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664 lines
22 KiB
664 lines
22 KiB
Enhanced TightVNC Viewer (SSVNC: SSL/SSH VNC viewer)
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Copyright (c) 2006-2008 Karl J. Runge <runge@karlrunge.com>
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All rights reserved.
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These bundles provide 1) An enhanced TightVNC Viewer on Unix, 2) Binaries
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for many Operating Systems (including Windows and Mac OS X) for your
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convenience, 3) Wrapper scripts and a GUI for gluing them all together.
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One can straight-forwardly download all of the components and get them
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to work together by oneself: this bundle is mostly for your convenience
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to combine and wrap together the freely available software.
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Bundled software co-shipped is copyright and licensed by others.
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See these sites and related ones for more information:
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http://www.tightvnc.com
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http://www.realvnc.com
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http://www.stunnel.org
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http://stunnel.mirt.net
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http://www.openssl.org
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http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/
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http://sourceforge.net/projects/cotvnc/
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Note: Some of the binaries included contain cryptographic software that
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you may not be allowed to download, use, or redistribute. Please check
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your situation first before downloading any of these bundles. See the
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survey http://rechten.uvt.nl/koops/cryptolaw/index.htm for useful
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information.
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All work done by Karl J. Runge in this project is
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Copyright (c) 2006-2008 Karl J. Runge and is licensed under the GPL as
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described in the file COPYING in this directory.
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All the files and information in this project are provided "AS IS"
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without any warranty of any kind. Use them at your own risk.
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=============================================================================
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This bundle contains a convenient collection of enhanced TightVNC
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viewers and stunnel binaries for different flavors of Unix and wrapper
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scripts and a GUI front-end to glue them together. Automatic SSL and
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SSH encryption tunnelling is provided.
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A Windows SSL wrapper for the bundled TightVNC binary and other utilities
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are provided. (Launch ssvnc.exe in the Windows subdirectory).
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The short name of the project is "ssvnc" for SSL/SSH VNC Viewer.
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It is a self-contained bundle, you could carry it around on, say,
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a USB memory stick for secure VNC viewing from almost any machine,
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Unix, Mac, or Windows.
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Features:
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--------
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The enhanced TightVNC viewer features are:
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- SSL support for connections using the bundled stunnel program.
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- Automatic SSH connections from the GUI (ssh must already be
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installed on Unix; bundled plink is used on Windows)
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- Ability to Save and Load VNC profiles for different hosts.
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- Create or Import SSL Certificates and Private Keys.
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- Reverse (viewer listening) VNC connections via SSL and SSH.
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- Support for Web Proxies, SOCKS Proxies, and the UltraVNC
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repeater proxy (e.g. repeater://host:port+ID:1234). Multiple
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proxies may be chained together (3 max).
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- Support for SSH Gateway connections and non-standard SSH ports.
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- You can also use your own VNC Viewer, e.g. UltraVNC or RealVNC,
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with the front-end GUI or scripts if you like.
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- Automatic Service tunnelling via SSH for CUPS and SMB Printing,
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ESD/ARTSD Audio, and SMB (Windows/Samba) filesystem mounting.
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- Sets up any additional SSH port redirections that you want.
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- Port Knocking for "closed port" SSH/SSL connections. In addition
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to a simple fixed port sequence and one-time-pad implementation,
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a hook is also provided to run any port knocking client before a
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connecting.
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- Support for native MacOS X usage with bundled Chicken of the
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VNC viewer (the Unix X11 viewer is also provided for MacOS X,
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and is better IMHO).
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- Dynamic VNC Server Port determination and redirection (using
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ssh's builtin SOCKS proxy, -D) for servers like x11vnc that
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print out PORT= at startup.
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- Unix Username and Password entry for use with "x11vnc -unixpw"
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type login dialogs.
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- Simplified mode launched by command "sshvnc" that is SSH Only.
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- Simplified mode launched by command "tsvnc" that provides a VNC
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"Terminal Services" mode (uses x11vnc on the remote side).
