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ssvncviewer(1) SSVNC ssvncviewer(1)
NAME
ssvncviewer - an X viewer client for VNC
SYNOPSIS
ssvncviewer [options] [host][:display]
ssvncviewer [options] [host][::port]
ssvncviewer [options] exec=[cmd+args...]
ssvncviewer [options] fd=n
ssvncviewer [options] /path/to/unix/socket
ssvncviewer [options] unix=/path/to/unix/socket
ssvncviewer [options] -listen [display]
ssvncviewer -help
DESCRIPTION
ssvncviewer is an Xt-based client application for the VNC (Virtual
Network Computing) system. It can connect to any VNC-compatible server
such as Xvnc, WinVNC, or x11vnc, allowing you to control desktop
environment of a different machine.
ssvncviewer is an enhanced version of the tightvnc unix viewer that can
take advantage of features in the x11vnc and UltraVNC VNC servers. See
below for the description of these features.
You can use F8 to display a pop-up utility menu (also F7 on MacOSX.)
Press F8 twice to pass single F8 to the remote side.
OPTIONS
-help Prints a short usage notice to stderr.
-listen
Make the viewer listen on port 5500+display for reverse
connections from a server. WinVNC supports reverse connections
using the "Add New Client" menu option, or the -connect command
line option. Xvnc requires the use of the helper program
vncconnect.
-via gateway
Automatically create encrypted TCP tunnel to the gateway machine
before connection, connect to the host through that tunnel
(TightVNC-specific). By default, this option invokes SSH local
port forwarding, assuming that SSH client binary can be accessed
as /usr/bin/ssh. Note that when using the -via option, the host
machine name should be specified as known to the gateway
machine, e.g. "localhost" denotes the gateway, not the machine
where vncviewer was launched. See the ENVIRONMENT section below
for the information on configuring the -via option.
-shared
When connecting, specify that a shared connection is requested.
In TightVNC, this is the default mode, allowing you to share the
desktop with other clients already using it.
-noshared
When connecting, specify that the session may not be shared.
This would either disconnect other connected clients or refuse
your connection, depending on the server configuration.
-viewonly
Disable transfer of mouse and keyboard events from the client to
the server.
-fullscreen
Start in full-screen mode. Please be aware that operating in
full-screen mode may confuse X window managers. Typically, such
conflicts cause incorrect handling of input focus or make the
viewer window disappear mysteriously. See the grabKeyboard
setting in the RESOURCES section below for a method to solve
input focus problem.
-noraiseonbeep
By default, the viewer shows and raises its window on remote
beep (bell) event. This option disables such behaviour
(TightVNC-specific).
-user username
User name for Unix login authentication. Default is to use
current Unix user name. If this option was given, the viewer
will prefer Unix login authentication over the standard VNC
authentication.
-passwd passwd-file
File from which to get the password (as generated by the
vncpasswd(1) program). This option affects only the standard VNC
authentication.
-encodings encoding-list
TightVNC supports several different compression methods to
encode screen updates; this option specifies a set of them to
use in order of preference. Encodings are specified separated
with spaces, and must thus be enclosed in quotes if more than
one is specified. Commas may be used to avoid spaces.
Available encodings, in default order for a remote connection,
are "copyrect tight hextile zlib corre rre raw". For a local
connection (to the same machine), the default order to try is
"raw copyrect tight hextile zlib corre rre". Raw encoding is
always assumed as a last option if no other encoding can be used
for some reason. For more information on encodings, see the
section ENCODINGS below.
-bgr233
Always use the BGR233 format to encode pixel data. This reduces
network traffic, but colors may be represented inaccurately. The
bgr233 format is an 8-bit "true color" format, with 2 bits blue,
3 bits green, and 3 bits red.
-owncmap
Try to use a PseudoColor visual and a private colormap. This
allows the VNC server to control the colormap.
-truecolour, -truecolor
Try to use a TrueColor visual.
-depth depth
On an X server which supports multiple TrueColor visuals of
different depths, attempt to use the specified one (in bits per
pixel); if successful, this depth will be requested from the VNC
server.
