Xtigervnc - the X VNC server
Xtigervnc [options] :display#
Xtigervnc is the X VNC (Virtual Network Computing) server.
It is based on a standard X server, but it has a "virtual" screen
rather than a physical one. X applications display themselves on it as if it
were a normal X display, but they can only be accessed via a VNC viewer -
see vncviewer(1).
So Xtigervnc is really two servers in one. To the applications it
is an X server, and to the remote VNC users it is a VNC server. By
convention we have arranged that the VNC server display number will be the
same as the X server display number, which means you can use eg. snoopy:2 to
refer to display 2 on machine "snoopy" in both the X world and the
VNC world.
The best way of starting Xvnc is via the vncserver
script. This sets up the environment appropriately and runs some X
applications to get you going. See the manual page for vncserver(1)
for more information.
Xtigervnc takes lots of options - running Xvnc -help
gives a list. Many of these are standard X server options, which are
described in the Xserver(1) manual page. In addition to options which
can only be set via the command-line, there are also "parameters"
which can be set both via the command-line and through the
vncconfig(1) program.
- -geometry
widthxheight
- Specify the size of the desktop to be created. Default is 1024x768.
- -depth
depth
- Specify the pixel depth in bits of the desktop to be created. Default is
24, other possible values are 8, 15, and 16 - anything else is likely to
cause strange behaviour by applications.
- -pixelformat
format
- Specify pixel format for server to use (BGRnnn or RGBnnn). The default for
depth 8 is BGR233 (meaning the most significant two bits represent blue,
the next three green, and the least significant three represent red), the
default for depth 16 is RGB565 and for depth 24 is RGB888.
- -interface IP
address
- Listen on interface. By default Xtigervnc listens on all available
interfaces.
- -inetd
- This significantly changes Xtigervnc's behaviour so that it can be
launched from inetd. See the section below on usage with inetd.
- -help
- List all the options and parameters
VNC parameters can be set both via the command-line and through
the vncconfig(1) program, and with a VNC-enabled Xorg server via
Options entries in the xorg.conf file.
Parameters can be turned on with -param or off with
-param=0. Parameters which take a value can be specified as
-param value. Other valid forms are
param=value -param=value
--param=value. Parameter names are case-insensitive.
- -desktop
desktop-name
- Each desktop has a name which may be displayed by the viewer. It defaults
to "x11".
- -rfbport
port
- Specifies the TCP port on which Xtigervnc listens for connections from
viewers (the protocol used in VNC is called RFB - "remote
framebuffer"). The default is 5900 plus the display number.
- -UseIPv4
- Use IPv4 for incoming and outgoing connections. Default is on.
- -UseIPv6
- Use IPv6 for incoming and outgoing connections. Default is on.
- -rfbunixpath
path
- Specifies the path of a Unix domain socket on which Xtigervnc listens for
connections from viewers, instead of listening on a TCP port.
- -rfbunixmode
mode
- Specifies the mode of the Unix domain socket. The default is 0600.
- -rfbwait time,
-ClientWaitTimeMillis time
- Time in milliseconds to wait for a viewer which is blocking the server.
This is necessary because the server is single-threaded and sometimes
blocks until the viewer has finished sending or receiving a message - note
that this does not mean an update will be aborted after this time. Default
is 20000 (20 seconds).
- -httpd
directory
- Run a mini-HTTP server which serves files from the given directory.
Normally the directory will contain the classes for the Java viewer. In
addition, files with a .vnc extension will have certain substitutions made
so that a single installation of the Java VNC viewer can be served by
separate instances of Xtigervnc.
- -httpPort
port
- Specifies the port on which the mini-HTTP server runs. Default is 5800
plus the display number.
- -rfbauth
passwd-file, -PasswordFile passwd-file
- Password file for VNC authentication. There is no default, you should
specify the password file explicitly. Password file should be created with
the vncpasswd(1) utility. The file is accessed each time a
connection comes in, so it can be changed on the fly.
- -AcceptCutText
- Accept clipboard updates from clients. Default is on.
- -MaxCutText
bytes
- The maximum size of a clipboard update that will be accepted from a
client. Default is 262144.
- -SendCutText
- Send clipboard changes to clients. Default is on.