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(the following features only apply to the bundled Unix tightvnc viewer)
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- rfbNewFBSize VNC support (screen resizing)
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- ZRLE VNC encoding support (RealVNC's encoding)
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- Cursor alphablending with x11vnc at 32bpp (-alpha option)
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- Option "-unixpw ..." for use with "x11vnc -unixpw" login dialogs.
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- Support for UltraVNC extensions: Single Window, Disable
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Server-side Input, 1/n Server side scaling, Text Chat (shell
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terminal UI). Both UltraVNC and x11vnc servers support these
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extensions
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- UltraVNC File Transfer via an auxiliary Java helper program
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(java must be in $PATH). Note that x11vnc supports UltraVNC
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file transfer.
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- Connection support for the UltraVNC repeater proxy (-repeater
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option).
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- Support for UltraVNC Single Click operation. (both unencrypted:
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SC I, and SSL encrypted: SC III)
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- Support for UltraVNC DSM Encryption Plugin mode. (ARC4 and
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AESV2, but not MSRC4 yet)
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- Instead of hostname:display one can also supply "exec=command args..."
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to connect the viewer to the stdio of an external command
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(e.g. stunnel or socat) rather than using a TCP/IP socket.
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- Extremely low color modes: 64 and 8 colors in 8bpp
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(-use64/-bgr222, -use8/-bgr111)
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- Medium color mode: 16bpp mode even for 32bpp Viewer display
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(-16bpp/-bgr565)
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- x11vnc's client-side caching -ncache method cropping option
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(-ycrop n). This will "hide" the large pixel buffer cache
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below the actual display. Set to actual height or use -1 for
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autodetection (tall screens are autodetected by default).
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- Scrollbar width setting: -sbwidth n, the default is very thin,
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2 pixels, for less distracting -ycrop usage.
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- Improvements to the Popup menu, all of these can now be changed
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dynamically via the menu: ViewOnly, Toggle Bell, CursorShape
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updates, X11 Cursor, Cursor Alphablending, Toggle Tight/ZRLE,
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Toggle JPEG, FullColor/16bpp/8bpp (256/64/8 colors), Greyscale
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for low color modes.
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- Maintains its own BackingStore if the X server does not
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- The default for localhost:0 connections is not raw encoding
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(local machine). Default assumes you are using SSH tunnel. Use
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-rawlocal to revert.
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- Support for the ZYWRLE encoding, a wavelet based extension to
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ZRLE to improve compression of motion video and photo regions.
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- XGrabServer support for fullscreen mode, for old window managers
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(-grab/-graball option).
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- Fix for Popup menu positioning for old window managers
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(-popupfix option).
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- Run vncviewer -help for all options.
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The list of software bundled in the archive files:
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TightVNC Viewer (windows, unix, macosx)
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Chicken of the VNC Viewer (macosx)
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Stunnel (windows, unix, macosx)
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Putty/Plink/Pageant (windows)
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OpenSSL (windows)
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esound (windows)
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These are all self-contained in the bundle directory: they will not be
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installed on your system. Just un-zip or un-tar the file you downloaded
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and run it straight from its directory.
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Quick Start:
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-----------
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Unix and Mac OS X:
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Inside a Terminal do something like the following.
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Unpack the archive:
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% gzip -dc ssvnc-1.0.19.tar.gz | tar xvf -
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Run the GUI:
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% ./ssvnc/Unix/ssvnc (for Unix)
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% ./ssvnc/MacOSX/ssvnc (for Mac OS X)
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The smaller file "ssvnc_no_windows-1.0.19.tar.gz"
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could have been used as well.
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On MacOSX you could also click on the SSVNC app icon in the Finder.
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On MacOSX if you don't like the Chicken of the VNC (e.g. no local
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cursors, no screen size rescaling, and no password prompting), and you
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have the XDarwin X server installed, you can set DISPLAY before starting
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ssvnc (or type DISPLAY=... in Host:Disp and hit Return). Then our
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enhanced TightVNC viewer will be used instead of COTVNC.