-compresslevel level
Use specified compression level (0..9) for "tight" and "zlib"
encodings (TightVNC-specific). Level 1 uses minimum of CPU time
and achieves weak compression ratios, while level 9 offers best
compression but is slow in terms of CPU time consumption on the
server side. Use high levels with very slow network connections,
and low levels when working over high-speed LANs. It's not
recommended to use compression level 0, reasonable choices start
from the level 1.
-quality level
Use the specified JPEG quality level (0..9) for the "tight"
encoding (TightVNC-specific). Quality level 0 denotes bad image
quality but very impressive compression ratios, while level 9
offers very good image quality at lower compression ratios. Note
that the "tight" encoder uses JPEG to encode only those screen
areas that look suitable for lossy compression, so quality level
0 does not always mean unacceptable image quality.
-nojpeg
Disable lossy JPEG compression in Tight encoding
(TightVNC-specific). Disabling JPEG compression is not a good
idea in typical cases, as that makes the Tight encoder less
efficient. You might want to use this option if it's absolutely
necessary to achieve perfect image quality (see also the
-quality option).
-nocursorshape
Disable cursor shape updates, protocol extensions used to handle
remote cursor movements locally on the client side
(TightVNC-specific). Using cursor shape updates decreases delays
with remote cursor movements, and can improve bandwidth usage
dramatically.
-x11cursor
Use a real X11 cursor with X-style cursor shape updates, instead
of drawing the remote cursor on the framebuffer. This option
also disables the dot cursor, and disables cursor position
updates in non-fullscreen mode.
-autopass
Read a plain-text password from stdin. This option affects only
the standard VNC authentication.
Enhanced TightVNC Viewer (SSVNC) OPTIONS
Enhanced TightVNC Viewer (SSVNC) web page is located at:
http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/ssvnc.html
Note: ZRLE and ZYWRLE encodings are now supported.
Note: F9 is shortcut to Toggle FullScreen mode.
Note: In -listen mode set the env var. SSVNC_MULTIPLE_LISTEN=1
to allow more than one incoming VNC server at a time. This is
the same as -multilisten described below. Set
SSVNC_MULTIPLE_LISTEN=MAX:n to allow no more than "n"
simultaneous reverse connections.
If the host:port is specified as "exec=command args..." then
instead of making a TCP/IP socket connection to the remote VNC
server, "command args..." is executed and the viewer is attached
to its stdio. This enables tunnelling established via an
external command, e.g. an stunnel(8) that does not involve a
listening socket. This mode does not work for -listen reverse
connections. To not have the exec= pid killed at exit, set
SSVNC_NO_KILL_EXEC_CMD=1.
If the host:port is specified as "fd=n" then it is assumed n is
an already opened file descriptor to the socket. (i.e the parent
did fork+exec)
If the host:port contains a '/' and exists in the file system it
is interpreted as a unix-domain socket (AF_LOCAL/AF_UNIX instead
of AF_INET) Prefix with unix= to force interpretation as a
unix-domain socket.
-multilisten
As in -listen (reverse connection listening) except allow more
than one incoming VNC server to be connected at a time. The
default for -listen of only one at a time tries to play it safe
by not allowing anyone on the network to put (many) desktops on
your screen over a long window of time. Use -multilisten for no
limit.
-acceptpopup
In -listen (reverse connection listening) mode when a reverse
VNC connection comes in show a popup asking whether to Accept or
Reject the connection. The IP address of the connecting host is
shown. Same as setting the env. var. SSVNC_ACCEPT_POPUP=1.
-acceptpopupsc
As in -acceptpopup except assume UltraVNC Single Click (SC)
server. Retrieve User and ComputerName info from UltraVNC
Server and display in the Popup.
-use64 In -bgr233 mode, use 64 colors instead of 256.
-bgr222
Same as -use64.
-use8 In -bgr233 mode, use 8 colors instead of 256.
-bgr111
Same as -use8.
-16bpp If the vnc viewer X display is depth 24 at 32bpp request a 16bpp
format from the VNC server to cut network traffic by up to 2X,
then tranlate the pixels to 32bpp locally.
