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@spice-project/spice-html5
Advanced tools
Spice Javascript client
Instructions and status as of August, 2016.
Requirements:
Modern Firefox or Chrome (IE will work, but badly)
A WebSocket proxy
websockify: https://github.com/kanaka/websockify works great.
Note that a patch to remove this requirement has been submitted to the Spice project but not yet been accepted. Refer to this email: https://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/spice-devel/2016-June/030552.html
A spice server
Optional:
A web server
With firefox, you can just open file:///your-path-to-spice.html-here
With Chrome, you have to set a secret config flag to do that, or serve the files from a web server.
Steps:
Start the spice server
Start websockify; my command line looks like this: ./websockify 5959 localhost:5900
Fire up spice.html, set host + port + password, and click start
Status:
The TODO file should be a fairly comprehensive list of tasks required to make this client more fully functional.
FAQs
Spice Javascript client
The npm package @spice-project/spice-html5 receives a total of 1,824 weekly downloads. As such, @spice-project/spice-html5 popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @spice-project/spice-html5 demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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