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Update: there is now a 'Use X11 vncviewer on MacOSX' under Options ...
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If you want a SSH-only tool (without the distractions of SSL) run
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the command:
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sshvnc
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instead of "ssvnc". Or click "SSH-Only Mode" under Options.
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Control-h will toggle between the two modes.
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If you want a simple VNC Terminal Services only mode (requires x11vnc
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on the remote server) run the command:
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tsvnc
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instead of "ssvnc". Or click "Terminal Services" under Options.
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Control-t will toggle between the two modes.
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"tsvnc profile-name" and "tsvnc user@hostname" work too.
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Unix/MacOSX Install:
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There is no standard install, but you can make symlinks like so:
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cd /a/directory/in/PATH
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ln -s /path/to/ssvnc/bin/{s,t}* .
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Or put /path/to/ssvnc/bin, /path/to/ssvnc/Unix, or /path/to/ssvnc/MacOSX
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in your PATH.
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Windows:
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Unzip, using WinZip or a similar utility, the zip file:
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ssvnc-1.0.19.zip
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Run the GUI, e.g.:
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Start -> Run -> Browse
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and then navigate to
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.../ssvnc/Windows/ssvnc.exe
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select Open, and then OK to launch it.
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The smaller file "ssvnc_windows_only-1.0.19.zip"
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could have been used as well.
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You can make a Windows shortcut to this program if you want to.
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See the Windows/README.txt for more info.
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If you want a SSH-only tool (without the distractions of SSL) run
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the command:
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sshvnc.bat
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Or click "SSH-Only Mode" under Options.
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If you want a simple VNC Terminal Services only mode (requires x11vnc
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on the remote server) run the command:
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tsvnc.bat
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Or click "Terminal Services" under Options. Control-t will toggle
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between the two modes. "tsvnc profile-name" and "tsvnc user@hostname"
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work too.
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Important Note for Windows Vista: One user reports that on Windows Vista
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if you move or extract the "ssvnc" folder down to the "Program Files"
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folder you will be prompted to do this as the Administrator. But then
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when you start up ssvnc, as a regular user, it cannot create files in
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that folder and so it fails to run properly. We recommend to not copy
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or extract the "ssvnc" folder into "Program Files". Rather, extract
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it to somewhere you have write permission (e.g. C:\ or your User dir)
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and create a Shortcut to ssvnc.exe on the desktop.
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If you must put a launcher file down in "Program Files", perhaps an
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"ssvnc.bat" that looks like this:
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C:
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cd \ssvnc\Windows
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ssvnc.exe
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SSH-ONLY Mode:
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--------------
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If you don't care for SSL and the distractions it provides in the GUI,
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run "sshvnc" (unix/macosx) or "sshvnc.bat" (windows) to run an SSH only
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version of the GUI.
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Terminal Services Mode
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----------------------
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There is an even simpler mode that uses x11vnc on the remote side for the
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session finding and management. Run "tsvnc" (unix/macosx) or "tsvnc.bat"
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(windows) to run the Terminal Services version of the GUI.
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Bundle Info:
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------------
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The bundle files unpack a directory/folder named: ssvnc
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It contains these programs to launch the GUI:
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Windows/ssvnc.exe for Windows
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MacOSX/ssvnc for Mac OS X
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Unix/ssvnc for Unix
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(the Mac OS X and Unix launchers are simply links to the bin directory).
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Your bundle file should have included binaries for many OS's: Linux,
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Solaris, FreeBSD, etc. Unpack your archive and see the subdirectories of
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./bin
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for the ones that were shipped in this project, e.g. ./bin/Linux.i686
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Run "uname -sm" to see your OS+arch combination (n.b. all Linux x86 are
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mapped to Linux.i686). (See the ./bin/ssvnc_cmd -h output for how to
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override platform autodection via the UNAME env. var).
