.TH X0VNCSERVER 1 "Dec 23, 2008" "TigerVNC" "TigerVNC Manual" .SH NAME x0vncserver \- TigerVNC Server for X displays .SH SYNOPSIS .B x0vncserver .RI [ options ] .br .B x0vncserver -version .SH DESCRIPTION .B x0vncserver is a TigerVNC Server which makes any X display remotely accessible via VNC, TigerVNC or compatible viewers. Unlike \fBXvnc\fP(1), it does not create a virtual display. Instead, it just shares an existing X server (typically, that one connected to the physical screen). .SH OPTIONS .B x0vncserver interprets the command line as a list of parameters with optional values. Running \fBx0vncserver -h\fP will show a list of all valid parameters with short descriptions. All parameters are optional, but normally you would have to use the \fBPasswordFile\fP parameter (see its description below). .PP There are several forms of specifying parameters in the command line (here we use `\fISomeParameter\fP' as an example parameter name): .TP .B -\fISomeParameter\fP Enable the parameter, turn the feature on. This form can be used with parameters that simply enable or disable some feature. .TP .B -\fISomeParameter\fP=0 Disable the parameter, turn the feature off. .TP .B -\fISomeParameter\fP=\fIvalue\fP Assign the specified \fIvalue\fP to the parameter. The leading dash can be omitted, or it can be doubled if desired (like in GNU-style long options). .PP Parameter names are case-insensitive, their order in the command line can be arbitrary. .SH PARAMETERS .TP .B display The X display name. If not specified, it defaults to the value of the DISPLAY environment variable. .TP .B rfbport TCP port to listen for incoming VNC connections (RFB protocol). The default port is 5900. .TP .B Log Specifies which log output should be directed to which target logger, and the level of output to log. Format is \fIlog\fP:\fItarget\fP:\fIlevel\fP. Default is \fB*:stderr:30\fP (log everything to stderr, set log level to 30). Log level should be a value between 0 and 100, higher levels produce more output. .TP .B HostsFile This parameter allows to specify a file name with IP access control rules. The file should include one rule per line, and the rule format is one of the following: +\fIaddress\fP/\fInetmask\fP (accept connections from the specified address group), -\fIaddress\fP/\fInetmask\fP (reject connections) or ?\fIaddress\fP/\fInetmask\fP (query the local user). The first rule matching the IP address determines the action to be performed. Rules that include only an action sign (+, - or ?) will match any IP address. \fINetmask\fP is optional and can be specified either in dotted format (e.g. /255.255.255.0), or as a single number of bits (e.g. /24). Default is to accept connections from any IP address. .TP .B SecurityTypes Specify which security scheme to use for incoming connections. Valid values are \fBNone\fP and \fBVncAuth\fP. Default is \fBVncAuth\fP. .TP .B PasswordFile Password file for VNC authentication. There is no default, you should specify the password file explicitly. Password file should be created with the \fBvncpasswd\fP(1) utility. .TP .B Password Obfuscated binary encoding of the password which clients must supply to access the server. Using this parameter is insecure, use \fBPasswordFile\fP parameter instead. .TP .B BlacklistThreshold The number of unauthenticated connection attempts allowed from any individual host before that host is black-listed. Default is 5. .TP .B BlacklistTimeout 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 QueryConnect Prompt the local user to accept or reject incoming connections. Default is off. .TP .B QueryConnectTimeout Number of seconds to show the Accept Connection dialog before rejecting the connection. Default is 10. .TP .B AlwaysShared Always treat incoming connections as shared, regardless of the client-specified setting. Default is off. .TP .B NeverShared Never treat incoming connections as shared, regardless of the client-specified setting. Default is off. .TP .B DisconnectClients Disconnect existing clients if an incoming connection is non-shared. If combined with \fBNeverShared\fP then new connections will be refused while there is a client active. Default is on. .TP .B AcceptKeyEvents Accept key press and release events from clients. Default is on. .TP .B AcceptPointerEvents Accept pointer events from clients. Default is on. .TP .B RemapKeys Comma-separated list of incoming keysyms to remap. Mappings are expressed as two hex values, prefixed by \fB0x\fP, and separated by \fB->\fP (`dash' and `greater than' characters). .TP .B Protocol3.3 Always use