RealVNC: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox software |
{{Infobox software |
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| name = RealVNC |
| name = RealVNC |
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| logo |
| logo |
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| screenshot = |
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| caption = The RealVNC viewer in action (pictured with resolution scaling) |
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| developer = RealVNC |
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| latest_release_version = 5.2.3 |
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| latest_release_date = {{release date and age|2015|02|09}} |
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| operating_system = [[AIX]]<br />[[HP-UX]]<br />[[Linux]]<br />[[OS X]]<br />[[Solaris (operating system)|Solaris]]<br />[[Microsoft Windows|Windows]] |
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| platform = [[Java Platform]] |
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| programming_language = [[Java (programming language)|Java]] |
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| genre = [[Remote administration]] [[software]] |
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| license = [[GNU General Public License|GPL]] / [[Proprietary software]] |
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| website = [http://www.realvnc.com/ www.realvnc.com] |
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}} |
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'''RealVNC''' is a company that provides [[remote desktop software|remote access]] software. The software consists of a server and client application for the [[Virtual Network Computing]] (VNC) protocol to control another computer's screen remotely. |
'''RealVNC''' is a company that provides [[remote desktop software|remote access]] software. The software consists of a server and client application for the [[Virtual Network Computing]] (VNC) protocol to control another computer's screen remotely. |
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For remote access to view one computer desktop on another, RealVNC comes in one of three editions: |
For remote access to view one computer desktop on another, RealVNC comes in one of three editions: |
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# Open Edition (formerly "Free Edition") – free registration and activation required, [[open-source]] version distributed under the [[GNU General Public License]]; runs on various flavors of Unix (Linux, Solaris, HP-UX, AIX) and versions of Windows prior to Windows Vista (i.e. Windows NT 4, 2000, XP, Server 2003), newer Windows operating systems must use the Personal or Enterprise editions.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.realvnc.com/vnc/features.html|title=VNC feature comparison|publisher=RealVNC Limited|accessdate=2012-03-27}}</ref> Note that users who wish to use this free version, as supplied by the [http://www.realvnc.com/products/free/4.1/index.html realvnc.com] site, may need (for example) to patch and compile the [[XFree86]] source code by themselves, as the free binaries available for download are outdated and typically fail to operate in modern environments.<ref name="tkac08">{{Citation | title = VNC compilation against Xorg 1.4 | author = Adam Tkac, Red Hat | url = http://www.realvnc.com/pipermail/vnc-list/2008-February/058615.html | |
# Open Edition (formerly "Free Edition") – free registration and activation required, [[open-source]] version distributed under the [[GNU General Public License]]; runs on various flavors of Unix (Linux, Solaris, HP-UX, AIX) and versions of Windows prior to Windows Vista (i.e. Windows NT 4, 2000, XP, Server 2003), newer Windows operating systems must use the Personal or Enterprise editions.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.realvnc.com/vnc/features.html|title=VNC feature comparison|publisher=RealVNC Limited|accessdate=2012-03-27}}</ref> Note that users who wish to use this free version, as supplied by the [http://www.realvnc.com/products/free/4.1/index.html realvnc.com] site, may need (for example) to patch and compile the [[XFree86]] source code by themselves, as the free binaries available for download are outdated and typically fail to operate in modern environments.<ref name="tkac08">{{Citation | title = VNC compilation against Xorg 1.4 | author = Adam Tkac, Red Hat | url = http://www.realvnc.com/pipermail/vnc-list/2008-February/058615.html | publ |
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# Personal Edition – commercial version geared towards home or small-business users, with authentication and encryption, remote printing, chat and file transfer; runs on Windows, Mac OS X and various flavours of Linux and UNIX. |
# Personal Edition – commercial version geared towards home or small-business users, with authentication and encryption, remote printing, chat and file transfer; runs on Windows, Mac OS X and various flavours of Linux and UNIX. |
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# Enterprise Edition – commercial version geared towards enterprises, with enhanced authentication and encryption, remote printing, chat, file transfer and a deployment tool for Windows; runs on Windows, Mac OS X and various flavours of Linux and UNIX. |
# Enterprise Edition – commercial version geared towards enterprises, with enhanced authentication and encryption, remote printing, chat, file transfer and a deployment tool for Windows; runs on Windows, Mac OS X and various flavours of Linux and UNIX. |
Revision as of 12:37, 11 June 2015
{{Infobox software | name = RealVNC | logo RealVNC is a company that provides remote access software. The software consists of a server and client application for the Virtual Network Computing (VNC) protocol to control another computer's screen remotely.