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Memory Stick Usage:
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-------------------
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If you create a directory named "Home" in that toplevel ssvnc directory
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then that will be used as the base for storing VNC profiles and
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certificates. Also, for convenience, if you first run the command with
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"." as an argument (e.g. "ssvnc .") it will automatically create that
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"Home" directory for you. This is handy if you want to place SSVNC
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on a USB flash drive that you carry around for mobile use and you want
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the profiles you create to stay with the drive (otherwise you'd have to
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browse to the drive directory each time you load or save).
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One user on Windows created a BAT file to launch SSVNC and needed to
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do this to get the Home directory correct:
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cd \ssvnc\Windows
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start \ssvnc\Windows\ssvnc.exe
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(an optional profile name can be supplied to the ssvnc.exe line)
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WARNING: if you use ssvnc from an "Internet Cafe", i.e. an untrusted
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computer, an intruder may be capturing keystrokes etc.
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External Dependencies:
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----------------------
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On Windows everything is included. Let us know if you find otherwise.
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On Unix depending on what you do you need these programs installed:
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- basic unix utilities (sh, ls, cat, awk, sed, etc..)
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- tcl/tk (wish interpreter)
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- xterm
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- perl
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- ssh
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- openssl
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Lesser used ones: netcat, esd/artsd, smbclient, smbmount, cups
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On Mac OS X depending on what you do you need these programs installed:
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- basic unix utilities (sh, ls, cat, awk, sed, etc..)
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- tcl/tk (wish interpreter)
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- Terminal
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- perl
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- ssh
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- openssl
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Lesser used ones: netcat, smbclient, cups
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Most Mac OS X and Unix OS come with the main components installed.
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If you need to Build:
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--------------------
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If your OS/arch is not included or the provided binary has the wrong
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library dependencies, etc. the script "build.unix" may be able to
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successfully build on for you and deposit the binaries down in ./bin/...
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using the included source code. It is a hack but usually works.
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You MUST run the build.unix script from this directory (that this toplevel
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README is in, i.e "ssvnc") and like this:
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./build.unix
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To use custom locations for libraries see the LDFLAGS_OS and CPPFLAGS_OS
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description at the top of the build.unix script.
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You can set these env. vars to customize the build:
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SSVNC_BUILD_NO_STATIC=1 do not try to statically link libs
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SSVNC_BUILD_FORCE_OVERWRITE=1 do not prompt about existing binaries
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SSVNC_BUILD_SKIP_VIEWER=1 do not build vncviewer
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SSVNC_BUILD_SKIP_STUNNEL=1 do not build stunnel
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SSVNC_BUILD_ULTRAFTP=1 only build the file xfer helper jar
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here is an example to build only the vncviewer and with normal library
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linking (and in a more or less automated way):
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env SSVNC_BUILD_NO_STATIC=1 SSVNC_BUILD_FORCE_OVERWRITE=1 SSVNC_BUILD_SKIP_STUNNEL=1 ./build.unix
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Feel free to ask us if you need help running ./build.unix
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Convential Build:
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A more conventional source tarball is provided in ssvnc-x.y.z.src.tar.gz.
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It uses a more or less familiar 'make config; make all; make install'
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method. It does not include stunnel, so that must be installed on the
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system separately.
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The programs:
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------------
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Unpack your archive, and you will see "bin", "Windows", "src" directories
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and other files. The command line wrapper scripts:
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./bin/ssvnc_cmd
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./bin/tightvncviewer
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are the main programs that are run and will try to autodetect your OS+arch
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combination and if binaries are present for it automatically use them.
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(if not found try the running the build.unix script).
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If you prefer a GUI to prompt for parameters and then start ssvnc_cmd
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you can run this instead:
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./bin/ssvnc
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this is the same GUI that is run on Windows (the ssvnc.exe).
