds: raise, lower, map, unmap, iconify,
move:dXdY, resize:dWdH, geom:WxH+X+Y. dX
dY, dW, and dH must have a leading "+"
or "-" e.g.: move:-30+10 resize:+20+35
also: wm_delete, wm_name:string and
icon_name:string. Also id_cmd:win=N:cmd
.IP
waitmapped wait until subwin is mapped.
.IP
nowaitmapped do not wait until subwin is mapped.
.IP
clip:WxH+X+Y set \fB-clip\fR mode to "WxH+X+Y"
.IP
flashcmap enable \fB-flashcmap\fR mode.
.IP
noflashcmap disable \fB-flashcmap\fR mode.
.IP
shiftcmap:n set \fB-shiftcmap\fR to n.
.IP
notruecolor enable \fB-notruecolor\fR mode.
.IP
truecolor disable \fB-notruecolor\fR mode.
.IP
overlay enable \fB-overlay\fR mode (if applicable).
.IP
nooverlay disable \fB-overlay\fR mode.
.IP
overlay_cursor in \fB-overlay\fR mode, enable cursor drawing.
.IP
overlay_nocursor disable cursor drawing. same as
nooverlay_cursor.
.IP
8to24 enable \fB-8to24\fR mode (if applicable).
.IP
no8to24 disable \fB-8to24\fR mode.
.IP
8to24_opts:str set the \fB-8to24\fR opts to "str".
.IP
24to32 enable \fB-24to32\fR mode (if applicable).
.IP
no24to32 disable \fB-24to32\fR mode.
.IP
visual:vis set \fB-visual\fR to "vis"
.IP
scale:frac set \fB-scale\fR to "frac"
.IP
scale_cursor:f set \fB-scale_cursor\fR to "f"
.IP
viewonly enable \fB-viewonly\fR mode.
.IP
noviewonly disable \fB-viewonly\fR mode.
.IP
shared enable \fB-shared\fR mode.
.IP
noshared disable \fB-shared\fR mode.
.IP
forever enable \fB-forever\fR mode.
.IP
noforever disable \fB-forever\fR mode.
.IP
timeout:n reset \fB-timeout\fR to n, if there are
currently no clients, exit unless one
connects in the next n secs.
.IP
tightfilexfer enable filetransfer for NEW clients.
.IP
notightfilexfer disable filetransfer for NEW clients.
.IP
ultrafilexfer enable filetransfer for clients.
.IP
noultrafilexfer disable filetransfer for clients.
.IP
rfbversion:n.m set \fB-rfbversion\fR for new clients.
.IP
http enable http client connections.
.IP
nohttp disable http client connections.
.IP
deny deny any new connections, same as "lock"
.IP
nodeny allow new connections, same as "unlock"
.IP
avahi enable avahi service advertising.
.IP
noavahi disable avahi service advertising.
.IP
mdns enable avahi service advertising.
.IP
nomdns disable avahi service advertising.
.IP
zeroconf enable avahi service advertising.
.IP
nozeroconf disable avahi service advertising.
.IP
connect:host do reverse connection to host, "host"
may be a comma separated list of hosts
or host:ports. See \fB-connect.\fR Passwords
required as with fwd connections.
See X11VNC_REVERSE_CONNECTION_NO_AUTH=1
.IP
disconnect:host disconnect any clients from "host"
same as "close:host". Use host
"all" to close all current clients.
If you know the client internal hex ID,
e.g. 0x3 (returned by "\fB-query\fR \fIclients\fR"
and RFB_CLIENT_ID) you can use that too.
.IP
proxy:host:port set reverse connection proxy (empty to
disable).
.IP
allowonce:host For the next connection only, allow
connection from "host". In \fB-ssl\fR mode
two connections are allowed (i.e. Fetch
Cert) unless X11VNC_NO_SSL_ALLOW_TWICE=1
.IP
allow:hostlist set \fB-allow\fR list to (comma separated)
"hostlist". See \fB-allow\fR and \fB-localhost.\fR
Do not use with \fB-allow\fR /path/to/file
Use "+host" to add a single host, and
use "\fB-host\fR" to delete a single host
.IP
localhost enable \fB-localhost\fR mode
.IP
nolocalhost disable \fB-localhost\fR mode
.IP
listen:str set \fB-listen\fR to str, empty to disable.
.IP
nolookup enable \fB-nolookup\fR mode.
.IP
lookup disable \fB-nolookup\fR mode.
.IP
input:str set \fB-input\fR to "str", empty to disable.
.IP
grabkbd enable \fB-grabkbd\fR mode.
.IP
nograbkbd disable \fB-grabkbd\fR mode.
.IP
grabptr enable \fB-grabptr\fR mode.
.IP
nograbptr disable \fB-grabptr\fR mode.
.IP
grabalways enable \fB-grabalways\fR mode.
.IP
nograbalways disable \fB-grabalways\fR mode.
.IP
grablocal:n set \fB-grablocal\fR to n.
.IP
client_input:str set the K, M, B \fB-input\fR on a per-client
basis. select which client as for
disconnect, e.g. client_input:host:MB
or client_input:0x2:K
.IP
accept:cmd set \fB-accept\fR "cmd" (empty to disable).
.IP
afteraccept:cmd set \fB-afteraccept\fR (empty to disable).
.IP
gone:cmd set \fB-gone\fR "cmd" (empty to disable).
.IP
noshm enable \fB-noshm\fR mode.
