- rQwait checks the receive queue to see if there is enough data to
satisfy the following request. If not it returns true (which is
almost always translated into an immediate return false by the
caller).
- rQwait is called quite a bit and this generally allows 4 lines to
become 1 line where it is called.
- rQwait allows simplification of cuttext processing. No global
tracking needed anymore.
Overall, about 60 lines less code.
DES is just used once during authentication and is not performance
sensitive so we save some space by generating and/or removing some
lookup tables. Also, shorten some very frequently used variables.
Shaves off about 100 lines.
- util.js that contains essential functions
- webutils.js that contains the GUI utility function.js
this helps to include noVNC in other project, especially Cappuccino Application
i
The decrypt functionality is never used so remove it. Also, we can
assume that we are always DES encrypting 16 characters which allows
several things to be simplified in DES.
Overall this removes about 80 lines of code.
- include/rfb.js: Keep track of the number of rects of each encoding
type and print them out when we close a connection (if 'info'
logging level).
- tests/vnc_perf.html: first pass at a noVNC based performance
benchmark.
- utils/wsproxy.py: Fix the output of the record filename.
- include/util.js: Add type and desc field to conf_default routine.
Make comment descriptions of settings into desc parameters that can
be queried. Also, use set_FOO in conf_default to set or coerce the
current setting so that we always have the right type for the value.
- include/rfb.js, include/default_config.js: add connectTimeout
setting to address situations with slow connections that may need
more than 2 seconds.
Yet another weird VNC server behavior: sending a failure and length
before the reason message. To calculated the length, the reason string
is already available, why not just send everything as one packet. Oh
well.
- include/canvas.js: When 'debug' logging, show browser detection
values.
- test/canvas.html: Only restore the canvas to it's starting state if
the logging level is not 'debug'.
- wsproxy.py: Append the session number to the record filename so that
multiple sessions don't stomp on each other.
In Safari, local cursor rendering is corrupt. In firefox 3.6.10, local
cursor rendering causes a segfault. Probable that the .cur format is
not 100% compliant (even though it works in Chrome and firefox 3.5 and
firefox 4.0). So just disable it by default until I can figure out how
to address the problems.
Addresses this issue:
http://github.com/kanaka/noVNC/issues#issue/14
Safari starts with '\x80' rather than '\x16' like Chrome and Firefox
and having PROTOCOL_TLSv1 doesn't work with Safari. But just removing
the ssl_version allows things to work with Safari wss:// connections.
Also, if the handshake (after SSL wrapping) is null then terminate the
connection. This probably means the certificate was refused by the
client. Unfortunately Safari (the version I have) doesn't cleanly
shutdown WebSockets connections until the page is reloaded (even if
the object is no longer referenced).
Add a new state 'disconnect' to reflect that we are not truly
'disconnected' until we get an onclose event. Add a disconnect timer
to match.
Handle disconnected cleanup better in updateState(). Anytime we enter
in a disconnect/disconnected state, make sure all running state is
cleaned up (WebSocket, timers, canvas).
Filed this issue for this bug:
http://github.com/gimite/web-socket-js/issues/issue/37
Right now the close() call only calls __flash.close() if readyState is OPEN.
But it should really call close any time that readyState is not CLOSED or
CLOSING.
The case I ran into is when I want to do the following:
1. make a test connection
2. tell the server to setup for a connection
3. connect again
I call close on the test connection, but since it is ignored when CONNECTING,
it eventually times out with a error. But by that time I have already issued a
new connection, it causes the new connection to fail. close() should cancel
CONNECTING state too.
Filed this bug about this issue:
http://github.com/gimite/web-socket-js/issues#issue/35
To work around the flash "recursive call" problem, WebSocket.as has
the onclose event disabled in the close() call and the javascript half
of the close() call does the onclose() call instead. This is fine, but
it needs to be asynchronous to act more like what happens with
a normal WebSockets object. The current behavior is that the onclose()
method is called inline (synchronously) when the close() is called and
this inconsistency make state handling more difficult.
Add -m, --multiprocess option which forks a handler for each
connection allowing multiple connections to the same target using the
same proxy instance.
Cleaned up the output of the handler process. Each process' output is
prefixed with an ordinal value.
Changed both the C and python versions of the proxy.
I've decided that debug/develop/extra features will just be in the
python version of the proxy. The C version (and other versions) will
just have the core functionality (unless someone wants to support it).
web-socket-js now has all the functionality and fixes needed for noVNC
so remove the include/as3crypto_patched directory and the
include/web-socket-js/flash-src directory (i.e. the sources for
web-socket-js). This cleans up almost 3K from the include/ directory.
Update to web-socket-js build based on upstream (gimite/web-socket-js)
9e766377188.
The rfb variable wasn't available at the point settingsDisabled() was
being called since it was called inline with RFB() initialization. To
solve this we pass the updateState rfb variable so that the canvas can
be queried for setting the cursor_uri value.
When the documement/window is scrolled, the onMouseDisable routine was
not properly calculating the position to test whether to ignore the
event or not.