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There are also:
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./bin/sshvnc (SSH-Only)
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./bin/tsvnc (Terminal Services Mode)
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For convenience, you can make symlinks from a directory in your PATH to
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any of the 3 programs above you wish to run. That is all you usually
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need to do for it to pick up all of the binaries, utils, etc. E.g.
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assuming $HOME/bin is in your $PATH:
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cd $HOME/bin
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ln -s /path/to/ssvnc/bin/{s,t}* .
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(note the "." at the end). The above commands is basically the way to
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"install" this on Unix or MacOS X.
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Also links to the GUI launcher script are provided in:
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MacOSX/ssvnc
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Unix/ssvnc
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and sshvnc and tsvnc. You could also put the Unix or MacOSX directory
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in your PATH.
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On Windows unpack your archive and run:
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Windows/ssvnc.exe
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Examples:
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--------
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The following assume you are in the toplevel directory of the
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archive you unpacked.
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Use enhanced TightVNC unix viewer to connect to x11vnc via SSL:
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./bin/ssvnc_cmd far-away.east:0
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./bin/tightvncviewer -ssl far-away.east:0 (same)
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./bin/ssvnc (start GUI launcher)
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Use enhanced TightVNC unix viewer without SSL:
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./bin/tightvncviewer far-away.east:0
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Use SSL to connect to a x11vnc server, and also verify the server's
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identity using the SSL Certificate in the file ./x11vnc.pem:
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./bin/ssvnc_cmd -alpha -verify ./x11vnc.pem far-away.east:0
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(also turns on the viewer-side cursor alphablending hack).
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Brief description of the subdirectories:
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---------------------------------------
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./bin/util some utility scripts, e.g. ss_vncviewer
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and ssvnc.tcl
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./src source code and patches.
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|
./src/zips zip files of source code and binaries.
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|
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|
./src/vnc_unixsrc unpacked tightvnc source code tree.
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|
./src/stunnel-4.14 unpacked stunnel source code tree.
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|
./src/patches patches to TightVNC viewer for the new
|
|
features on Unix (used by build.unix).
|
|
./src/tmp temporary build dir for build.unix
|
|
(the last four are used by build.unix)
|
|
|
|
|
|
./man man pages for TightVNC viewer and stunnel.
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|
|
|
./Windows Stock TightVNC viewer and Stunnel, Openssl
|
|
etc Windows binaries. ssvnc.exe is the
|
|
program to run.
|
|
|
|
./MacOSX contains an unpacked Chicken of the VNC
|
|
viewer and a symlink to ssvnc.
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|
|
|
./Unix contains a symlink to ssvnc.
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|
|
|
Depending on which bundle you use not all of the above may be present.
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|
The smallest bundles with binaries are:
|
|
|
|
ssvnc_windows_only-1.x.y.zip Windows
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|
ssvnc_no_windows-1.x.y.tar.gz Unix and MacOSX
|
|
|
|
however, the tiny scripts only one (only 60KB) will run properly on Unix
|
|
as long as you install external vncviewer and stunnel packages:
|
|
|
|
ssvnc_unix_minimal-1.x.y.tar.gz
|
|
|
|
|
|
Untrusted Local Users:
|
|
---------------------
|
|
|
|
*IMPORTANT WARNING*: If you run SSVNC on a workstation or computer
|
|
that other users can log into and you DO NOT TRUST these users
|
|
(it is a shame but sometimes one has to work in an environment like
|
|
this), then please note the following warning.
|
|
|
|
By 'do not trust' we mean they might try to gain access to remote
|
|
machines you connect to via SSVNC. Note that an untrusted local
|
|
user can often obtain root access in a short amount of time; if a
|
|
user has acheived that, then all bets are off for ANYTHING that you
|
|
do on the workstation. It is best to get rid of Untrusted Local
|
|
Users as soon as possible.
