78e0d938cf9a1cef400a57ca3d727b9772dd4a1a
This allows IE10 to function. Note that we would normally subclass this type, but ArrayBuffer is implemented in native code, and so is difficult to subclass.
Prototype Spice Javascript client
Instructions and status as of June 1, 2012.
Requirements:
1. Modern Firefox or Chrome
2. A WebSocket proxy
I've used websockify:
https://github.com/kanaka/websockify
works great.
3. A spice server
At this point, I've tested with qemu hosting
a Fedora image, a Vista image, and with Xspice.
Vista was pretty bad; I recommend either Linux or Xspice.
** Xspice has a processing issue; see this email:
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/spice-devel/2012-May/009020.html
Optional:
1. 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:
1. Start the spice server
2. Start websockify; my command line looks like this:
./websockify 5959 localhost:5900
3. 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.
As of June 1, 2012, this client is a nifty proof of concept,
but a long way from being a useful production tool.
Description
Languages
JavaScript
93.3%
HTML
5%
CSS
0.9%
Makefile
0.8%