mirror of
https://github.com/kasmtech/KasmVNC.git
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644 lines
22 KiB
Groff
644 lines
22 KiB
Groff
.TH Xvnc 1 "" "KasmVNC" "Virtual Network Computing"
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.SH NAME
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Xvnc \- the X VNC server
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.B Xvnc
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.RI [ options ]
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.RI : display#
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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.B Xvnc
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is the X VNC (Virtual Network Computing) server. It is based on a standard X
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server, but it has a "virtual" screen rather than a physical one. X
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applications display themselves on it as if it were a normal X display, but
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they can only be accessed via a VNC viewer - see \fBvncviewer\fP(1).
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So Xvnc is really two servers in one. To the applications it is an X server,
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and to the remote VNC users it is a VNC server. By convention we have arranged
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that the VNC server display number will be the same as the X server display
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number, which means you can use eg. snoopy:2 to refer to display 2 on machine
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"snoopy" in both the X world and the VNC world.
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The best way of starting \fBXvnc\fP is via the \fBvncserver\fP script. This
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sets up the environment appropriately and runs some X applications to get you
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going. See the manual page for \fBvncserver\fP(1) for more information.
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.SH OPTIONS
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.B Xvnc
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takes lots of options - running \fBXvnc -help\fP gives a list. Many of these
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are standard X server options, which are described in the \fBXserver\fP(1)
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manual page. In addition to options which can only be set via the
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command-line, there are also "parameters" which can be set both via the
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command-line and through the \fBvncconfig\fP(1) program.
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.TP
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.B \-geometry \fIwidth\fPx\fIheight\fP
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Specify the size of the desktop to be created. Default is 1024x768.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-depth \fIdepth\fP
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Specify the pixel depth in bits of the desktop to be created. Default is 24,
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other possible values are 16 and 32. Anything else is likely to cause strange
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behaviour by applications and may prevent the server from starting at all.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-pixelformat \fIformat\fP
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Specify pixel format for server to use (BGRnnn or RGBnnn). The default for
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depth 16 is RGB565 and for depth 24 and 32 is RGB888.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-interface \fIIP address\fP
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Listen on interface. By default Xvnc listens on all available interfaces.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-inetd
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This significantly changes Xvnc's behaviour so that it can be launched from
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inetd. See the section below on usage with inetd.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-help
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List all the options and parameters
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.SH PARAMETERS
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VNC parameters can be set both via the command-line and through the
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\fBvncconfig\fP(1) program, and with a VNC-enabled Xorg server via Options
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entries in the xorg.conf file.
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Parameters can be turned on with -\fIparam\fP or off with
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-\fIparam\fP=0. Parameters which take a value can be specified as
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-\fIparam\fP \fIvalue\fP. Other valid forms are \fIparam\fP\fB=\fP\fIvalue\fP
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-\fIparam\fP=\fIvalue\fP --\fIparam\fP=\fIvalue\fP. Parameter names are
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case-insensitive.
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.TP
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.B \-desktop \fIdesktop-name\fP
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Each desktop has a name which may be displayed by the viewer. It defaults to
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"x11".
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.
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.TP
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.B \-rfbport \fIport\fP
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Specifies the TCP port on which Xvnc listens for connections from viewers (the
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protocol used in VNC is called RFB - "remote framebuffer"). The default is
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5900 plus the display number.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-UseIPv4
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Use IPv4 for incoming and outgoing connections. Default is on.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-UseIPv6
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Use IPv6 for incoming and outgoing connections. Default is on.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-UnixRelay \fIname:path\fP
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Create a local named unix socket, for relaying data. May be given multiple times.
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Example: -UnixRelay audio:/tmp/audiosock
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.
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.TP
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.B \-rfbunixpath \fIpath\fP
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Specifies the path of a Unix domain socket on which Xvnc listens for
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connections from viewers, instead of listening on a TCP port.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-rfbunixmode \fImode\fP
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Specifies the mode of the Unix domain socket. The default is 0600.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-rfbwait \fItime\fP, \-ClientWaitTimeMillis \fItime\fP
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Time in milliseconds to wait for a viewer which is blocking the server. This is
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necessary because the server is single-threaded and sometimes blocks until the
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viewer has finished sending or receiving a message - note that this does not
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mean an update will be aborted after this time. Default is 20000 (20 seconds).