|
|
|
|
Both the SSL and SSH tunnels set up by SSVNC listen on certain ports
|
|
on the 'localhost' address and redirect TCP connections to the remote
|
|
machine; usually the VNC server running there (but it could also be
|
|
another service, e.g. CUPS printing). These are the stunnel(8) SSL
|
|
redirection and the ssh(1) '-L' port redirection. Because 'localhost'
|
|
is used only users or programs on the same workstation that is
|
|
running SSVNC can connect to these ports, however this includes any
|
|
local users (not just the user running SSVNC.)
|
|
|
|
If the untrusted local user tries to connect to these ports, he may
|
|
succeed in varying degrees to gain access to the remote machine.
|
|
We now list some safeguards one can put in place to try to make this
|
|
more difficult to acheive.
|
|
|
|
It probably pays to have the VNC server require a password, even
|
|
though there has already been SSL or SSH authentication (via
|
|
certificates or passwords). In general if the VNC Server requires
|
|
SSL authentication of the viewer that helps, unless the untrusted
|
|
local user has gained access to your SSVNC certificate keys.
|
|
|
|
If the VNC server is configured to only allow one viewer connection
|
|
at a time, then the window of opportunity that the untrusted local
|
|
user can use is greatly reduced: he might only have a second or two
|
|
between the tunnel being set up and the SSVNC vncviewer connecting
|
|
to it (i.e. if the VNC server only allows a single connection, the
|
|
untrusted local user cannot connect once your session is established).
|
|
Similarly, when you disconnect the tunnel is torn down quickly and
|
|
there is little or no window of opportunity to connect (e.g. x11vnc
|
|
in its default mode exits after the first client disconnects).
|
|
|
|
Also for SSL tunnelling with stunnel(8) on Unix using one of the SSVNC
|
|
prebuilt 'bundles', a patched stunnel is provided that denies all
|
|
connections after the first one, and exits when the first one closes.
|
|
This is not true if the system installed stunnel(8) is used and is
|
|
not true when using SSVNC on Windows.
|
|
|
|
The following are two experimental features that are added to SSVNC
|
|
to improve the situation for the SSL/stunnel case. Set them via
|
|
Options -> Advanced -> "STUNNEL Local Port Protections".
|
|
|
|
1) For SSL tunnelling with stunnel(8) on Unix there is a setting
|
|
'Use stunnel EXEC mode' (experimental) that will try to exec(2)
|
|
stunnel instead of using a listening socket. This will require
|
|
using the specially modified vncviewer unix viewer provided
|
|
by SSVNC. If this mode proves stable it will become the default.
|
|
|
|
2) For SSL tunnelling with stunnel(8) on Unix there is a setting
|
|
'Use stunnel IDENT check' (experimental) to limit socket
|
|
connections to be from you (this assumes the untrusted local
|
|
user has not become root on your workstation and has modified
|
|
your local IDENT check service; if he has you have much bigger
|
|
problems to worry about...)
|
|
|
|
There is also one simple LD_PRELOAD trick for SSH to limit the number
|
|
of accepted port redirection connections. This makes the window of
|
|
time the untrusted local user can connect to the tunnel much smaller.
|
|
Enable it via Options -> Advanced -> "SSH Local Port Protections".
|
|
You will need to have the lim_accept.so file in your SSVNC package.
|
|
|
|
The main message is to 'Watch your Back' when you connect via the
|
|
SSVNC tunnels and there are users you don't trust on your workstation.
|
|
The same applies to ANY use of SSH '-L' port redirections or outgoing
|
|
stunnel SSL redirection services.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Help and Info:
|
|
-------------
|
|
|
|
For more help on other options and usage patterns run these:
|
|
|
|
./bin/ssvnc_cmd -h
|
|
./bin/util/ss_vncviewer -h
|
|
|
|
See also:
|
|
|
|
http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc
|
|
http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/#faq
|
|
x11vnc -h | more
|
|
|
|
http://www.stunnel.org
|
|
http://stunnel.mirt.net
|
|
http://www.openssl.org
|
|
http://www.tightvnc.com
|
|
http://www.realvnc.com
|
|
http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/
|
|
http://sourceforge.net/projects/cotvnc/
|