noVNC: HTML5 VNC Client
Description
noVNC is a HTML5 VNC client that runs well in any modern browser including
mobile browsers (iOS and Android).
Many companies, projects and products have integrated noVNC including
Ganeti Web Manager,
OpenStack,
OpenNebula,
LibVNCServer, and
ThinLinc. See
the Projects and Companies wiki page
for a more complete list with additional info and links.
News/help/contact
Notable commits, announcements and news are posted to
@noVNC.
If you are a noVNC developer/integrator/user (or want to be) please join the
noVNC discussion group.
Bugs and feature requests can be submitted via
github issues.
If you are looking for a place to start contributing to noVNC, a good place to
start would be the issues that are marked as
"patchwelcome".
If you want to show appreciation for noVNC you could donate to a great non-
profits such as:
Compassion International,
SIL,
Habitat for Humanity,
Electronic Frontier Foundation,
Against Malaria Foundation,
Nothing But Nets, etc.
Please tweet @noVNC if you do.
Features
- Supports all modern browsers including mobile (iOS, Android)
- Supported VNC encodings: raw, copyrect, rre, hextile, tight, tightPNG
- WebSocket SSL/TLS encryption (i.e. "wss://") support
- 24-bit true color and 8 bit colour mapped
- Supports desktop resize notification/pseudo-encoding
- Local or remote cursor
- Clipboard copy/paste
- Clipping or scolling modes for large remote screens
- Easy site integration and theming (3 example themes included)
- Licensed under the MPL 2.0
Screenshots
Running in Firefox before and after connecting:
See more screenshots
here.
Browser Requirements
-
Chrome 8, Firefox 4, Safari 6, Opera 12, IE 11, Edge 12, etc.
-
HTML5 Canvas, WebSockets and Typed Arrays
-
Fast Javascript Engine: this is not strictly a requirement, but without a
fast Javascript engine, noVNC might be painfully slow.
-
See the more detailed
browser compatibility wiki page.
Server Requirements
Unless you are using a VNC server with support for WebSockets connections (such
as x11vnc/libvncserver,
QEMU, or
MobileVNC), you need to use a
WebSockets to TCP socket proxy. There is a python proxy included
('websockify').
Quick Start
-
Use the launch script to start a mini-webserver and the WebSockets proxy
(websockify). The --vnc
option is used to specify the location of a running
VNC server:
./utils/launch.sh --vnc localhost:5901
-
Point your browser to the cut-and-paste URL that is output by the launch
script. Enter a password if the VNC server has one configured. Hit the
Connect button and enjoy!
Other Pages
-
Modules/API - The library
modules and their Javascript API.
-
Integration - Get noVNC
to work in existing projects.
-
Troubleshooting - How
to troubleshoot problems.
-
Encrypted Connections -
Setup websockify so that you can use encrypted connections from noVNC.
-
Advanced Usage -
Generating an SSL certificate, starting a VNC server, advanced websockify
usage, etc.
-
Testing - Run and write
tests.
-
Translations - Add and
modify localization for JavaScript and HTML.
Authors/Contributors
-
Core team:
-
Notable contributions:
- UI and Icons : Pierre Ossman, Chris Gordon
- Original Logo : Michael Sersen
- tight encoding : Michael Tinglof (Mercuri.ca)
-
Included libraries:
- as3crypto : Henri Torgemane (code.google.com/p/as3crypto)
- base64 : Martijn Pieters (Digital Creations 2), Samuel Sieb (sieb.net)
- DES : Dave Zimmerman (Widget Workshop), Jef Poskanzer (ACME Labs)
- Pako : Vitaly Puzrin (https://github.com/nodeca/pako)
-
Contribution guide