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.
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.TP
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.B \-httpd \fIdirectory\fP
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Run a mini-HTTP server which serves files from the given directory. Normally
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the directory will contain the kasmweb client. It will use the websocket port.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-http-header \fIheader=val\fP
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Append this header to all HTTP responses (file and API). May be given multiple
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times.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-rfbauth \fIpasswd-file\fP, \-PasswordFile \fIpasswd-file\fP
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Password file for VNC authentication. There is no default, you should
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specify the password file explicitly. Password file should be created with
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the \fBvncpasswd\fP(1) utility. The file is accessed each time a connection
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comes in, so it can be changed on the fly.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-KasmPasswordFile \fIpasswd-file\fP
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Password file for BasicAuth, created with the \fBkasmvncpasswd\fP utility.
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Default \fI~/.kasmpasswd\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-PublicIP \fImy-ip\fP
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The server's public IP, for UDP negotiation. If not set, will be queried via the internet.
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Default unset.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-StunServer \fIsrv\fP
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Use this STUN server for querying the server's public IP. If not set, a hardcoded list of
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STUN servers is used.
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Default unset.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-udpFullFrameFrequency \fIframes\fP
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Send a full frame every N frames for clients using UDP. 0 to disable. Default \fI0\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-udpPort \fIport\fP
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Which port to use for UDP. Default same as websocket.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-AcceptCutText
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Accept clipboard updates from clients. Default is on.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-SendCutText
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Send clipboard changes to clients. Default is on.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-SendPrimary
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Send the primary selection and cut buffer to the server as well as the
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clipboard selection. Default is off.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-AcceptPointerEvents
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Accept pointer press and release events from clients. Default is on.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-AcceptKeyEvents
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Accept key press and release events from clients. Default is on.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-AcceptSetDesktopSize
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Accept requests to resize the size of the desktop. Default is on.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DisconnectClients
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Disconnect existing clients if an incoming connection is non-shared. Default is
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on. If \fBDisconnectClients\fP is false, then a new non-shared connection will
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be refused while there is a client active. When combined with
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\fBNeverShared\fP this means only one client is allowed at a time.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-NeverShared
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Never treat incoming connections as shared, regardless of the client-specified
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setting. Default is off.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-AlwaysShared
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Always treat incoming connections as shared, regardless of the client-specified
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setting. Default is off.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-Protocol3.3
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Always use protocol version 3.3 for backwards compatibility with badly-behaved
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clients. Default is off.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-FrameRate \fIfps\fP
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The maximum number of updates per second sent to each client. If the screen
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updates any faster then those changes will be aggregated and sent in a single
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update to the client. Note that this only controls the maximum rate and a
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client may get a lower rate when resources are limited. Default is \fB60\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DynamicQualityMin \fImin\fP
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The minimum quality to with dynamic JPEG quality scaling. The accepted values
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are 0-9 where 0 is low and 9 is high, with the same meaning as the client-side
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-quality parameter. Default is \fB7\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DynamicQualityMax \fImax\fP
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The maximum quality to use with dynamic JPEG quality scaling. Setting this to
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zero disables dynamic JPEG quality scaling. The accepted values are 0-9 where 0
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is low and 9 is high, with the same meaning as the client-side -quality parameter.
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Default is \fB8\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-TreatLossless \fIquality\fP
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Treat lossy quality levels above and including this as lossless, without
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sending lossless updates for them. 0-9, 10 disables this.
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Default is \fB10\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-PreferBandwidth
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Prefer bandwidth over quality, and set various options for lower bandwidth use.
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The default is off, aka to prefer quality. You can override individual values
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by setting them after this switch on the command line. This switch sets the
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following:
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.br
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- dynamic JPEG quality range 2-9
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.br
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- TreatLossless 8
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.
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.TP
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.B \-RectThreads \fInum\fP
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Use this many threads to compress rects in parallel. Default \fB0\fP (automatic),
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set to \fB1\fP to disable.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-JpegVideoQuality \fInum\fP
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The JPEG quality to use when in video mode.
