Man1 - remote-viewer.1

Table of Contents



NAME

remote-viewer - a simple remote desktop client

SYNOPSIS

remote-viewer [OPTIONS] Ω- [URI]

DESCRIPTION

remote-viewer is a simple remote display client. The supported protocols are SPICE and VNC.

Starting remote-viewer without URI will open a simple dialog with an entry and a list of previously successfully accessed URI.

The URI can also point to a connection settings file, see the CONNECTION FILE section for a description of the format.

If URI is ’-’, then remote-viewer will read the standard input as a connection settings file and attempt to connect using it.

In some circumstances the viewer may need to grab the mouse pointer. The default key sequence for releasing the grab is Ctrl_L=+=Alt_L, however, this can be overridden using the --hotkeys argument documented below.

OPTIONS

The following options are accepted when running remote-viewer:

-h, –help
Display command line help summary
-V, –version
Display program version number
-v, –verbose
Display information about the connection
-z PCT, –zoom=PCT
Zoom level of the display window in percentage. Range 10-400.
-f, –full-screen
Start with the windows maximized to fullscreen. If supported, the remote display will be reconfigured to match the physical client monitor configuration, by enabling or disabling extra monitors as necessary. This is currently implemented by the Spice backend only and can be disabled by the --auto-resize arguemnt. To specify which client monitors are used in fullscreen mode, see the CONFIGURATION section below.
–auto-resize <always|never>
Controls whether it is permitted to attempt to resize the remote framebuffer to match the local window size. This currently defaults to on, but note that not all servers will support this.
-t TITLE, –title TITLE
Set the window title to TITLE
-s, –shared
Permitted a shared session with multiple clients
–cursor auto|local
Control how the mouse cursor is rendered. auto is the default behaviour, which will honour the behaviour requested by the remote server. This may involve the server remote rendering the cursor into the framebuffer, or sending the cursor details to the client to render. local overrides this default to request that the local desktop cursor is always rendered regardless of what the server requests. The latter is rarely needed, but can be used if the server has a bad configuration that results in its own cursor being hidden.
–debug
Print debugging information
-H HOTKEYS, –hotkeys HOTKEYS
Set global hotkey bindings. By default, keyboard shortcuts only work when the guest display widget does not have focus. Any actions specified in HOTKEYS will be effective even when the guest display widget has input focus. The format for HOTKEYS is <action1>=<key1>[+<key2>][,<action2>=<key3>[+<key4>]]. Key-names are case-insensitive. Valid actions are: toggle-fullscreen, release-cursor, zoom-in, zoom-out, zoom-reset, secure-attention, usb-device-reset, smartcard-insert and smartcard-remove. The secure-attention action sends a secure attention sequence (Ctrl+Alt+Del) to the guest. Examples: –hotkeys=toggle-fullscreen=shift+f11,release-cursor=shift+f12 –hotkeys=release-cursor=ctrl+alt Note that hotkeys for which no binding is given are disabled. Although the hotkeys specified here are handled by the client, it is still possible to send these key combinations to the guest via a menu item.
-K, –keymap
Remap and/or block supplied keypresses to the host. All key identifiers are case-sensitive and follow the naming convention as defined in gdkkeysyms.h without the GDK_KEY_ prefix. Running the application with –debug will display keypress symbols in the following way: Key pressed was keycode=’0x63’, gdk_keyname=’c’ Key pressed was keycode=’0xffeb’, gdk_keyname=’Super_L’ The format for supplying a keymap is: <srcKeySym1>=[<destKeySym1>][+<destKeySym2][,<srckeySym2>=[<destKeySym1] To block a keypress simply assign an empty parameter to the srcKeySym. Example: –keymap=Super_L=,Alt_L=,1=Shift_L+F1,2=Shift_L+F2 This will block the Super_L (typically Windows Key) and ALT_L keypresses and remap key 1 to Shift F1, 2 to Shift F2.
-k, –kiosk
Start in kiosk mode. In this mode, the application will start in fullscreen with minimal UI. It will prevent the user from quitting or performing any interaction outside of usage of the remote desktop session. Note that it can’t offer a complete secure solution by itself. Your kiosk system must have additional configuration and security settings to lock down the OS. In particular, you must configure or disable the window manager, limit the session capabilities, use some restart/watchdog mechanism, disable VT switching etc.
–kiosk-quit <never|on-disconnect>
By default, when kiosk mode is enabled, virt-viewer will remain open when the connection to the remote server is terminated. By setting kiosk-quit option to on-disconnect value, virt-viewer will quit instead.