-bgr565
Same as -16bpp.
-grey Use a grey scale for the 16- and 8-bpp modes.
-alpha Use alphablending transparency for local cursors requires:
x11vnc server, both client and server must be 32bpp and same
endianness.
-scale str
Scale the desktop locally. The string "str" can a floating
point ratio, e.g. "0.9", or a fraction, e.g. "3/4", or WxH, e.g.
1280x1024. Use "fit" to fit in the current screen size. Use
"auto" to fit in the window size. "str" can also be set by the
env. var. SSVNC_SCALE.
If you observe mouse trail painting errors, enable X11 Cursor
mode (either via Popup or -x11cursor.)
Note that scaling is done in software and so can be slow and
requires more memory. Some speedup Tips:
ZRLE is faster than Tight in this mode. When scaling is first
detected, the encoding will be automatically switched to ZRLE.
Use the Popup menu if you want to go back to Tight. Set
SSVNC_PRESERVE_ENCODING=1 to disable this.
Use a solid background on the remote side. (e.g. manually or
via x11vnc -solid ...)
If the remote server is x11vnc, try client side caching: x11vnc
-ncache 10 ...
-ycrop n
Only show the top n rows of the framebuffer. For use with
x11vnc -ncache client caching option to help "hide" the pixel
cache region. Use a negative value (e.g. -1) for autodetection.
Autodetection will always take place if the remote fb height is
more than 2 times the width.
-sbwidth n
Scrollbar width for x11vnc -ncache mode (-ycrop), default is
very narrow: 2 pixels, it is narrow to avoid distraction in
-ycrop mode.
-nobell
Disable bell.
-rawlocal
Prefer raw encoding for localhost, default is no, i.e. assumes
you have a SSH tunnel instead.
-notty Try to avoid using the terminal for interactive responses: use
windows for messages and prompting instead. Messages will also
be printed to terminal.
-sendclipboard
Send the X CLIPBOARD selection (i.e. Ctrl+C, Ctrl+V) instead of
the X PRIMARY selection (mouse select and middle button paste.)
-sendalways
Whenever the mouse enters the VNC viewer main window, send the
selection to the VNC server even if it has not changed. This is
like the Xt resource translation SelectionToVNC(always)
-recvtext
str When cut text is received from the VNC server, ssvncviewer
will set both the X PRIMARY and the X CLIPBOARD local
selections. To control which is set, specify 'str' as
'primary', 'clipboard', or 'both' (the default.)
-graball
Grab the entire X server when in fullscreen mode, needed by some
old window managers like fvwm2.
-popupfix
Warp the popup back to the pointer position, needed by some old
window managers like fvwm2.
-grabkbd
Grab the X keyboard when in fullscreen mode, needed by some
window managers. Same as -grabkeyboard. -grabkbd is the
default, use -nograbkbd to disable.
-bs, -nobs
Whether or not to use X server Backingstore for the main viewer
window. The default is to not, mainly because most Linux, etc,
systems X servers disable *all* Backingstore by default. To
re-enable it put
Option "Backingstore"
in the Device section of /etc/X11/xorg.conf. In -bs mode with
no X server backingstore, whenever an area of the screen is
re-exposed it must go out to the VNC server to retrieve the
pixels. This is too slow.
In -nobs mode, memory is allocated by the viewer to provide its
own backing of the main viewer window. This actually makes some
activities faster (changes in large regions) but can appear to
"flash" too much.
-noshm Disable use of MIT shared memory extension (not recommended)
-termchat
Do the UltraVNC chat in the terminal vncviewer is in instead of
in an independent window.
-unixpw str
Useful for logging into x11vnc in -unixpw mode. "str" is a
string that allows many ways to enter the Unix Username and Unix
Password. These characters: username, newline, password,
newline are sent to the VNC server after any VNC authentication
has taken place. Under x11vnc they are used for the -unixpw
login. Other VNC servers could do something similar.
You can also indicate "str" via the environment variable
SSVNC_UNIXPW.