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Default \fB-1\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-WebpVideoQuality \fInum\fP
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The WEBP quality to use when in video mode.
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Default \fB-1\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-MaxVideoResolution \fI1920x1080\fP
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When in video mode, downscale the screen to max this size. Keeps aspect ratio.
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Default \fB1920x1080\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-VideoTime \fIseconds\fP
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High rate of change must happen for this many seconds to switch to video mode.
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Default \fB5\fP, set \fB0\fP to always enable.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-VideoOutTime \fIseconds\fP
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The rate of change must be below the VideoArea threshold for this many seconds
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to switch out of video mode.
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Default \fB3\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-VideoArea \fIpercentage\fP
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High rate of change must happen for this % of the screen to switch to video mode.
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Default \fB45\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-PrintVideoArea
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Print the detected video area % value.
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Default off.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-VideoScaling \fItype\fP
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Scaling method to use when in downscaled video mode. 0 = nearest, 1 = bilinear,
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2 = progressive bilinear.
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Default \fB2\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-CompareFB \fImode\fP
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Perform pixel comparison on framebuffer to reduce unnecessary updates. Can
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be either \fB0\fP (off), \fB1\fP (always) or \fB2\fP (auto). Default is
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\fB2\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-hw3d
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Enable hardware 3d acceleration. Default is software (llvmpipe usually).
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.
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.TP
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.B \-drinode \fIpath\fP
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Use another path instead of /dev/dri/renderD128. You may need this if you have
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more than one GPU.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-ZlibLevel \fIlevel\fP
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Zlib compression level for ZRLE encoding (it does not affect Tight encoding).
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Acceptable values are between 0 and 9. Default is to use the standard
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compression level provided by the \fBzlib\fP(3) compression library.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-ImprovedHextile
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Use improved compression algorithm for Hextile encoding which achieves better
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compression ratios by the cost of using slightly more CPU time. Default is
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on.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-IgnoreClientSettingsKasm
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Ignore the additional client settings exposed in Kasm. Default off.
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Kasm exposes a few settings to the client the standard VNC does not.
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This param lets the server ignore those.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_Region \fIx1,y1,x2,y2\fP
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Black out anything outside this region. x1,y1 is the upper-left corner,
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and x2,y2 the lower-left. In addition to absolute pixel values, percentages
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are allowed, zero means "default", and a negative number means "border".
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_RegionAllowClick \fIbool\fP
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Allow clicks inside the blacked-out region.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_RegionAllowRelease \fIbool\fP
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Allow click releases inside the blacked-out region.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_ClipSendMax \fIbytes\fP
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Limit clipboard bytes to send to clients in one transaction. Default 0.
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0 disables the limit, use \fBSendCutText\fP to disable clipboard sending entirely.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_ClipAcceptMax \fIbytes\fP
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Limit clipboard bytes to receive from clients in one transaction. Default 0.
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0 disables the limit, use \fBAcceptCutText\fP to disable clipboard receiving entirely.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_ClipDelay \fIms\fP
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This many milliseconds must pass between clipboard actions. Default 0, 0 disables the limit.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_ClipTypes \fIa,b\fP
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Allowed binary clipboard mimetypes, separated by commas. Default
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chromium/x-web-custom-data,text/html,image/png
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_KeyRateLimit \fIkeys-per-second\fP
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Reject keyboard presses over this many per second. Default 0 (disabled).
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_Log \fIoff/info/verbose\fP
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Log clipboard and keyboard actions. Info logs just clipboard direction and size,
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verbose adds the contents for both.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_WatermarkImage \fIpath/to/file.png\fP
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Add a watermark. The PNG file should be greyscale, black is treated as transparent
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and white as opaque.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_WatermarkLocation \fIx,y\fP
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Place the watermark at this position from the corner. Positive numbers are from top-left,
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negative from bottom-right. Negative numbers count from the bottom-right edge of the image.
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If not set, the watermark will be centered. Cannot be used together with repeat.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_WatermarkRepeatSpace \fInum\fP
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If set, repeat the watermark over the entire image, with \fBnum\fP pixels between
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repetitions. Cannot be used together with location.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_WatermarkTint \fIr,g,b,a\fP
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Tint the greyscale watermark by this color. Default is 255,255,255,255 - full white.
