2005/01/16 Karl Runge has done awesome work to support cursors with alpha blending! You can try it with x11vnc as in CVS, or wait a few more days for x11vnc to be released officially!
2005/01/15 Happy new year! It begins with a new macro recorder based on LibVNCServer/LibVNCClient using perl as script language. The macro recorder is itself written in perl, and writes out perl scripts, acting as a VNC proxy, so that you can connect a vncviewer to it, and it records all your input, possibly looking for a certain button, image, word, etc. before continuing. I called it VisualNaCro, and it's in CVS.
2004/12/20 Just before christmas, a new release! Version 0.7 brings you the first non-beta of LibVNCServer...
2004/12/02 Finally MinGW32 support. I only had problems with a vncviewer which wouldn't connect to localhost: I use SDLvncviewer...
2004/12/01 LibVNCClient is getting better and better... Expect a very powerful client soon!
2004/10/16 LibVNCServer has automated test, thanks to LibVNCClient (included). It doesn't do ZRLE yet, and exposed some bugs, the only remaining of these is CoRRE (not sure yet if it's a bug in the client or the server).
2004/09/14 Added Success stories.
2004/09/07 The API was cleaned up. The structures and functions now have a prefix (mostly "rfb", sometimes "zrle" or "sra") in order not to clutter the namespace, while the structure's members don't need such a prefix.
2004/08/17 I finally came around to fix mouse behaviour in QEMU's VNC frontend for Windows 98. Please find the patch here. If mouse behaves strangely, try to wiggle the pointer to a free spot on the desktop, hit Ctrl+Shift and release them. After that, the mouse should behave nicely.
2004/06/07 After silently being added almost a year ago, libvncclient's API was modified for real use, and three examples were added: ppmtest (a very simple demo), SDLvncviewer, and vnc2mpg (which lets you record your VNC session to a movie). Automated regression tests of the libraries are planned.
2004/06/02 x11vnc-0.6.1 was released! This reflects the long way the original, small example has gone, improved in many possible ways and having a broad user base.
2004/05/29 Some patches were created for QEMU, a FAST! emulator by Fabrice Bellard, to control those sessions with a vncviewer.
2004/02/29 LibVNCServer is listed as a project using Valgrind!
2003/11/07 Version 0.6 is out! x11vnc performance boosts! You no longer need a c++ compiler in order to have ZRLE coding! LinuxVNC was added (This is to the text console what x11vnc is to X11)!
2003/02/21 rdp2vnc is in rdesktop's CVS.
2003/02/19 A preliminary patch for rdesktop (CVS) to make rdp2vnc, a translator from Windows Terminal Server's protocol to VNC's protocol, is available. It needs a new version of libvncserver; try CVS until I release 0.6.
2003/02/09 Version 0.5 is out! Features include autoconf based configure, rpm package (YMMV), cleanup of directory structure, NEW x11vnc! ZRLE encoding! HTTP tunnelling through LibVNCServer's HTTP support! Many bug fixes!
2002/07/28 Version 0.4 is out! Biggest feature: NewFB encoding. Quite a few bugfixes also (Thanks to all!).
2001/12/14 A new version of rdesktop+vnc is available! (Includes support for other platforms keyboard mapping with plain rdesktop!)
2001/10/23 Added a link to my homepage at the end.
2001/10/18 I released the rdp2vnc extensions as well as patches for general keyboard handling, working inside Xvnc and process_text2 (the famous "font:" error) to rdesktop. Please find it on the download page.
2001/10/13 A snapshot of LibVNCServer and RDP2VNC is now available. You can also download the diff against rdesktop-1.1.0. rdp2vnc also contains the patches for keyboards other than PC keyboards, and you can specify "-k fr" again.
Now that you know what it is, maybe you want to make your own server. If this is not the case, you can ignore the rest of this page an go on surfing the internet.
Now that you want to make a VNC server, that is, a server which speaks the RFB protocol, you can download this library from sourceforge.
The simplest server looks like this:
#include <rfb/rfb.h> int main(int argc,char** argv) { rfbScreenInfoPtr server=rfbGetScreen(&argc,argv,400,300,8,3,4); server->frameBuffer=malloc(400*300*4); rfbInitServer(server); rfbRunEventLoop(server,-1,FALSE); return(0); }This sample creates a 400x300 frame buffer in true colour. There are 4 bytes per pixel, because 3 (which are only used instead of all 4) is such an odd number. Then the server is initialized and a blocking event loop is started.
Of course, this program only shows rubbish (whatever is in the frame buffer you malloc'd), but it proves that writing a server can be very easy.
For details (especially if you want to write a real server) look into the provided examples, pnmshow.c and example.c, and into the README. You find there documentation for much more complicated servers.
Serious comments, suggestions, pizzas, etc. go to me (delete the RuBBISH).
Here are some links:
LibVNCServer is an adapted OSXvnc-server by Dan McGuirk, which is in turn an adapted original Xvnc.
I use it to to drive a Windows Terminal Server (RDP) to RFB converter with it. Much work has been done to make rdesktop a good X client to Windows Terminal Services (both NT and 2000, see rdesktop patches). Previous work was done by Tim Edmonds who has set up such a converter named vdesktop including a single client server and a multi client server, rdp2vnc. Unfortunately he used the example code from rfbcounter, which can encode only RRE, which is not a good compression.
Other people have used this library as well.
If you want to know about other of my projects, look at my homepage.