RETIRED, further work has moved to Debian project infrastructure
ef3807908d
They are fairly noisy, and more appropriate to the more detailed level. |
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thirdparty | ||
.gitignore | ||
apache.conf.sample | ||
atKeynames.js | ||
bitmap.js | ||
COPYING | ||
COPYING.LESSER | ||
cursor.js | ||
display.js | ||
enums.js | ||
filexfer.js | ||
inputs.js | ||
lz.js | ||
main.js | ||
Makefile | ||
playback.js | ||
png.js | ||
port.js | ||
quic.js | ||
README | ||
resize.js | ||
simulatecursor.js | ||
spice_auto.html | ||
spice-html5.spec.in | ||
spice.css | ||
spice.html | ||
spicearraybuffer.js | ||
spiceconn.js | ||
spicedataview.js | ||
spicemsg.js | ||
spicetype.js | ||
ticket.js | ||
TODO | ||
utils.js | ||
webm.js | ||
wire.js |
Spice Javascript client Instructions and status as of August, 2016. Requirements: 1. Modern Firefox or Chrome (IE will work, but badly) 2. 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 3. A spice server 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.