.IP
shm disable \fB-noshm\fR mode (i.e. use shm).
.IP
flipbyteorder enable \fB-flipbyteorder\fR mode, you may need
to set noshm for this to do something.
.IP
noflipbyteorder disable \fB-flipbyteorder\fR mode.
.IP
onetile enable \fB-onetile\fR mode. (you may need to
set shm for this to do something)
.IP
noonetile disable \fB-onetile\fR mode.
.IP
solid enable \fB-solid\fR mode
.IP
nosolid disable \fB-solid\fR mode.
.IP
solid_color:color set \fB-solid\fR color (and apply it).
.IP
blackout:str set \fB-blackout\fR "str" (empty to disable).
See \fB-blackout\fR for the form of "str"
(basically: WxH+X+Y,...)
Use "+WxH+X+Y" to append a single
rectangle use "-WxH+X+Y" to delete one
.IP
xinerama enable \fB-xinerama\fR mode. (if applicable)
.IP
noxinerama disable \fB-xinerama\fR mode.
.IP
xtrap enable \fB-xtrap\fR input mode(if applicable)
.IP
noxtrap disable \fB-xtrap\fR input mode.
.IP
xrandr enable \fB-xrandr\fR mode. (if applicable)
.IP
noxrandr disable \fB-xrandr\fR mode.
.IP
xrandr_mode:mode set the \fB-xrandr\fR mode to "mode".
.IP
rotate:mode set the \fB-rotate\fR mode to "mode".
.IP
padgeom:WxH set \fB-padgeom\fR to WxH (empty to disable)
If WxH is "force" or "do" the padded
geometry fb is immediately applied.
.IP
quiet enable \fB-quiet\fR mode.
.IP
noquiet disable \fB-quiet\fR mode.
.IP
modtweak enable \fB-modtweak\fR mode.
.IP
nomodtweak enable \fB-nomodtweak\fR mode.
.IP
xkb enable \fB-xkb\fR modtweak mode.
.IP
noxkb disable \fB-xkb\fR modtweak mode.
.IP
capslock enable \fB-capslock\fR mode.
.IP
nocapslock disable \fB-capslock\fR mode.
.IP
skip_lockkeys enable \fB-skip_lockkeys\fR mode.
.IP
noskip_lockkeys disable \fB-skip_lockkeys\fR mode.
.IP
skip_keycodes:str enable \fB-xkb\fR \fB-skip_keycodes\fR "str".
.IP
sloppy_keys enable \fB-sloppy_keys\fR mode.
.IP
nosloppy_keys disable \fB-sloppy_keys\fR mode.
.IP
skip_dups enable \fB-skip_dups\fR mode.
.IP
noskip_dups disable \fB-skip_dups\fR mode.
.IP
add_keysyms enable \fB-add_keysyms\fR mode.
.IP
noadd_keysyms stop adding keysyms. those added will
still be removed at exit.
.IP
clear_mods enable \fB-clear_mods\fR mode and clear them.
.IP
noclear_mods disable \fB-clear_mods\fR mode.
.IP
clear_keys enable \fB-clear_keys\fR mode and clear them.
.IP
noclear_keys disable \fB-clear_keys\fR mode.
.IP
clear_locks do the clear_locks action.
.IP
clear_all do the clear_all action.
.IP
keystate have x11vnc print current keystate.
.IP
remap:str set \fB-remap\fR "str" (empty to disable).
See \fB-remap\fR for the form of "str"
(basically: key1-key2,key3-key4,...)
Use "+key1-key2" to append a single
keymapping, use "-key1-key2" to delete.
.IP
norepeat enable \fB-norepeat\fR mode.
.IP
repeat disable \fB-norepeat\fR mode.
.IP
nofb enable \fB-nofb\fR mode.
.IP
fb disable \fB-nofb\fR mode.
.IP
bell enable bell (if supported).
.IP
nobell disable bell.
.IP
sendbell ring the bell now.
.IP
nosel enable \fB-nosel\fR mode.
.IP
sel disable \fB-nosel\fR mode.
.IP
noprimary enable \fB-noprimary\fR mode.
.IP
primary disable \fB-noprimary\fR mode.
.IP
nosetprimary enable \fB-nosetprimary\fR mode.
.IP
setprimary disable \fB-nosetprimary\fR mode.
.IP
noclipboard enable \fB-noclipboard\fR mode.
.IP
clipboard disable \fB-noclipboard\fR mode.
.IP
nosetclipboard enable \fB-nosetclipboard\fR mode.
.IP
setclipboard disable \fB-nosetclipboard\fR mode.
.IP
seldir:str set \fB-seldir\fR to "str"
.IP
resend_cutbuffer resend the most recent CUTBUFFER0 copy
.IP
resend_clipboard resend the most recent CLIPBOARD copy
.IP
resend_primary resend the most recent PRIMARY copy
.IP
cursor:mode enable \fB-cursor\fR "mode".
.IP
show_cursor enable showing a cursor.
.IP
noshow_cursor disable showing a cursor. (same as
"nocursor")
.IP
cursor_drag enable cursor changes during drag.
.IP
nocursor_drag disable cursor changes during drag.
.IP
arrow:n set \fB-arrow\fR to alternate n.
.IP
xfixes enable xfixes cursor shape mode.
.IP
noxfixes disable xfixes cursor shape mode.
.IP
alphacut:n set \fB-alphacut\fR to n.
.IP
alphafrac:f set \fB-alphafrac\fR to f.