RFB protocol version 3.3 for backwards compatibility with badly-behaved clients. Default is off. .TP .B Geometry This option specifies the screen area that will be shown to VNC clients. The format is .B \fIwidth\fPx\fIheight\fP+\fIxoffset\fP+\fIyoffset\fP , where `+' signs can be replaced with `\-' signs to specify offsets from the right and/or from the bottom of the screen. Offsets are optional, +0+0 is assumed by default (top left corner). If the argument is empty, full screen is shown to VNC clients (this is the default). .TP .B MaxProcessorUsage Maximum percentage of CPU time to be consumed when polling the screen. Default is 35. .TP .B PollingCycle Milliseconds per one polling cycle. Actual interval may be dynamically adjusted to satisfy \fBMaxProcessorUsage\fP setting. Default is 30. .TP .B VideoArea This option specifies the screen area that will be handled as video. The format is .B \fIwidth\fPx\fIheight\fP+\fIxoffset\fP+\fIyoffset\fP , where `+' signs can be replaced with `\-' signs to specify offsets from the right and/or from the bottom of the screen. Offsets are optional, +0+0 is assumed by default (top left corner). Video area is not checked for actual changes, it is assumed to be changing continuously and is sent in each screen update. Normally, video area is compressed with JPEG (if allowed by the client). Note that this setting can be overriden by TigerVNC clients supporting VideoRectangleSelection protocol extension. In other words, clients may choose video selection themselves, but if they do not, then the \fBVideoArea\fP parameter will take effect. If the argument is empty, no video area is set (this is the default). .TP .B VideoPriority Specify the priority of sending video updates. \fBx0vncserver\fP can be instructed to treat certain rectangular part of the screen as a video area and handle it in a special way for improved performance (see documentation on the \fBVideoArea\fP parameter). \fBVideoPriority\fP value controls how often video area will be sent to clients as compared to the rest of the screen. The priority must be an integer between 0 and 8, and the default value is 2. \fBVideoPriority\fP set to 1 gives the same priority both to video and to other pixels. Higher values give more priority to video. For example, the value 5 specifies that the rate of sending video will be five times higher than the rate of updating the rest of the screen. If \fBVideoPriority\fP is set to 0, it gives equal priority to video and other updates (just like the value 1) and also disables special encoding for video data. In other words, \fBVideoPriority\fP video area will be sent as a part of other screen contents. .TP .B CompareFB Perform pixel comparison on framebuffer to reduce unnecessary updates. Default is on. .TP .B UseSHM Use MIT-SHM extension if available. Using that extension accelerates reading the screen. Default is on. .TP .B OverlayMode Use overlay mode in IRIX or Solaris (does not have effect in other systems). This enables system-specific access to complete full-color version of the screen (the default X visual often provides 256 colors). Also, in overlay mode, \fBx0vncserver\fP can show correct mouse cursor. Default is on. .TP .B UseHardwareJPEG Use hardware-accelerated JPEG compressor for video if available. \fBx0vncserver\fP can be instructed to treat certain rectangular part of the screen as a video area and handle it in a special way for improved performance. If the client supports Tight encoding and JPEG compression, such video areas will be sent as JPEG-encoded rectangles. And if this option is on, compression will be hardware-accelerated (currently, supported only in SGI/IRIX equipped with appropriate hardware). Default is on. .TP .B ZlibLevel 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 \fBzlib\fP(3) compression library. .TP .B 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. .TP .B IdleTimeout The number of seconds after which an idle VNC connection will be dropped (zero means no timeout). Default is 0. .TP .B MaxDisconnectionTime Terminate when no client has been connected for \fIN\fP seconds. Default is 0. .TP .B MaxConnectionTime Terminate when a client has been connected for \fIN\fP seconds. Default is 0. .TP .B MaxIdleTime Terminate after \fIN\fP seconds of user inactivity. Default is 0. .TP .B ClientWaitTimeMillis The number of milliseconds to wait for a client which is no longer responding. Default is 20000. .SH SEE ALSO .BR Xvnc (1), .BR vncpasswd (1), .br http://www.tigervnc.org/ .SH AUTHOR This manual page was written by Constantin Kaplinsky.