Note that the Escape key is actually sent first to tell x11vnc
to not echo the Unix Username back to the VNC viewer. Set
SSVNC_UNIXPW_NOESC=1 to override this.
If str is ".", then you are prompted at the command line for the
username and password in the normal way. If str is "-" the
stdin is read via getpass(3) for username@password. Otherwise
if str is a file, it is opened and the first line read is taken
as the Unix username and the 2nd as the password. If str
prefixed by "rm:" the file is removed after reading. Otherwise,
if str has a "@" character, it is taken as username@password.
Otherwise, the program exits with an error. Got all that?
-repeater str
This is for use with UltraVNC repeater proxy described here:
http://www.uvnc.com/addons/repeater.html. The "str" is the ID
string to be sent to the repeater. E.g. ID:1234 It can also be
the hostname and port or display of the VNC server, e.g.
12.34.56.78:0 or snoopy.com:1. Note that when using -repeater,
the host:dpy on the cmdline is the repeater server, NOT the VNC
server. The repeater will connect you.
Example: vncviewer ... -repeater ID:3333 repeat.host:5900
Example: vncviewer ... -repeater vhost:0 repeat.host:5900
Use, e.g., '-repeater SCIII=ID:3210' if the repeater is a Single
Click III (SSL) repeater (repeater_SSL.exe) and you are passing
the SSL part of the connection through stunnel, socat, etc.
This way the magic UltraVNC string 'testB' needed to work with
the repeater is sent to it.
-rfbversion str
Set the advertised RFB version. E.g.: -rfbversion 3.6 For some
servers, e.g. UltraVNC this needs to be done.
-ultradsm
UltraVNC has symmetric private encryption DSM plugins. See
http://www.uvnc.com/features/encryption.html. It is assumed you
are using a unix program (e.g. our ultravnc_dsm_helper) to
encrypt and decrypt the UltraVNC DSM stream. IN ADDITION TO THAT
supply -ultradsm to tell THIS viewer to modify the RFB data sent
so as to work with the UltraVNC Server. For some reason, each
RFB msg type must be sent twice under DSM.
-mslogon user
Use Windows MS Logon to an UltraVNC server. Supply the username
or "1" to be prompted. The default is to autodetect the
UltraVNC MS Logon server and prompt for the username and
password.
IMPORTANT NOTE: The UltraVNC MS-Logon Diffie-Hellman exchange is
very weak and can be brute forced to recover your username and
password in a few seconds of CPU time. To be safe, be sure to
use an additional encrypted tunnel (e.g. SSL or SSH) for the
entire VNC session.
-chatonly
Try to be a client that only does UltraVNC text chat. This mode
is used by x11vnc to present a chat window on the physical X11
console (i.e. to chat with the person at the display).
-env VAR=VALUE
To save writing a shell script to set environment variables,
specify as many as you need on the command line. For example,
-env SSVNC_MULTIPLE_LISTEN=MAX:5 -env EDITOR=vi
-noipv6
Disable all IPv6 sockets. Same as VNCVIEWER_NO_IPV6=1.
-noipv4
Disable all IPv4 sockets. Same as VNCVIEWER_NO_IPV4=1.
-printres
Print out the Ssvnc X resources (appdefaults) and then exit. You
can save them to a file and customize them (e.g. the keybindings
and Popup menu) Then point to the file via XENVIRONMENT or
XAPPLRESDIR.
-pipeline
Like TurboVNC, request the next framebuffer update as soon as
possible instead of waiting until the end of the current
framebuffer update coming in. Helps 'pipeline' the updates.
This is currently the default, use -nopipeline to disable.
-appshare
Enable features for use with x11vnc's -appshare mode where
instead of sharing the full desktop only the application's
windows are shared. Viewer multilisten mode is used to create
the multiple windows: -multilisten is implied. See 'x11vnc
-appshare -help' more information on the mode. Features enabled
in the viewer under -appshare are: Minimum extra text in the
title, auto -ycrop is disabled, x11vnc -remote_prefix
X11VNC_APPSHARE_CMD: message channel, x11vnc initial window
position hints. See also Escape Keys below for additional key
and mouse bindings.