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The color components can be used to colorize the greyscale watermark, and the alpha
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can be used to make it fainter.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_WatermarkText \fI"foo %H:%M"\fP
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Instead of an image, render this text as the watermark. Takes time formatting options
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for \fBstrftime\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_WatermarkTextAngle \fIangle\fP
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Rotate the text by this many degrees, increasing clockwise. Default \fB0\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_WatermarkFont \fI/path/to/font.ttf\fP
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Use a different font for -DLP_WatermarkText than the bundled one. TTF and OTF fonts
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are accepted.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_WatermarkFontSize \fI48\fP
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Font size for -DLP_WatermarkText. Default \fI48\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_WatermarkTimeOffset \fI0\fP
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Time offset from UTC, hours. Default \fI0\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-DLP_WatermarkTimeOffsetMinutes \fI0\fP
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Time offset from UTC, minutes. Default \fI0\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-selfBench
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Run a set of self-benchmarks and exit.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-noWebsocket
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Disable websockets and expose a traditional VNC port (5901, etc.).
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.
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.TP
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.B \-websocketPort \fIport\fP
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Listen for websocket connections on this port, default 6800.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-cert \fIpath\fP
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SSL pem cert to use for websocket connections, default empty/not used.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-key \fIpath\fP
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SSL pem key to use for websocket connections, default empty/not used.
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Only use this if you have the cert and key in separate files. If they
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are in the same file, use \fB-cert\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-sslOnly
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Require SSL for websocket connections. Default off, non-SSL allowed.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-disableBasicAuth
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Disable basic auth for websocket connections. Default enabled, details read from
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the \fB-KasmPasswordFile\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-SecurityTypes \fIsec-types\fP
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Specify which security scheme to use for incoming connections. Valid values
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are a comma separated list of \fBNone\fP, \fBVncAuth\fP, \fBPlain\fP,
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\fBTLSNone\fP, \fBTLSVnc\fP, \fBTLSPlain\fP, \fBX509None\fP, \fBX509Vnc\fP
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and \fBX509Plain\fP. Default is \fBVncAuth,TLSVnc\fP.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-Password \fIpassword\fP
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Obfuscated binary encoding of the password which clients must supply to
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access the server. Using this parameter is insecure, use \fBPasswordFile\fP
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parameter instead.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-PlainUsers \fIuser-list\fP
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A comma separated list of user names that are allowed to authenticate via
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any of the "Plain" security types (Plain, TLSPlain, etc.). Specify \fB*\fP
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to allow any user to authenticate using this security type. Default is to
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deny all users.
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.
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.TP
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.B \-pam_service \fIname\fP, \-PAMService \fIname\fP
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PAM service name to use when authentication users using any of the "Plain"
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security types. Default is \fBvnc\fP.
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.
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.TP
|
||
.B \-X509Cert \fIpath\fP
|
||
Path to a X509 certificate in PEM format to be used for all X509 based
|
||
security types (X509None, X509Vnc, etc.).
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-X509Key \fIpath\fP
|
||
Private key counter part to the certificate given in \fBX509Cert\fP. Must
|
||
also be in PEM format.
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-GnuTLSPriority \fIpriority\fP
|
||
GnuTLS priority string that controls the TLS session’s handshake algorithms.
|
||
See the GnuTLS manual for possible values. Default is \fBNORMAL\fP.
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-BlacklistThreshold \fIcount\fP
|
||
The number of unauthenticated connection attempts allowed from any individual
|
||
host before that host is black-listed. Default is 5.
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-BlacklistTimeout \fIseconds\fP
|
||
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.
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-IdleTimeout \fIseconds\fP
|
||
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.
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-MaxDisconnectionTime \fIseconds\fP
|
||
Terminate when no client has been connected for \fIN\fP seconds. Default is
|
||
0.
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-MaxConnectionTime \fIseconds\fP
|
||
Terminate when a client has been connected for \fIN\fP seconds. Default is
|
||
0.
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-MaxIdleTime \fIseconds\fP
|
||
Terminate after \fIN\fP seconds of user inactivity. Default is 0.
