VNC(1) VNC(1) NAME vncs, vncv - remote frame buffer server and viewer for Virtual Network Computing (VNC) SYNOPSIS vncs [ -v ] [ -c cert ] [ -d :display ] [ -g widthxheight ] [ -p pixfmt ] [ -x net ] [ cmd [ args ] ] vncs -k :display [ -x net ] vncv [ -acstv ] [ -e encodings ] [ -l charset ] [ -k keypattern ] host[:n] DESCRIPTION VNC is a lightweight protocol for accessing graphical appli- cations remotely. The protocol allows one or more clients to connect to a server. While connected, clients display the frame buffer presented by the server and can send mouse events, keyboard events, and exchange snarf buffers. The server persists across viewer sessions, so that the virtual application can be accessed from various locations as its owner moves around. VNC displays have names of the form host:n, where host is the machine's network name and n is a small integer identi- fier; display n is served on TCP port 5900+n. Vncs starts a new virtual frame buffer in memory, simulating a Plan 9 terminal running cmd args, by default an interac- tive shell. As viewers connect, each is authenticated using a (rather breakable) challenge-response protocol using the user's Inferno/POP password. The options are: -c cert start TLS on each viewer connection using the certificate in the file cert. The corresponding private key must be loaded into the server's factotum(4). When serving TLS connections, the base port is 35729 rather than 5900. -d :n run on display n ; without this option, the server searches for an unused display. -g widthxheight set the virtual frame buffer to be widthxheight (default 1024x768) pixels. -p pixfmt set the virtual frame buffer's internal pixel Page 1 Plan 9 (printed 12/22/24) VNC(1) VNC(1) format to pixfmt (default r5g6b5). -v print verbose output to standard error. -x net announce on an alternate network interface. -A turn off authentication. The command vncs -k :n kills the VNC server running on dis- play n. Vncv provides access to remote display host:n. It resizes its window to be the smaller of the remote frame buffer size and the local screen when not using the autoscaling option. The options are: -a autoscale remote frame buffer to local screen window size. -c when connecting to 8-bit displays, request r4g4b4 pix- els rather than r3g3b2 pixels. This takes up more bandwidth but usually gives significantly better match- ing to the Plan 9 color map. -e encodings set the ordered list of allowed frame buffer update encodings. The default (and full) set is copyrect corre hextile rre raw mousewarp desktopsize xdesktopsize. The encodings should be given as a sin- gle space-separated argument (quoted when using the shell). -l charset sets the character set (see tcs(1)) used by the server to encode clipboard text. The default is utf-8. -k keypattern add keypattern to the pattern used to select a key from factotum(4). -s share the display with extant viewers; by default extant viewers are closed when a new viewer connects. -t start TLS on the connection. -v print verbose output to standard error. SOURCE /sys/src/cmd/vnc SEE ALSO Page 2 Plan 9 (printed 12/22/24) VNC(1) VNC(1) http://www.uk.research.att.com/vnc BUGS If the remote frame buffer is larger than the local screen, and autoscaling is disabled, only the upper left corner can be accessed. Autoscaling is only implemented for raw encod- ing. Vncs and vncv encryption is not secure. It's advisable to tunnel through ssh or some other secure protocol. Vncv does no verification of the TLS certificate presented by the server. Page 3 Plan 9 (printed 12/22/24)