-escape str
This sets the 'Escape Keys' modifier sequence and enables escape
keys mode. When the modifier keys escape sequence is held down,
the next keystroke is interpreted locally to perform a special
action instead of being sent to the remote VNC server.
Use '-escape default' for the default modifier sequence. (Unix:
Alt_L,Super_L and MacOSX: Control_L,Meta_L)
Here are the 'Escape Keys: Help+Set' instructions from the
Popup:
Escape Keys: Enter a comma separated list of modifier keys to
be the 'escape sequence'. When these keys are held down, the
next keystroke is interpreted locally to invoke a special action
instead of being sent to the remote VNC server. In other words,
a set of 'Hot Keys'.
Here is the list of local key mappings to special actions:
r: refresh desktop b: toggle bell c: toggle full-color
f: file transfer x: x11cursor z: toggle Tight/ZRLE
l: full screen g: graball e: escape keys dialog
s: scale dialog +: scale up (=) -: scale down (_)
t: text chat a: alphablend cursor
V: toggle viewonly Q: quit viewer 123456: UltraVNC scale 1/n
Arrow keys: pan the viewport about 10% for each keypress.
PageUp/PageDown: pan the viewport by a screenful vertically.
Home/End: pan the viewport by a screenful horizontally.
KeyPad Arrows: pan the viewport by 1 pixel for each keypress.
Dragging the Mouse with Button1 pressed also pans the viewport.
Clicking Mouse Button3 brings up the Popup Menu.
The above mappings are always active in ViewOnly mode, unless
you set the Escape Keys value to 'never'.
x11vnc -appshare hot-keys: x11vnc has a simple application
sharing mode that enables the viewer-side to move, resize, or
raise the remote toplevel windows. To enable it, hold down
Shift + the Escape Keys and press these:
Arrow keys: move the remote window around in its desktop.
PageUp/PageDn/Home/End: resize the remote window.
+/-: raise or lower the remote window.
M or Button1 move win to local position; D or Button3: delete
remote win.
If the Escape Keys value below is set to 'default' then a
default list of of modifier keys is used. For Unix it is:
Alt_L,Super_L and for MacOSX it is Control_L,Meta_L. Note: the
Super_L key usually has a Windows(TM) Flag on it. Also note the
_L and _R mean the key is on the LEFT or RIGHT side of the
keyboard.
On Unix the default is Alt and Windows keys on Left side of
keyboard. On MacOSX the default is Control and Command keys on
Left side of keyboard.
Example: Press and hold the Alt and Windows keys on the LEFT
side of the keyboard and then press 'c' to toggle the full-color
state. Or press 't' to toggle the ultravnc Text Chat window,
etc.
To use something besides the default, supply a comma separated
list (or a single one) from: Shift_L Shift_R Control_L Control_R
Alt_L Alt_R Meta_L Meta_R Super_L Super_R Hyper_L Hyper_R or
Mode_switch.
New Popup actions:
ViewOnly: ~ -viewonly
Disable Bell: ~ -nobell
Cursor Shape: ~ -nocursorshape
X11 Cursor: ~ -x11cursor
Cursor Alphablend: ~ -alpha
Toggle Tight/Hextile: ~ -encodings hextile...
Toggle Tight/ZRLE: ~ -encodings zrle...
Toggle ZRLE/ZYWRLE: ~ -encodings zywrle...
Quality Level ~ -quality (both Tight and ZYWRLE)
Compress Level ~ -compresslevel
Disable JPEG: ~ -nojpeg (Tight)
Pipeline Updates ~ -pipeline
Full Color as many colors as local screen
allows.
Grey scale (16 & 8-bpp) ~ -grey, for low colors 16/8bpp modes
only.
16 bit color (BGR565) ~ -16bpp / -bgr565
8 bit color (BGR233) ~ -bgr233
256 colors ~ -bgr233 default # of colors.