HOTKEY

A key binding combination is described by a series of key strings separated by ’+’ that must be pressed together in order to activate the associated action.

It must be composed of modifiers (shift, ctrl or alt) and a non-modifier key. For example, shift+f11.

CONNECTION FILE

remote-viewer connection file is of INI file format, with a mandatory [virt-viewer] group and type key.

Example

Opening a file with the following content will start remote-viewer in fullscreen and connect to the host betsiboka using the SPICE protocol:

[virt-viewer] type=spice host=betsiboka port=5900 fullscreen=1

Key list

“version” (string)
If remote-viewer version number isn’t greater or equal to the required version, an error is raised with the expected version. The version format accepted is a list of integers separated by ’.’. It can be followed by a dash ’-’ and an additional build number with the same format. Version comparison is done by comparing each integer from the list one by one. If any of the component is not a number, the version comparison will fail and consider that the 2 versions are considered to be the same.
“versions” (osid:version list)
This is a list of osid:version couples separated by ’;’. osid is an arbitrary string, version is a version number in the same format as in the ’version’ field. A given couple indicates that remote-viewer builds matching the given ’osid’ (fedora22, debian7, …) must be at least version ’version’. For consistency, it’s recommended to use libosinfo OS shortids as the osid.
“newer-version-url” (string)
If specified, this field is an URL which will be displayed to the user when a version check fails.
“type” (string, mandatory)
The session type, either spice, vnc or ovirt.
“unix-path” (string)
The server to connect to, using a Unix socket path. (supported with spice, since 8.0) This option is incompatible with host, port and tls-port.
“host” (string)
The server host to connect to.
“port” (integer)
The server port to connect to.
“tls-port” (integer)
The server TLS/SSL port to connect to.
“username” (string)
The username for the session authentication.
“password” (string)
The password for the session authentication.
“disable-channels” (string list)
The list of session channels to disable. The current SPICE channels are: main, display, inputs, cursor, playback, record, smartcard, usbredir.
“tls-ciphers” (string)
Set the cipher list to use for the secure connection, in textual OpenSSL cipher list format. (see ciphers (1))
“title” (string)
String to present in the window title.
“fullscreen” (boolean)
Opens the client windows in fullscreen.
“ca” (string)
CA certificate in PEM format (using \n to separate the lines). This will be used to verify the SSL certificate used for SPICE TLS sessions.
“host-subject” (string)
Verify the certificate subject matches with the given subject.
“toggle-fullscreen” (hotkey string)
Key binding for entering and leaving fullscreen mode. (see HOTKEY for description of expected string)
“release-cursor” (hotkey string)
Key binding for releasing cursor grab. (see HOTKEY for description of expected string)
“zoom-in” (hotkey string)
Key binding for zooming in and enlarging client window size. (see HOTKEY for description of expected string)
“zoom-out” (hotkey string)
Key binding for zooming out and reducing client window size. (see HOTKEY for description of expected string)
“zoom-reset” (hotkey string)
Key binding for reseting zoom and client window size. (see HOTKEY for description of expected string)
“smartcard-insert” (hotkey string)
Key binding for inserting emulated smartcard. (see HOTKEY for description of expected string)
“smartcard-remove” (hotkey string)
Key binding for removing emulated smartcard. (see HOTKEY for description of expected string)
“color-depth” (integer)
Set the color depth of the guest display (16 or 32).
“disable-effects” (string list)
A list of desktop effects to disable in the remote guest. The effects that can be disabled with SPICE are: wallpaper, font-smooth, animation or all.
“enable-smartcard” (boolean)
Set to 1 to enable client smartcard redirection.
“enable-usbredir” (boolean)
Set to 1 to enable client USB device redirection.
“enable-usb-autoshare” (boolean)
Set to 1 to enable client USB devices auto-sharing.
“usb-filter” (string)
Set a string specifying a filter to use to determine which USB devices to autoconnect when plugged in, a filter consists of one or more rules. Where each rule has the form of: class,vendor,product,version,allow Use -1 for class/vendor/product/version to accept any value. And the rules themselves are concatenated like this: rule1|rule2|rule3
“secure-channels” (string list)
The list of session channels to secure. The current SPICE channels are: main, display, inputs, cursor, playback, record, smartcard, usbredir.
“delete-this-file” (boolean)
Set to 1 for the client to remove this connection file (if it can’t, it will fail silently)
“proxy” (string)
A proxy URL to tunnel the connection through. At the time of writing this documentation, the only supported proxy method with Spice is HTTP CONNECT. For example, to tunnel connection through foobar host HTTP proxy on port 8080, use the value http://foobar:8080.