.IP
alpharemove enable \fB-alpharemove\fR mode.
.IP
noalpharemove disable \fB-alpharemove\fR mode.
.IP
alphablend disable \fB-noalphablend\fR mode.
.IP
noalphablend enable \fB-noalphablend\fR mode.
.IP
cursorshape disable \fB-nocursorshape\fR mode.
.IP
nocursorshape enable \fB-nocursorshape\fR mode.
.IP
cursorpos disable \fB-nocursorpos\fR mode.
.IP
nocursorpos enable \fB-nocursorpos\fR mode.
.IP
xwarp enable \fB-xwarppointer\fR mode.
.IP
noxwarp disable \fB-xwarppointer\fR mode.
.IP
buttonmap:str set \fB-buttonmap\fR "str", empty to disable
.IP
dragging disable \fB-nodragging\fR mode.
.IP
nodragging enable \fB-nodragging\fR mode.
.IP
ncache reenable \fB-ncache\fR mode.
.IP
noncache disable \fB-ncache\fR mode.
.IP
ncache_size:n set \fB-ncache\fR size to n.
.IP
ncache_cr enable \fB-ncache_cr\fR mode.
.IP
noncache_cr disable \fB-ncache_cr\fR mode.
.IP
ncache_no_moveraise enable no_moveraise mode.
.IP
noncache_no_moveraise disable no_moveraise mode.
.IP
ncache_no_dtchange enable ncache_no_dtchange mode.
.IP
noncache_no_dtchange disable ncache_no_dtchange mode.
.IP
ncache_old_wm enable ncache_old_wm mode.
.IP
noncache_old_wm disable ncache_old_wm mode.
.IP
ncache_no_rootpixmap enable ncache_no_rootpixmap.
.IP
noncache_no_rootpixmap disable ncache_no_rootpixmap.
.IP
ncache_reset_rootpixmap recheck the root pixmap, ncrp
.IP
ncache_keep_anims enable ncache_keep_anims.
.IP
noncache_keep_anims disable ncache_keep_anims.
.IP
ncache_pad:n set \fB-ncache_pad\fR to n.
.IP
wireframe enable \fB-wireframe\fR mode. same as "wf"
.IP
nowireframe disable \fB-wireframe\fR mode. same as "nowf"
.IP
wireframe:str enable \fB-wireframe\fR mode string.
.IP
wireframe_mode:str enable \fB-wireframe\fR mode string.
.IP
wireframelocal enable wireframelocal. same as "wfl"
.IP
nowireframe disable wireframelocal. same as "nowfl"
.IP
wirecopyrect:str set \fB-wirecopyrect\fR string. same as "wcr:"
.IP
scrollcopyrect:str set \fB-scrollcopyrect\fR string. same "scr"
.IP
noscrollcopyrect disable \fB-scrollcopyrect__mode_.\fR "noscr"
.IP
scr_area:n set \fB-scr_area\fR to n
.IP
scr_skip:list set \fB-scr_skip\fR to "list"
.IP
scr_inc:list set \fB-scr_inc\fR to "list"
.IP
scr_keys:list set \fB-scr_keys\fR to "list"
.IP
scr_term:list set \fB-scr_term\fR to "list"
.IP
scr_keyrepeat:str set \fB-scr_keyrepeat\fR to "str"
.IP
scr_parms:str set \fB-scr_parms\fR parameters.
.IP
fixscreen:str set \fB-fixscreen\fR to "str".
.IP
noxrecord disable all use of RECORD extension.
.IP
xrecord enable use of RECORD extension.
.IP
reset_record reset RECORD extension (if avail.)
.IP
pointer_mode:n set \fB-pointer_mode\fR to n. same as "pm"
.IP
input_skip:n set \fB-input_skip\fR to n.
.IP
allinput enable use of \fB-allinput\fR mode.
.IP
noallinput disable use of \fB-allinput\fR mode.
.IP
ssltimeout:n set \fB-ssltimeout\fR to n.
.IP
speeds:str set \fB-speeds\fR to str.
.IP
wmdt:str set \fB-wmdt\fR to str.
.IP
debug_pointer enable \fB-debug_pointer,\fR same as "dp"
.IP
nodebug_pointer disable \fB-debug_pointer,\fR same as "nodp"
.IP
debug_keyboard enable \fB-debug_keyboard,\fR same as "dk"
.IP
nodebug_keyboard disable \fB-debug_keyboard,\fR same as "nodk"
.IP
keycode:n inject keystroke 'keycode' (xmodmap \fB-pk)\fR
.IP
keycode:n,down inject 'keycode' (down=0,1)
.IP
keysym:str inject keystroke 'keysym' (number/name)
.IP
keysym:str,down inject 'keysym' (down=0,1)
.IP
ptr:x,y,mask inject pointer event x, y, button-mask
.IP
fakebuttonevent:button,down direct XTestFakeButtonEvent.
.IP
sleep:t sleep floating point time t.
.IP
get_xprop:p get X property named 'p'.
.IP
set_xprop:p:val set X property named 'p' to 'val'.
p -> id=NNN:p for hex/dec window id.
.IP
wininfo:id get info about X window id. use 'root'
for root window, use +id for children.
.IP
grab_state get state of pointer and keyboard grab.
.IP
pointer_pos print XQueryPointer x,y cursor position.
.IP
mouse_x print x11vnc's idea of cursor position.
.IP
mouse_y print x11vnc's idea of cursor position.
