noVNC is a HTML5 VNC client that runs well in any modern browser including mobile browsers (iPhone/iPad and Android).
Many companies/projects have integrated noVNC including Ganeti Web Manager, OpenStack, OpenNebula, and LibVNCServer. See the Projects and Companies wiki page for a more complete list with additional info and links.
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 have 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.
- 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
Running in Chrome before and after connecting:
See more screenshots here.
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HTML5 Canvas (with createImageData): Chrome, Firefox 3.6+, iOS Safari, Opera 11+, Internet Explorer 9+, etc.
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HTML5 WebSockets: For browsers that do not have builtin WebSockets support, the project includes web-socket-js, a WebSockets emulator using Adobe Flash. iOS 4.2+ has built-in WebSocket support.
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Fast Javascript Engine: this is not strictly a requirement, but without a fast Javascript engine, noVNC might be painfully slow.
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See the more detailed browser compatibility wiki page.
Unless you are using a VNC server with support for WebSockets connections (such as x11vnc/libvncserver, QEMU, or PocketVNC), you need to use a WebSockets to TCP socket proxy. There is a python proxy included ('websockify').
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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
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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!
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Encrypted Connections. How to setup websockify so that you can use encrypted connections from noVNC.
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Advanced Usage. Starting a VNC server, advanced websockify usage, etc.
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Integrating noVNC into existing projects.
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Troubleshooting noVNC problems.
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Core team:
- Joel Martin
- Samuel Mannehed (Cendio)
- Peter Åstrand (Cendio)
- Solly Ross (Red Hat / OpenStack)
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Notable contributions:
- UI and Icons : Chris Gordon
- Original Logo : Michael Sersen
- tight encoding : Michael Tinglof (Mercuri.ca)
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Included libraries:
- web-socket-js : Hiroshi Ichikawa (github.com/gimite/web-socket-js)
- as3crypto : Henri Torgemane (code.google.com/p/as3crypto)
- base64 : Martijn Pieters (Digital Creations 2), Samuel Sieb (sieb.net)
- jsunzip : Erik Moller (github.com/operasoftware/jsunzip),
- tinflate : Joergen Ibsen (ibsensoftware.com)
- DES : Dave Zimmerman (Widget Workshop), Jef Poskanzer (ACME Labs)