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-QueryConnect
|
||
Prompts the user of the desktop to explicitly accept or reject incoming
|
||
connections. Default is off.
|
||
|
||
The \fBvncconfig\fP(1) program must be running on the desktop in order for
|
||
QueryConnect to be supported.
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-QueryConnectTimeout \fIseconds\fP
|
||
Number of seconds to show the Accept Connection dialog before rejecting the
|
||
connection. Default is \fB10\fP.
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-localhost
|
||
Only allow connections from the same machine. Useful if you use SSH and want to
|
||
stop non-SSH connections from any other hosts.
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-Log \fIlogname\fP:\fIdest\fP:\fIlevel\fP
|
||
Configures the debug log settings. \fIdest\fP can currently be \fBstderr\fP,
|
||
\fBstdout\fP or \fBsyslog\fP, and \fIlevel\fP is between 0 and 100, 100 meaning
|
||
most verbose output. \fIlogname\fP is usually \fB*\fP meaning all, but you can
|
||
target a specific source file if you know the name of its "LogWriter". Default
|
||
is \fB*:stderr:30\fP.
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-RemapKeys \fImapping
|
||
Sets up a keyboard mapping.
|
||
.I mapping
|
||
is a comma-separated string of character mappings, each of the form
|
||
.IR char -> char ,
|
||
or
|
||
.IR char <> char ,
|
||
where
|
||
.I char
|
||
is a hexadecimal keysym. For example, to exchange the " and @ symbols you would specify the following:
|
||
|
||
.RS 10
|
||
RemapKeys=0x22<>0x40
|
||
.RE
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-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).
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-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.
|
||
.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-AllowOverride
|
||
Comma separated list of parameters that can be modified using VNC extension.
|
||
Parameters can be modified for example using \fBvncconfig\fP(1) program from
|
||
inside a running session.
|
||
|
||
Allowing override of parameters such as \fBPAMService\fP or \fBPasswordFile\fP
|
||
can negatively impact security if Xvnc runs under different user than the
|
||
programs allowed to override the parameters.
|
||
|
||
When \fBNoClipboard\fP parameter is set, allowing override of \fBSendCutText\fP
|
||
and \fBAcceptCutText\fP has no effect.
|
||
|
||
Default is \fBdesktop,AcceptPointerEvents,SendCutText,AcceptCutText,SendPrimary,SetPrimary\fP.
|
||
|
||
.SH USAGE WITH INETD
|
||
By configuring the \fBinetd\fP(1) service appropriately, Xvnc can be launched
|
||
on demand when a connection comes in, rather than having to be started
|
||
manually. When given the \fB-inetd\fP 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, Xvnc 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 vncconfig program). Further viewer connections to the
|
||
same TCP port result in inetd spawning off a new Xvnc to deal with each
|
||
connection. When the connection to the viewer dies, the Xvnc 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/Xvnc Xvnc -inetd -query
|
||
localhost -once securitytypes=none
|
||
|
||
In this example a viewer connection to :50 will result in a new Xvnc 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 Xvnc. This means that for a given TCP port, there is only ever one
|
||
Xvnc at a time. Further viewer connections to the same port are accepted by
|
||
the same Xvnc in the normal way. Even when the original connection is broken,
|
||
the Xvnc will continue to run. If this is used with the XDMCP options -query
|
||
and -once, the Xvnc 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/Xvnc Xvnc -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 Xvnc will die, but of course a new one will be
|
||
created automatically the next time he connects.
|
||
|
||
.SH SEE ALSO
|
||
.BR vncconfig (1),
|
||
.BR vncpasswd (1),
|
||
.BR vncserver (1),
|
||
.BR vncviewer (1),
|
||
.BR Xserver (1),
|
||
.BR inetd (1)
|
||
.br
|
||
http://kasmweb.com
|
||
|
||
.SH AUTHOR
|
||
Kasm Technologies Corp., Tristan Richardson, RealVNC Ltd., D. R. Commander 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. KasmVNC has since
|
||
forked and the project and has added many modern features and made
|
||
the solution web native.
|
||
|
||
This manual is part of the KasmVNC software suite.
|