.IP
noop do nothing.
.IP
defer:n set \fB-defer\fR to n ms,same as deferupdate:n
.IP
wait:n set \fB-wait\fR to n ms.
.IP
extra_fbur:n set \fB-extra_fbur\fR to n.
.IP
wait_ui:f set \fB-wait_ui\fR factor to f.
.IP
setdefer:n set \fB-setdefer\fR to \fB-2,-1,0,1,\fR or 2.
.IP
wait_bog disable \fB-nowait_bog\fR mode.
.IP
nowait_bog enable \fB-nowait_bog\fR mode.
.IP
slow_fb:f set \fB-slow_fb\fR to f seconds.
.IP
xrefresh:f set \fB-xrefresh\fR to f seconds.
.IP
readtimeout:n set read timeout to n seconds.
.IP
nap enable \fB-nap\fR mode.
.IP
nonap disable \fB-nap\fR mode.
.IP
sb:n set \fB-sb\fR to n s, same as screen_blank:n
.IP
fbpm disable \fB-nofbpm\fR mode.
.IP
nofbpm enable \fB-nofbpm\fR mode.
.IP
dpms disable \fB-nodpms\fR mode.
.IP
nodpms enable \fB-nodpms\fR mode.
.IP
forcedpms enable \fB-forcedpms\fR mode.
.IP
noforcedpms disable \fB-forcedpms\fR mode.
.IP
clientdpms enable \fB-clientdpms\fR mode.
.IP
noclientdpms disable \fB-clientdpms\fR mode.
.IP
noserverdpms enable \fB-noserverdpms\fR mode.
.IP
serverdpms disable \fB-noserverdpms\fR mode.
.IP
noultraext enable \fB-noultraext\fR mode.
.IP
ultraext disable \fB-noultraext\fR mode.
.IP
chatwindow enable local chatwindow mode.
.IP
nochatwindow disable local chatwindow mode.
.IP
chaton begin chat using local window.
.IP
chatoff end chat using local window.
.IP
xdamage enable xdamage polling hints.
.IP
noxdamage disable xdamage polling hints.
.IP
xd_area:A set \fB-xd_area\fR max pixel area to "A"
.IP
xd_mem:f set \fB-xd_mem\fR remembrance to "f"
.IP
fs:frac set \fB-fs\fR fraction to "frac", e.g. 0.5
.IP
gaps:n set \fB-gaps\fR to n.
.IP
grow:n set \fB-grow\fR to n.
.IP
fuzz:n set \fB-fuzz\fR to n.
.IP
snapfb enable \fB-snapfb\fR mode.
.IP
nosnapfb disable \fB-snapfb\fR mode.
.IP
rawfb:str set \fB-rawfb\fR mode to "str".
.IP
uinput_accel:f set uinput_accel to f.
.IP
uinput_thresh:n set uinput_thresh to n.
.IP
uinput_reset:n set uinput_reset to n ms.
.IP
uinput_always:n set uinput_always to 1/0.
.IP
progressive:n set libvncserver \fB-progressive\fR slice
height parameter to n.
.IP
desktop:str set \fB-desktop\fR name to str for new clients.
.IP
rfbport:n set \fB-rfbport\fR to n.
.IP
macnosaver enable \fB-macnosaver\fR mode.
.IP
macsaver disable \fB-macnosaver\fR mode.
.IP
macnowait enable \fB-macnowait\fR mode.
.IP
macwait disable \fB-macnowait\fR mode.
.IP
macwheel:n set \fB-macwheel\fR to n.
.IP
macnoswap enable \fB-macnoswap\fR mouse button mode.
.IP
macswap disable \fB-macnoswap\fR mouse button mode.
.IP
macnoresize enable \fB-macnoresize\fR mode.
.IP
macresize disable \fB-macnoresize\fR mode.
.IP
maciconanim:n set \fB-maciconanim\fR to n.
.IP
macmenu enable \fB-macmenu\fR mode.
.IP
macnomenu disable \fB-macmenu\fR mode.
.IP
macuskbd enable \fB-macuskbd\fR mode.
.IP
macnouskbd disable \fB-macuskbd\fR mode.
.IP
httpport:n set \fB-httpport\fR to n.
.IP
httpdir:dir set \fB-httpdir\fR to dir (and enable http).
.IP
enablehttpproxy enable \fB-enablehttpproxy\fR mode.
.IP
noenablehttpproxy disable \fB-enablehttpproxy\fR mode.
.IP
alwaysshared enable \fB-alwaysshared\fR mode.
.IP
noalwaysshared disable \fB-alwaysshared\fR mode.
(may interfere with other options)
.IP
nevershared enable \fB-nevershared\fR mode.
.IP
nonevershared disable \fB-nevershared\fR mode.
(may interfere with other options)
.IP
dontdisconnect enable \fB-dontdisconnect\fR mode.
.IP
nodontdisconnect disable \fB-dontdisconnect\fR mode.
(may interfere with other options)
.IP
debug_xevents enable debugging X events.
.IP
nodebug_xevents disable debugging X events.
.IP
debug_xdamage enable debugging X DAMAGE mechanism.
.IP
nodebug_xdamage disable debugging X DAMAGE mechanism.
.IP
debug_wireframe enable debugging wireframe mechanism.
.IP
nodebug_wireframe disable debugging wireframe mechanism.
.IP
debug_scroll enable debugging scrollcopy mechanism.