- -SendPrimary
- Send the primary selection and cut buffer to the server as well as the
clipboard selection. Default is on.
- -AcceptPointerEvents
- Accept pointer press and release events from clients. Default is on.
- -AcceptKeyEvents
- Accept key press and release events from clients. Default is on.
- -AcceptSetDesktopSize
- Accept requests to resize the size of the desktop. Default is on.
- -DisconnectClients
- Disconnect existing clients if an incoming connection is non-shared.
Default is on. If DisconnectClients is false, then a new non-shared
connection will be refused while there is a client active. When combined
with NeverShared this means only one client is allowed at a
time.
- -NeverShared
- Never treat incoming connections as shared, regardless of the
client-specified setting. Default is off.
- -AlwaysShared
- Always treat incoming connections as shared, regardless of the
client-specified setting. Default is off.
- -Protocol3.3
- Always use protocol version 3.3 for backwards compatibility with
badly-behaved clients. Default is off.
- -FrameRate
fps
- The maximum number of updates per second sent to each client. If the
screen updates any faster then those changes will be aggregated and sent
in a single update to the client. Note that this only controls the maximum
rate and a client may get a lower rate when resources are limited. Default
is 60.
- -CompareFB
mode
- Perform pixel comparison on framebuffer to reduce unnecessary updates. Can
be either 0 (off), 1 (always) or 2 (auto). Default is
2.
- -ZlibLevel
level
- Zlib compression level for ZRLE encoding (it does not affect Tight
encoding). Acceptable values are between 0 and 9. Default is to use the
standard compression level provided by the zlib(3) compression
library.
- -ImprovedHextile
- Use improved compression algorithm for Hextile encoding which achieves
better compression ratios by the cost of using slightly more CPU time.
Default is on.
- -SecurityTypes
sec-types
- Specify which security scheme to use for incoming connections. Valid
values are a comma separated list of None, VncAuth,
Plain, TLSNone, TLSVnc, TLSPlain,
X509None, X509Vnc and X509Plain. Default is
VncAuth,TLSVnc.
- -Password
password
- Obfuscated binary encoding of the password which clients must supply to
access the server. Using this parameter is insecure, use
PasswordFile parameter instead.
- -PlainUsers
user-list
- A comma separated list of user names that are allowed to authenticate via
any of the "Plain" security types (Plain, TLSPlain, etc.).
Specify * to allow any user to authenticate using this security
type. Default is to deny all users.
- -pam_service
name, -PAMService name
- PAM service name to use when authentication users using any of the
"Plain" security types. Default is vnc.
- -X509Cert
path
- Path to a X509 certificate in PEM format to be used for all X509 based
security types (X509None, X509Vnc, etc.).
- -X509Key
path
- Private key counter part to the certificate given in X509Cert. Must
also be in PEM format.
- -GnuTLSPriority
priority
- GnuTLS priority string that controls the TLS session’s handshake
algorithms. See the GnuTLS manual for possible values. Default is
NORMAL.
- -BlacklistThreshold
count
- The number of unauthenticated connection attempts allowed from any
individual host before that host is black-listed. Default is 5.
- -BlacklistTimeout
seconds
- The initial timeout applied when a host is first black-listed. The host
cannot re-attempt a connection until the timeout expires. Default is
10.
- -IdleTimeout
seconds
- The number of seconds after which an idle VNC connection will be dropped.
Default is 0, which means that idle connections will never be
dropped.
- -MaxDisconnectionTime
seconds
- Terminate when no client has been connected for N seconds. Default
is 0.
- -MaxConnectionTime
seconds
- Terminate when a client has been connected for N seconds. Default
is 0.
- -MaxIdleTime
seconds
- Terminate after N seconds of user inactivity. Default is 0.
- -QueryConnect
- Prompts the user of the desktop to explicitly accept or reject incoming
connections. Default is off.
The vncconfig(1) program must be running on the desktop
in order for QueryConnect to be supported.
- -QueryConnectTimeout
seconds
- Number of seconds to show the Accept Connection dialog before rejecting
the connection. Default is 10.
- -localhost
- Only allow connections from the same machine. Useful if you use SSH and
want to stop non-SSH connections from any other hosts.