64 colors ~ -bgr222 / -use64
8 colors ~ -bgr111 / -use8
Scale Viewer ~ -scale
Escape Keys: Toggle ~ -escape
Escape Keys: Help+Set ~ -escape
Set Y Crop (y-max) ~ -ycrop
Set Scrollbar Width ~ -sbwidth
XGrabServer ~ -graball
UltraVNC Extensions:
Set 1/n Server Scale Ultravnc ext. Scale desktop by 1/n.
Text Chat Ultravnc ext. Do Text Chat.
File Transfer Ultravnc ext. File xfer via Java
helper.
Single Window Ultravnc ext. Grab and view a single
window.
(select then click on the window you
want).
Disable Remote Input Ultravnc ext. Try to prevent input
and
viewing of monitor at physical
display.
Note: the Ultravnc extensions only apply to servers that
support
them. x11vnc/libvncserver supports some of them.
Send Clipboard not Primary ~ -sendclipboard
Send Selection Every time ~ -sendalways
ENCODINGS
The server supplies information in whatever format is desired by the
client, in order to make the client as easy as possible to implement.
If the client represents itself as able to use multiple formats, the
server will choose one.
Pixel format refers to the representation of an individual pixel. The
most common formats are 24 and 16 bit "true-color" values, and 8-bit
"color map" representations, where an arbitrary map converts the color
number to RGB values.
Encoding refers to how a rectangle of pixels are sent (all pixel
information in VNC is sent as rectangles). All rectangles come with a
header giving the location and size of the rectangle and an encoding
type used by the data which follows. These types are listed below.
Raw The raw encoding simply sends width*height pixel values. All
clients are required to support this encoding type. Raw is also
the fastest when the server and viewer are on the same machine,
as the connection speed is essentially infinite and raw encoding
minimizes processing time.
CopyRect
The Copy Rectangle encoding is efficient when something is being
moved; the only data sent is the location of a rectangle from
which data should be copied to the current location. Copyrect
could also be used to efficiently transmit a repeated pattern.
RRE The Rise-and-Run-length-Encoding is basically a 2D version of
run-length encoding (RLE). In this encoding, a sequence of
identical pixels are compressed to a single value and repeat
count. In VNC, this is implemented with a background color, and
then specifications of an arbitrary number of subrectangles and
color for each. This is an efficient encoding for large blocks
of constant color.
CoRRE This is a minor variation on RRE, using a maximum of 255x255
pixel rectangles. This allows for single-byte values to be used,
reducing packet size. This is in general more efficient, because
the savings from sending 1-byte values generally outweighs the
losses from the (relatively rare) cases where very large regions
are painted the same color.
Hextile
Here, rectangles are split up in to 16x16 tiles, which are sent
in a predetermined order. The data within the tiles is sent
either raw or as a variant on RRE. Hextile encoding is usually
the best choice for using in high-speed network environments
(e.g. Ethernet local-area networks).
Zlib Zlib is a very simple encoding that uses zlib library to
compress raw pixel data. This encoding achieves good
compression, but consumes a lot of CPU time. Support for this
encoding is provided for compatibility with VNC servers that
might not understand Tight encoding which is more efficient than
Zlib in nearly all real-life situations.
Tight Like Zlib encoding, Tight encoding uses zlib library to compress
the pixel data, but it pre-processes data to maximize
compression ratios, and to minimize CPU usage on compression.
Also, JPEG compression may be used to encode color-rich screen
areas (see the description of -quality and -nojpeg options
above). Tight encoding is usually the best choice for
low-bandwidth network environments (e.g. slow modem
connections).
ZRLE The SSVNC viewer has ported the RealVNC (www.realvnc.com) ZRLE
encoding to the unix tightvnc viewer.
ZYWRLE The SSVNC viewer has ported the Hitachi lossy wavelet based ZRLE
encoding from http://mobile.hitachi-
system.co.jp/publications/ZYWRLE/ to the unix tightvnc viewer.
