With high DPI systems we can end up with a container with a size that
is not an integer number of CSS pixels. Make sure we can handle those
cases by allowing a fractional size for the output canvas. Framebuffer
size and viewport coordinates are still restricted to integer dimensions
though.
Based on initial patch by Alexander E. Patrakov.
Always use the shorthand notation if the function is a method of an object or class `{ foo() { ... } }` or `class bar { foo() { ... } }`
unless it's a callback in which case you a fat arrow function should be used `{ cb: () => { ... } }`
Some browsers don't support custom cursors, and there are cases
where the browsers refuse to show the cursor. Handle both of these
cases by letting the browser render the cursor via a floating
canvas.
This allows us to support a local cursor at all times.
Siemens' touch panels support Tight authentication as well as NOTUNNEL,
but they fail to advertise the latter. Work around this issue by detecting
a Siemens device (through their custom tunnel types) and assume NOTUNNEL
support even if not advertised.
Pasting clipboard texts that were larger than 10240 bytes didnt work and
caused a crash in noVNC. This commit fixes the crash and adds handling
for sending large clipboard texts. Fixes issue #1065.
Firefox no longer sends keyup events properly for the Alt keys. Try
to sniff out the state of the Alt key by monitoring other events that
include its state.
Try to properly detect the fake CtrlL+AltR sequence Windows sends
when pressing AltGr. This allows us to send more accurate key
events over to the server.
Tight PNG rects cannot use the basic compression variants, and PNG
cannot be used in a standard Tight rect.
This is a partial revert of 3e8b26a based on better understanding
of the encoding.
The function removeChild throws an exception when the element specified
doesn't exist. This can happen when opening the websocket throws an
exception during connect. Fixes issue #979
The API allowed strings to be passed from the RFB module to the
application using the disconnect reason. This caused problems since
the application didn't have control over translations for these
strings.
Most of the information being passed using this string was very
technical and not helpful to the end user. One exception to this was
the security result information regarding for example authentication
failures. The protocol allows the VNC server to pass a string
directly to the user in the security result.
So the disconnect reason is replaced by a boolean saying if the
disconnection was clean or not. And for the security result information
from the server, a new event has been added.
Instead of exposing all the internal connection states, the RFB module
will now only send events on connect and on disconnect. This makes it
simpler for the application and gets rid of the double events that were
being sent on disconnect (previously updatestate and disconnect).
An RFB object represents a single connection so it doesn't make
sense to have one without it trying to connect right away. Matches
the behaviour of other APIs, e.g. WebSocket.
Use normal properties with JavaScript setters and getters instead of
our homegrown stuff.
This also changes the properties to follow normal naming conventions.
Sort things by category, and organise everything in the same place.
We don't support reuse of RFB objects so we can safely init everything
in the constructor.
The previous method of retaining focus didn't work reliably when
the RFB object tried to move the focus to the canvas. Add a setting
to control "focus on click" behaviour instead of letting them try
to fight it out.
Give the canvas proper focus handling. This avoids messy logic that
needs to disable and enable event handling when we want to interact
with other UI elements.
It also makes sure we can properly inhibit the browser from triggering
local actions on key presses.
This restores basic support for Intel AMT servers. They refuse clients
that request more than 16 bits per pixels, so implement a fallback
in just the "Raw" encoding.
The VNC protocol can't handle different deltas or speeds for a mouse
wheel event. When using a device that sends a lot of small mouse wheel
events, instead of fewer larger steps, the effect was that mouse wheel
scrolling was way to sensitive.
This patch looks at the delta of wheel events and doesn't send events
until the combined delta has passed a threshold. Single events that
doesn't pass the threshold get sent after a timeout in order to not
loose any events.
Fixes#577.