.IP
nodebug_scroll disable debugging scrollcopy mechanism.
.IP
debug_tiles enable \fB-debug_tiles\fR
.IP
nodebug_tiles disable \fB-debug_tiles\fR
.IP
debug_grabs enable \fB-debug_grabs\fR
.IP
nodebug_grabs disable \fB-debug_grabs\fR
.IP
debug_sel enable \fB-debug_sel\fR
.IP
nodebug_sel disable \fB-debug_sel\fR
.IP
debug_ncache enable \fB-debug_ncache\fR
.IP
nodebug_ncache disable \fB-debug_ncache\fR
.IP
dbg enable \fB-dbg\fR crash shell
.IP
nodbg disable \fB-dbg\fR crash shell
.IP
.IP
noremote disable the \fB-remote\fR command processing,
it cannot be turned back on.
.IP
.IP
bcx_xattach:str This remote control command is for
use with the BARCO xattach program or the x2x program.
Both of these programs are for 'pointer and keyboard'
sharing between separate X displays. In general the
two displays are usually nearby, e.g. on the same desk,
and this allows the user to share a single pointer and
keyboard between them. The user moves the mouse to
an edge and then the mouse pointer appears to 'jump'
to the other display screen. Thus it emulates what a
single X server would do for two screens (e.g. :0.0 and
:0.1) The illusion of a single Xserver with multiple
screens is achieved by forwarding events to the 2nd
one via the XTEST extension.
.IP
What the x11vnc bcx_xattach command does is to perform
some pointer movements to try to INDUCE xattach/x2x
to 'jump' to the other display. In what follows the
\'master' display refers to the one that when it has
\'focus' it is basically doing nothing besides watching
for the mouse to go over an edge. The 'slave'
display refers to the one to which the mouse and
keyboard is redirected to once an edge in the master
has been crossed. Note that the x11vnc executing the
bcx_xattach command MUST be the one connected to the
*master* display.
.IP
Also note that when input is being redirected (via
XTEST) from the master display to the slave display,
the master display's pointer and keyboard are *grabbed*
by xattach/x2x. x11vnc can use this info to verify that
the master/slave mode change has taken place correctly.
If you specify the "ifneeded" option (see below)
and the initial grab state is that of the desired
final state, then no pointer movements are injected
and "DONE,GRAB_OK" is returned.
.IP
"str" must contain one of "up", "down", "left",
or "right" to indicate the direction of the 'jump'.
"str" must also contain one of "master_to_slave"
or "slave_to_master" to indicate the type of mode
change induced by the jump. Use "M2S" and "S2M"
as shorter aliases.
.IP
"str" may be a "+" separated list of additional
tuning options. The "shift=n" option indicates an
offset shift position away from (0,0) (default 20).
"final=x+y" specifies the final position of the cursor
at the end of the normal move sequence; default 30+30.
"extra_move=x+y" means to do one more pointer move
after "final" to x+y. "dt=n" sets the sleep time
in milliseconds between pointer moves (default: 40ms)
"retry=n" specifies the maximum number of retries if
the grab state change fails. "ifneeded" means to not
apply the pointer movements if the initial grab state is
that of the desired final state. "nograbcheck" means
to not check if the grab state changed as expected and
only apply the pointer movements (default is to check
the grab states.)
.IP
If you do not specify "up", etc., to bcx_xattach
nothing will be attempted and the command returns
the string FAIL,NO_DIRECTION_SPECIFIED. If you do
not specify "master_to_slave" or "M2S", etc., to
bcx_xattach nothing will be attempted and the command
returns the string FAIL,NO_MODE_CHANGE_SPECIFIED.
.IP
Otherwise, the returned string will contain "DONE".
It will be "DONE,GRAB_OK" if the grab state changed
as expected (or if "ifneeded" was supplied and
the initial grab state was already the desired
one.) If the initial grab state was incorrect,
but the final grab state was correct then it is
"DONE,GRAB_FAIL_INIT". If the initial grab state
was correct, but the final grab state was incorrect
then it is "DONE,GRAB_FAIL_FINAL". If both are
incorrect it will be "DONE,GRAB_FAIL". Under grab
failure the string will be followed by ":p1,k1-p2,k2"
where p1,k1 indicates the initial pointer and keyboard
grab states and p2,k2 the final ones. If GRAB_FAIL or
GRAB_FAIL_FINAL occurs, the action will be retried up
to 3 times; trying to reset the state and sleeping a
bit between each try. Set retry=n to adjust the number
of retries, zero to disable retries.
.IP
Examples:
\fB-R\fR bcx_xattach:down+M2S
\fB-R\fR bcx_xattach:up+S2M
\fB-R\fR bcx_xattach:up+S2M+nograbcheck+dt=30
\fB-R\fR bcx_xattach:down+M2S+extra_move=100+100
.IP
or use \fB-Q\fR instead of \fB-R\fR to retrieve the result text.
.IP
End of the bcx_xattach:str description.
.IP
The
.IR vncconnect (1)
command from standard VNC
distributions may also be used if string is prefixed
with "cmd=" E.g. 'vncconnect cmd=stop'. Under some
circumstances
.IR xprop (1)
can used if it supports \fB-set\fR
(see the FAQ).
.IP
If "\fB-connect\fR \fI/path/to/file\fR" has been supplied to the
running x11vnc server then that file can be used as a
communication channel (this is the only way to remote
control one of many x11vnc's polling the same X display)
Simply run: 'x11vnc \fB-connect\fR /path/to/file \fB-remote\fR ...'
or you can directly write to the file via something
like: "echo cmd=stop > /path/to/file", etc.