RESOURCES
X resources that vncviewer knows about, aside from the normal Xt
resources, are as follows:
shareDesktop
Equivalent of -shared/-noshared options. Default true.
viewOnly
Equivalent of -viewonly option. Default false.
fullScreen
Equivalent of -fullscreen option. Default false.
grabKeyboard
Grab keyboard in full-screen mode. This can help to solve
problems with losing keyboard focus. Default false.
raiseOnBeep
Equivalent of -noraiseonbeep option, when set to false. Default
true.
passwordFile
Equivalent of -passwd option.
userLogin
Equivalent of -user option.
passwordDialog
Whether to use a dialog box to get the password (true) or get it
from the tty (false). Irrelevant if passwordFile is set. Default
false.
encodings
Equivalent of -encodings option.
compressLevel
Equivalent of -compresslevel option (TightVNC-specific).
qualityLevel
Equivalent of -quality option (TightVNC-specific).
enableJPEG
Equivalent of -nojpeg option, when set to false. Default true.
useRemoteCursor
Equivalent of -nocursorshape option, when set to false
(TightVNC-specific). Default true.
useBGR233
Equivalent of -bgr233 option. Default false.
nColours
When using BGR233, try to allocate this many "exact" colors from
the BGR233 color cube. When using a shared colormap, setting
this resource lower leaves more colors for other X clients.
Irrelevant when using truecolor. Default is 256 (i.e. all of
them).
useSharedColours
If the number of "exact" BGR233 colors successfully allocated is
less than 256 then the rest are filled in using the "nearest"
colors available. This resource says whether to only use the
"exact" BGR233 colors for this purpose, or whether to use other
clients' "shared" colors as well. Default true (i.e. use other
clients' colors).
forceOwnCmap
Equivalent of -owncmap option. Default false.
forceTrueColour
Equivalent of -truecolour option. Default false.
requestedDepth
Equivalent of -depth option.
useSharedMemory
Use MIT shared memory extension if on the same machine as the X
server. Default true.
wmDecorationWidth, wmDecorationHeight
The total width and height taken up by window manager
decorations. This is used to calculate the maximum size of the
VNC viewer window. Default is width 4, height 24.
bumpScrollTime, bumpScrollPixels
When in full screen mode and the VNC desktop is bigger than the
X display, scrolling happens whenever the mouse hits the edge of
the screen. The maximum speed of scrolling is bumpScrollPixels
pixels every bumpScrollTime milliseconds. The actual speed of
scrolling will be slower than this, of course, depending on how
fast your machine is. Default 20 pixels every 25 milliseconds.
popupButtonCount
The number of buttons in the popup window. See the README file
for more information on how to customize the buttons.
debug For debugging. Default false.
rawDelay, copyRectDelay
For debugging, see the README file for details. Default 0 (off).
ENVIRONMENT
When started with the -via option, vncviewer reads the VNC_VIA_CMD
environment variable, expands patterns beginning with the "%"
character, and executes result as a command assuming that it would
create TCP tunnel that should be used for VNC connection. If not set,
this environment variable defaults to "/usr/bin/ssh -f -L %L:%H:%R %G
sleep 20".
The following patterns are recognized in the VNC_VIA_CMD (note that all
the patterns %G, %H, %L and %R must be present in the command
template):
%% A literal "%";
%G gateway host name;
%H remote VNC host name, as known to the gateway;
%L local TCP port number;
%R remote TCP port number.
SEE ALSO
vncserver(1), x11vnc(1), ssvnc(1), Xvnc(1), vncpasswd(1),
vncconnect(1), ssh(1), http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc,
http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/ssvnc.html
AUTHORS
Original VNC was developed in AT&T Laboratories Cambridge. TightVNC
additions was implemented by Constantin Kaplinsky. Many other people
participated in development, testing and support. Karl J. Runge added
all of the SSVNC related features and improvements.
Man page authors:
Marcus Brinkmann <Marcus.Brinkmann@ruhr-uni-bochum.de>,
Terran Melconian <terran@consistent.org>,
Tim Waugh <twaugh@redhat.com>,
Constantin Kaplinsky <const@ce.cctpu.edu.ru>
Karl J. Runge <runge@karlrunge.com>
April 2010 ssvncviewer(1)