Previously launch.sh would check both for the existence of a local
websockify file and /websockify/run file.
This initial check should really be for a local websockify directory
as in packaged environments a file could very well be the actual
executable leading to launch.sh incorrectly attempting to use a local
version of websockify.
These are harmless and really only for debugging. So remove them
as they tend to trick people in to thinking something is wrong.
We already print the entire server pixel format earlier anyway in
case we need the details.
* First attempt to make the fullscreen button work inside an iframe.
* Cleaner distinction between document element and document.
* Scoping corrections. Auto-detect correct iframe.
* Added comments to the relevant sections.
* IE issue fixed.
* Same source issue solved. fullscreenToggle now checks if it is permitted to inspect other iframes.
Commit 6e7e6f9 stopped the function from running if width or height was
zero, this commit reverts that change. This commit also makes the
resulting canvas 0x0 if autoscale is called with zero. By adding this
special case we can avoid division by zero in the calculations.
It is not necessary as Websock.flush() is guaranteed to succeed and
give us some space. It also remove the call to _fail(), which was
invalid at this place as clientCutText() is not a method on RFB.
We accidentally removed the code updating the data index in 8a189a6,
resulting in the decoder newer consuming any data. So the data would
be parsed as the next rect, causing weird errors.
This change adds support for the VMware Mouse Position
pseudo-encoding[1], which is used to notify VNC clients when X11 clients
call `XWarpPointer()`[2]. This function is called by SDL (and other
similar libraries) when they detect that the server does not support
native relative motion, like some RFB clients.
With this, RFB clients can choose to adjust the local cursor position
under certain circumstances to match what the server has set. For
instance, if pointer lock has been enabled on the client's machine and
the cursor is not being drawn locally, the local position of the cursor
is irrelevant, so the RFB client can use what the server sends as the
canonical absolute position of the cursor. This ultimately enables the
possibility of games (especially FPS games) to behave how users expect
(if the clients implement the corresponding change).
Part of: #619
1: https://github.com/rfbproto/rfbproto/blob/master/rfbproto.rst#vmware-cursor-position-pseudo-encoding
2: https://tronche.com/gui/x/xlib/input/XWarpPointer.html
3: https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/file/28e3b60e2131/src/events/SDL_mouse.c#l804
We computed a safe area if a client gave us a bogus one, but we didn't
actually use it. Fix this properly and make sure we don't pass on bad
coordinates further.
Now measures over an entire update, which should hopefully give us more
stable values. They are still small values for fast networks though so
increase precision in the values we keep.
We can't safely use the normal timers in base classes as we cannot
guarantee that subclasses will call the base class' handleTimeout()
properly if the subclass overrides it.