.PP
\fB-query\fR \fIvariable\fR
.IP
Like \fB-remote,\fR except just query the value of
\fIvariable\fR. "\fB-Q\fR" is an alias for "\fB-query\fR".
Multiple queries can be done by separating variables
by commas, e.g. \fB-query\fR var1,var2. The results come
back in the form ans=var1:value1,ans=var2:value2,...
to the standard output. If a variable is read-only,
it comes back with prefix "aro=" instead of "ans=".
.IP
Some \fB-remote\fR commands are pure actions that do not make
sense as variables, e.g. "stop" or "disconnect", in
these cases the value returned is "N/A". To direct a
query straight to the X11VNC_REMOTE property or connect
file use "qry=..." instead of "cmd=..."
.IP
ans= stop quit exit shutdown ping resend_cutbuffer
resend_clipboard resend_primary blacken zero refresh
reset close disconnect id_cmd id sid waitmapped
nowaitmapped clip flashcmap noflashcmap shiftcmap
truecolor notruecolor overlay nooverlay overlay_cursor
overlay_yescursor nooverlay_nocursor nooverlay_cursor
nooverlay_yescursor overlay_nocursor 8to24 no8to24
8to24_opts 24to32 no24to32 visual scale scale_cursor
viewonly noviewonly shared noshared forever noforever
once timeout tightfilexfer notightfilexfer ultrafilexfer
noultrafilexfer rfbversion deny lock nodeny unlock
avahi mdns zeroconf noavahi nomdns nozeroconf connect
proxy allowonce allow localhost nolocalhost listen
lookup nolookup accept afteraccept gone shm noshm
flipbyteorder noflipbyteorder onetile noonetile
solid_color solid nosolid blackout xinerama noxinerama
xtrap noxtrap xrandr noxrandr xrandr_mode rotate padgeom
quiet q noquiet modtweak nomodtweak xkb noxkb capslock
nocapslock skip_lockkeys noskip_lockkeys skip_keycodes
sloppy_keys nosloppy_keys skip_dups noskip_dups
add_keysyms noadd_keysyms clear_mods noclear_mods
clear_keys noclear_keys clear_all clear_locks keystate
remap repeat norepeat fb nofb bell nobell sendbell
sel nosel primary noprimary setprimary nosetprimary
clipboard noclipboard setclipboard nosetclipboard
seldir cursorshape nocursorshape cursorpos nocursorpos
cursor_drag nocursor_drag cursor show_cursor
noshow_cursor nocursor arrow xfixes noxfixes xdamage
noxdamage xd_area xd_mem alphacut alphafrac alpharemove
noalpharemove alphablend noalphablend xwarppointer
xwarp noxwarppointer noxwarp buttonmap dragging
nodragging ncache_cr noncache_cr ncache_no_moveraise
noncache_no_moveraise ncache_no_dtchange
noncache_no_dtchange ncache_no_rootpixmap
noncache_no_rootpixmap ncache_reset_rootpixmap ncrp
ncache_keep_anims noncache_keep_anims ncache_old_wm
noncache_old_wm ncache_pad ncache noncache ncache_size
debug_ncache nodebug_ncache wireframe_mode wireframe wf
nowireframe nowf wireframelocal wfl nowireframelocal
nowfl wirecopyrect wcr nowirecopyrect nowcr scr_area
scr_skip scr_inc scr_keys scr_term scr_keyrepeat
scr_parms scrollcopyrect scr noscrollcopyrect
noscr fixscreen noxrecord xrecord reset_record
pointer_mode pm input_skip allinput noallinput input
grabkbd nograbkbd grabptr nograbptr grabalways
nograbalways grablocal client_input ssltimeout
speeds wmdt debug_pointer dp nodebug_pointer nodp
debug_keyboard dk nodebug_keyboard nodk keycode keysym
ptr fakebuttonevent sleep get_xprop set_xprop wininfo
bcx_xattach deferupdate defer setdefer extra_fbur
wait_ui wait_bog nowait_bog slow_fb xrefresh wait
readtimeout nap nonap sb screen_blank fbpm nofbpm dpms
nodpms clientdpms noclientdpms forcedpms noforcedpms
noserverdpms serverdpms noultraext ultraext chatwindow
nochatwindow chaton chatoff fs gaps grow fuzz snapfb
nosnapfb rawfb uinput_accel uinput_thresh uinput_reset
uinput_always progressive rfbport http nohttp httpport
httpdir enablehttpproxy noenablehttpproxy alwaysshared
noalwaysshared nevershared noalwaysshared dontdisconnect
nodontdisconnect desktop debug_xevents nodebug_xevents
debug_xevents debug_xdamage nodebug_xdamage
debug_xdamage debug_wireframe nodebug_wireframe
debug_wireframe debug_scroll nodebug_scroll debug_scroll
debug_tiles dbt nodebug_tiles nodbt debug_tiles
debug_grabs nodebug_grabs debug_sel nodebug_sel dbg
nodbg macnosaver macsaver nomacnosaver macnowait macwait
nomacnowait macwheel macnoswap macswap nomacnoswap
macnoresize macresize nomacnoresize maciconanim macmenu
macnomenu nomacmenu macuskbd nomacuskbd noremote
.IP
aro= noop display vncdisplay icon_mode autoport
loop loopbg desktopname guess_desktop guess_dbus
http_url auth xauth users rootshift clipshift scale_str
scaled_x scaled_y scale_numer scale_denom scale_fac_x
scale_fac_y scaling_blend scaling_nomult4 scaling_pad
scaling_interpolate inetd privremote unsafe safer
nocmds passwdfile unixpw unixpw_nis unixpw_list ssl
ssl_pem sslverify stunnel stunnel_pem https httpsredir
usepw using_shm logfile o flag rmflag rc norc h help
V version lastmod bg sigpipe threads readrate netrate
netlatency pipeinput clients client_count pid ext_xtest
ext_xtrap ext_xrecord ext_xkb ext_xshm ext_xinerama
ext_overlay ext_xfixes ext_xdamage ext_xrandr rootwin
num_buttons button_mask mouse_x mouse_y grab_state
pointer_pos bpp depth indexed_color dpy_x dpy_y wdpy_x
wdpy_y off_x off_y cdpy_x cdpy_y coff_x coff_y rfbauth
passwd viewpasswd
.PP
\fB-QD\fR \fIvariable\fR
.IP
Just like \fB-query\fR variable, but returns the default
value for that parameter (no running x11vnc server
is consulted)
.PP
\fB-sync\fR
.IP
By default \fB-remote\fR commands are run asynchronously, that
is, the request is posted and the program immediately
exits. Use \fB-sync\fR to have the program wait for an
acknowledgement from the x11vnc server that command was
processed (somehow). On the other hand \fB-query\fR requests
are always processed synchronously because they have
to wait for the answer.