- -Log
logname:dest:level
- Configures the debug log settings. dest can currently be
stderr, stdout or syslog, and level is between
0 and 100, 100 meaning most verbose output. logname is usually
* meaning all, but you can target a specific source file if you
know the name of its "LogWriter". Default is
*:stderr:30.
- -RemapKeys
mapping
- Sets up a keyboard mapping. mapping is a comma-separated string of
character mappings, each of the form char->char, or
char<>char, where char is a hexadecimal keysym.
For example, to exchange the " and @ symbols you would specify the
following:
RemapKeys=0x22<>0x40
- -AvoidShiftNumLock
- Key affected by NumLock often require a fake Shift to be inserted in order
for the correct symbol to be generated. Turning on this option avoids
these extra fake Shift events but may result in a slightly different
symbol (e.g. a Return instead of a keypad Enter).
- -RawKeyboard
- Send keyboard events straight through and avoid mapping them to the
current keyboard layout. This effectively makes the keyboard behave
according to the layout configured on the server instead of the layout
configured on the client. Default is off.
- -AllowOverride
- Comma separated list of parameters that can be modified using VNC
extension. Parameters can be modified for example using
vncconfig(1) program from inside a running session.
Allowing override of parameters such as PAMService or
PasswordFile can negatively impact security if Xtigervnc runs
under different user than the programs allowed to override the
parameters.
When NoClipboard parameter is set, allowing override of
SendCutText and AcceptCutText has no effect.
Default is
desktop,AcceptPointerEvents,SendCutText,AcceptCutText,SendPrimary,SetPrimary.
By configuring the inetd(1) service appropriately,
Xtigervnc can be launched on demand when a connection comes in, rather than
having to be started manually. When given the -inetd option, instead
of listening for TCP connections on a given port it uses its standard input
and standard output. There are two modes controlled by the wait/nowait entry
in the inetd.conf file.
In the nowait mode, Xtigervnc uses its standard input and output
directly as the connection to a viewer. It never has a listening socket, so
cannot accept further connections from viewers (it can however connect out
to listening viewers by use of the tigervncconfig program). Further viewer
connections to the same TCP port result in inetd spawning off a new
Xtigervnc to deal with each connection. When the connection to the viewer
dies, the Xtigervnc and any associated X clients die. This behaviour is most
useful when combined with the XDMCP options -query and -once. An typical
example in inetd.conf might be (all on one line):
5950 stream tcp nowait nobody /usr/local/bin/Xtigervnc Xtigervnc
-inetd -query localhost -once securitytypes=none
In this example a viewer connection to :50 will result in a new
Xtigervnc for that connection which should display the standard XDM login
screen on that machine. Because the user needs to login via XDM, it is
usually OK to accept connections without a VNC password in this case.
In the wait mode, when the first connection comes in, inetd gives
the listening socket to Xtigervnc. This means that for a given TCP port,
there is only ever one Xtigervnc at a time. Further viewer connections to
the same port are accepted by the same Xtigervnc in the normal way. Even
when the original connection is broken, the Xtigervnc will continue to run.
If this is used with the XDMCP options -query and -once, the Xtigervnc and
associated X clients will die when the user logs out of the X session in the
normal way. It is important to use a VNC password in this case. A typical
entry in inetd.conf might be:
5951 stream tcp wait james /usr/local/bin/Xtigervnc Xtigervnc
-inetd -query localhost -once passwordFile=/home/james/.vnc/passwd
In fact typically, you would have one entry for each user who uses
VNC regularly, each of whom has their own dedicated TCP port which they use.
In this example, when user "james" connects to :51, he enters his
VNC password, then gets the XDM login screen where he logs in in the normal
way. However, unlike the previous example, if he disconnects, the session
remains persistent, and when he reconnects he will get the same session back
again. When he logs out of the X session, the Xtigervnc will die, but of
course a new one will be created automatically the next time he
connects.
Tristan Richardson, RealVNC Ltd. and others.
VNC was originally developed by the RealVNC team while at Olivetti
Research Ltd / AT&T Laboratories Cambridge. TightVNC additions were
implemented by Constantin Kaplinsky. Many other people have since
participated in development, testing and support. This manual is part of the
TigerVNC software suite.