Unused code, variables and unnecessary styles. The host/port check
would only have an effect if someone explicitly set them as empty in
the query string. The different colors of the status bar are not
necessary, nor is the styling of the background.
When password auth is enabled on the server, the RFB object sends a
'credentialsrequired' event to the UI. This commit adds support for
this event to our recoding playback.
The enableDisableViewClip call in the fullscreen code didn't have any
effect and should have been removed when the special case for clipping
in IE and Safari fullscreen was removed in b18ef81.
The setViewDrag call claimed to disable view drag on UI state change.
The UI states are:
init, connecting, connected, reconnecting, disconnecting, disconnected
The only state where the called function didn't immediately return was
"connected" and that's the only state where enabling view drag is
possible. Thus it could never have been enabled when changing to the
"connected" state.
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.
It is not allowed and only happens to work because babel doesn't
strictly follow the specification. It doesn't seem necessary for the
tests to run, so just remove it.
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.
Rather than trying to pick a utility, we should be able to just use bash to check if a port is available or not.
We can probably assume bash is available due to the shebang declaring it.
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.