.IP
Also note that if both \fB-remote\fR and \fB-query\fR requests are
supplied on the command line, the \fB-remote\fR is processed
first (synchronously: no need for \fB-sync),\fR and then
the \fB-query\fR request is processed in the normal way.
This allows for a reliable way to see if the \fB-remote\fR
command was processed by querying for any new settings.
Note however that there is timeout of a few seconds
(see the next paragraph) so if the x11vnc takes longer
than that to process the requests the requester will
think that a failure has taken place.
.IP
The default is to wait 3.5 seconds. Or if cmd=stop
only 1.0 seconds. If cmd matches 'script:' then it
will wait up to 10.0 seconds. Set X11VNC_SYNC_TIMEOUT
to the number of seconds you want it to wait.
.PP
\fB-query_retries\fR \fIstr\fR
.IP
If a query fails to get a response from an x11vnc
server, retry up to n times. \fIstr\fR is specified as
n[:t][/match] Optionally the delay between tries may
be specified by "t" a floating point time (default
0.5 seconds.) Note: the response is not checked for
validity or whether it corresponds to the query sent.
The query "ping:mystring" may be used to help uniquely
identify the query. Optionally, a matching string after
a "/" will be used to check the result text. Up to
n retries will take place until the matching string is
found in the output text. If the match string is never
found the program's exit code is 1; if the match is
found it exits with 0. Note that there may be stdout
printed for each retry (i.e. multiple lines printed
out to stdout.)
Example: \fB-query_retries\fR 4:1.5/grab_state
.PP
\fB-remote_prefix\fR \fIstr\fR
.IP
Enable a remote-control communication channel for
connected VNC clients. str is a non-empty string. If a
VNC client sends rfbCutText having the prefix \fIstr\fR
then the part after it is processed as though it were
sent via 'x11vnc \fB-remote\fR ...'. If it begins with
neither 'cmd=' nor 'qry=' then 'qry=' is assumed.
Any corresponding output text for that remote control
command is sent back to all client as rfbCutText.
The returned output is also prefixed with \fIstr\fR.
Example: \fB-remote_prefix\fR DO_THIS:
.IP
Note that enabling \fB-remote_prefix\fR allows the remote
VNC viewers to run x11vnc \fB-remote\fR commands. Do not
use this option if they are not to be trusted.
.PP
\fB-noremote,\fR \fB-yesremote\fR
.IP
Do not process any remote control commands or queries.
Do process remote control commands or queries.
Default: \fB-yesremote\fR
.IP
A note about security wrt remote control commands.
If someone can connect to the X display and change
the property X11VNC_REMOTE, then they can remotely
control x11vnc. Normally access to the X display is
protected. Note that if they can modify X11VNC_REMOTE
on the X server, they have enough permissions to also
run their own x11vnc and thus have complete control
of the desktop. If the "\fB-connect\fR \fI/path/to/file\fR"
channel is being used, obviously anyone who can write
to /path/to/file can remotely control x11vnc. So be
sure to protect the X display and that file's write
permissions. See \fB-privremote\fR below.
.IP
If you are paranoid and do not think \fB-noremote\fR is
enough, to disable the X11VNC_REMOTE property channel
completely use \fB-novncconnect,\fR or use the \fB-safer\fR option
that shuts many things off.
.PP
\fB-unsafe\fR
.IP
A few remote commands are disabled by default
(currently: id:pick, accept:<cmd>, gone:<cmd>, and
rawfb:setup:<cmd>) because they are associated with
running external programs. If you specify \fB-unsafe,\fR then
these remote-control commands are allowed. Note that
you can still specify these parameters on the command
line, they just cannot be invoked via remote-control.
.PP
\fB-safer\fR
.IP
Equivalent to: \fB-novncconnect\fR \fB-noremote\fR and prohibiting
\fB-gui\fR and the \fB-connect\fR file. Shuts off communcation
channels.