oVirt Support

The connection file can also carry some oVirt-specific options when oVirt support is compiled in. These options are used to interact with oVirt REST API. This is currently only used in order to show a menu allowing to change the CD image being used by the virtual machine from remote-viewer user interface. These options go in an optional [ovirt] group.

“host” (string, mandatory)
The oVirt instance to connect to. This corresponds to the hostname one would connect to access the oVirt user or admin portal.
“vm-guid” (string, mandatory)
GUID of the oVirt virtual machine to connect to.
“jsessionid” (string)
Value to set the ’jsessionid’ cookie to. With oVirt 3.6, setting this authentication cookie to a valid value will allow to interact with the oVirt REST API without being asked for credentials.
“sso-token” (string)
Value to set the ’Authorization’ header to. With oVirt 4.0 or newer, setting this authentication header to a valid value will allow to interact with the oVirt REST API without being asked for credentials.
“ca” (string)
CA certificate in PEM format (using \n to separate the lines). This will be used to validate the certificate used for the oVirt REST https session remote-viewer will establish.

CONFIGURATION

A small number of configuration options can be controlled by editing the settings file located in the user configuration directory:

<USER-CONFIG-DIR>/virt-viewer/settings

This file is a text file in INI format, with application options in the [virt-viewer] group and per-guest options in a group identified by the guest’s UUID. The application options should not be edited manually. There is also a special [fallback] group which specifies options for all guests that don’t have an explicit group.

For each guest, the initial fullscreen monitor configuration can be specified by using the monitor-mapping key. This configuration only takes effect when the -f/–full-screen option is specified.

The value of this key is a list of mappings between a guest display and a client monitor. Each mapping is separated by a semicolon character, and the mappings have the format <GUEST-DISPLAY-ID>:<CLIENT-MONITOR-ID>.

For example, to map guest displays 1 and 2 to client monitors 2 and 3 for the guest with a UUID of e4591275-d9d3-4a44-a18b-ef2fbc8ac3e2, use:

[e4591275-d9d3-4a44-a18b-ef2fbc8ac3e2] monitor-mapping=1:2;2:3

The monitor-mapping must contain ids of all displays from 1 to the last desired display id, e.g. monitor-mapping=3:3 is invalid because mappings for displays 1 and 2 are not specified.

Configuration key share-clipboard contains a boolean value. If it’s true, then clipboard is shared with guests if clipboard sharing is supported by used protocol.

EXAMPLES

To connect to SPICE server on host makai with port 5900

remote-viewer spice://makai:5900

To connect to VNC server on host tsingy with port 5900

remote-viewer vnc://tsingy:5900

To connect to a virtual machine named toliara on an oVirt server at example.org

remote-viewer ovirt://[username@]example.org/toliara

BUGS

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (C) 2012-2020 Red Hat, Inc., and various contributors. This is free software. You may redistribute copies of it under the terms of the GNU General Public License https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.

SEE ALSO

virt-viewer(1), spice-client(1), the project website http://gitlab.com/virt-viewer/virt-viewer

Author: dt

Created: 2022-02-22 Tue 16:53