History
Andy Harter (CEO of RealVNC Limited) and other members of the original VNC team at AT&T founded RealVNC Limited in 2002.
Platforms, editions, versions
For a desktop-to-desktop connection RealVNC runs on Windows, on Mac OS X, and on many Unix-like operating systems. A RealVNC client also runs on the Java platform and on the Apple iPhone, iPod touch and iPad and Google Android devices. A Windows-only client, VNC Viewer Plus is now[when?] available, designed to interface to the embedded server on Intel AMT chipsets found on Intel vPro motherboards.
For remote access to view one computer desktop on another, RealVNC comes in one of three editions:
- Open Edition (formerly "Free Edition") – free registration and activation required, open-source version distributed under the GNU General Public License; runs on various flavors of Unix (Linux, Solaris, HP-UX, AIX) and versions of Windows prior to Windows Vista (i.e. Windows NT 4, 2000, XP, Server 2003), newer Windows operating systems must use the Personal or Enterprise editions.[1] Note that users who wish to use this free version, as supplied by the realvnc.com site, may need (for example) to patch and compile the XFree86 source code by themselves, as the free binaries available for download are outdated and typically fail to operate in modern environments.Cite error: A
<ref>
tag is missing the closing</ref>
(see the help page).
With the release of VNC 5.0[when?], RealVNC software editions used a single binary which superseded VNC Enterprise Edition and VNC Personal Edition.[2]
Client
RealVNC clients using vncviewer
can run in full-screen mode; they use the F8 function-key as the default key for bringing up an options menu (which includes the option to, among other things, switch off full screen mode or to forward a Control-Alt-Delete key-sequence).
Server
The server component of RealVNC allows a computer to be remotely controlled by another computer. The software can be installed for legitimate purposes, but it can also be installed from a remote location by an attacker with malicious intent. It is detected as RemoteAccess:Win32/RealVNC by Windows Defender.[3]
Connectivity
RealVNC uses the RFB protocol. It defaults to TCP port 5900. When making a connection over the Internet, the user must open this port in the local firewall as well as configure port forwarding to forward TCP Port 5900 (or the customized port respectively) to the local machine address if behind a NAT Router.
As an alternative, one can tunnel VNC through SSH, avoiding the opening of additional ports and automatically traversing the NAT router. SSH also provides encryption of the connection between the VNC server and viewer.
After proposing remote access interface for Weston in October 2013,[4] RealVNC published a Wayland developer preview in July 2014.[5][6]
Limitations
The VNC protocol is pixel based. Although this leads to great flexibility (e.g., any type of desktop can be displayed), it is often less efficient than solutions that have a better understanding of the underlying graphic layout, like X11. Those protocols send graphic primitives or high-level commands in a simpler form (e.g., open window), whereas RFB just sends the raw pixel data.
References
- ^ "VNC feature comparison". RealVNC Limited. Retrieved 2012-03-27.
- ^
"What happened to VNC Enterprise Edition and VNC Personal Edition?". RealVNC Limited. Retrieved 2014-04-07.
Following the release of VNC 5.0 VNC is now a single binary which supersedes VNC Enterprise Edition and VNC Personal Edition.
- ^ Microsoft (2006-06-18), RemoteAccess:Win32/RealVNC, "Microsoft Corporation" at [1], retrieved 2009-12-14
{{citation}}
: External link in
(help)|publisher=
- ^ "[RFC weston] remote access interface module". freedesktop.org. 2013-10-18.
- ^ "VNC® Wayland Developer Preview". 2014-07-08.
- ^ "RealVNC Wayland developer preview email". freedesktop.org. 2014-07-09.
External links
- Companies based in Cambridge
- Virtual Network Computing
- Remote administration software
- Cross-platform software
- Free network-related software
- Free software programmed in Java (programming language)
- OS X remote administration software
- Windows remote administration software
- Remote administration software for Linux
- Remote desktop software for Linux