.PP
\fB-privremote\fR
.IP
Perform some sanity checks and disable remote-control
commands if it appears that the X DISPLAY and/or
connectfile can be accessed by other users. Once
remote-control is disabled it cannot be turned back on.
.PP
\fB-nocmds\fR
.IP
No external commands (e.g.
.IR system (3)
,
.IR popen (3)
,
.IR exec (3)
)
will be run at all.
.PP
\fB-allowedcmds\fR \fIlist\fR
.IP
\fIlist\fR contains a comma separated list of the only
external commands that can be run. The full list of
associated options is:
.IP
stunnel, ssl, unixpw, WAIT, zeroconf, id, accept,
afteraccept, gone, pipeinput, v4l-info, rawfb-setup,
dt, gui, ssh, storepasswd, passwdfile, custom_passwd,
findauth, crash.
.IP
See each option's help to learn the associated external
command. Note that the \fB-nocmds\fR option takes precedence
and disables all external commands.
.PP
\fB-deny_all\fR
.IP
For use with \fB-remote\fR nodeny: start out denying all
incoming clients until "\fB-remote\fR \fInodeny\fR" is used to
let them in.
.PP
These options are passed to libvncserver:
.PP
\fB-rfbport\fR \fIport\fR
.IP
TCP port for RFB protocol
.PP
\fB-rfbwait\fR \fItime\fR
.IP
max time in ms to wait for RFB client
.PP
\fB-rfbauth\fR \fIpasswd-file\fR
.IP
use authentication on RFB protocol
(use 'x11vnc \fB-storepasswd\fR pass file' to create a password file)
.PP
\fB-rfbversion\fR \fI3.x\fR
.IP
Set the version of the RFB we choose to advertise
.PP
\fB-permitfiletransfer\fR
.IP
permit file transfer support
.PP
\fB-passwd\fR \fIplain-password\fR
.IP
use authentication
(use plain-password as password, USE AT YOUR RISK)
.PP
\fB-deferupdate\fR \fItime\fR
.IP
time in ms to defer updates (default 40)
.PP
\fB-deferptrupdate\fR \fItime\fR
.IP
time in ms to defer pointer updates (default none)
.PP
\fB-desktop\fR \fIname\fR
.IP
VNC desktop name (default "LibVNCServer")
.PP
\fB-alwaysshared\fR
.IP
always treat new clients as shared
.PP
\fB-nevershared\fR
.IP
never treat new clients as shared
.PP
\fB-dontdisconnect\fR
.IP
don't disconnect existing clients when a new non-shared
connection comes in (refuse new connection instead)
.PP
\fB-httpdir\fR \fIdir-path\fR
.IP
enable http server using dir-path home
.PP
\fB-httpport\fR \fIportnum\fR
.IP
use portnum for http connection
.PP
\fB-enablehttpproxy\fR
.IP
enable http proxy support
.PP
\fB-progressive\fR \fIheight\fR
.IP
enable progressive updating for slow links
.PP
\fB-listen\fR \fIipaddr\fR
.IP
listen for connections only on network interface with
addr ipaddr. '-listen localhost' and hostname work too.
.PP
libvncserver-tight-extension options:
.PP
\fB-disablefiletransfer\fR
.IP
disable file transfer
.PP
\fB-ftproot\fR \fIstring\fR
.IP
set ftp root
.SH "FILES"
.IR $HOME/.x11vncrc ,
.IR $HOME/.Xauthority
.SH "ENVIRONMENT"
.IR DISPLAY ,
.IR XAUTHORITY ,
.IR HOME
.PP
The following are set for the auxiliary commands
run by \fB-accept\fR, \fB-gone\fR and other cases:
.PP
.IR RFB_CLIENT_IP ,
.IR RFB_CLIENT_PORT ,
.IR RFB_SERVER_IP ,
.IR RFB_SERVER_PORT ,
.IR RFB_X11VNC_PID ,
.IR RFB_CLIENT_ID ,
.IR RFB_CLIENT_COUNT ,
.IR RFB_MODE
.IR RFB_STATE
.IR RFB_LOGIN_VIEWONLY
.IR RFB_LOGIN_TIME
.IR RFB_CURRENT_TIME
.IR RFB_USERNAME
.IR RFB_SSL_CLIENT_CERT
.SH "SEE ALSO"
.IR vncviewer (1),
.IR vncpasswd (1),
.IR vncconnect (1),
.IR vncserver (1),
.IR Xvnc (1),
.IR xev (1),
.IR xdpyinfo (1),
.IR xwininfo (1),
.IR xprop (1),
.IR xmodmap (1),
.IR xrandr (1),
.IR Xserver (1),
.IR xauth (1),
.IR xhost (1),
.IR Xsecurity (7),
.IR xmessage (1),
.IR XGetImage (3X11),
.IR ipcrm (1),
.IR inetd (1),
.IR xdm (1),
.IR gdm (1),
.IR kdm (1),
.IR ssh (1),
.IR stunnel (8),
.IR su (1),
.IR http://www.tightvnc.com ,
.IR http://www.realvnc.com ,
.IR http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/ ,
.IR http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/#faq
.SH AUTHORS
x11vnc was written by Karl J. Runge <runge@karlrunge.com>,
it is part of the LibVNCServer project <http://sf.net/projects/libvncserver>.
This manual page is based one the one written by Ludovic Drolez
<ldrolez@debian.org>, for the Debian project (both may be used by others).
|