X11vnc
x11vnc is a VNC server, it allows one to view remotely and interact with real X displays (i.e. a display corresponding to a physical monitor, keyboard, and mouse) with any VNC viewer. While it is not developed any longer by its original author Karl Runge, LibVNC and the GitHub community have taken over the development.
x11vnc does not create an extra display (or X desktop) for remote control. Instead, it shows in real time the existing X11 display, unlike Xvnc, part of TigerVNC, which is an alternatives VNC server available in the official repositories.
Contents
Setting up x11vnc
Installation
Install x11vnc from the official repositories.
Starting
First, start X either by startx or through a display manager. You may need to set up X to run headless too.
Then, run the following command, all available options are explained in x11vnc(1).
$ x11vnc -display :0
Another option is to place the x11vnc command line in a script which is called at login, for example:
x11vnc -wait 50 -noxdamage -passwd PASSWORD -display :0 -forever -o /var/log/x11vnc.log -bg
ps
on the machine will see it. Also note that /var/log/x11vnc.log
needs to be created manually and its ownership needs to match that of the user who will run it.Setting X authority
You may set an X authority file for the VNC server. This is accomplished by using the -auth
argument followed by the appropriate file, which will depend on how your X server was started. Generally, assigning an X authority file requires running x11vnc as root.
Start X
$ x11vnc -display :0 -auth ~/.Xauthority
If that fails, you may have to run instead (as root):
# x11vnc -display :0 -auth /home/user/.Xauthority
Where user is the username of the user who is running the X server.
GDM
.Xauthority
is not created, and x11vnc fails to start). You are therefore advised to uncomment #WaylandEnable=false
setting in /etc/gdm/custom.conf
in order to proceed.# x11vnc -display :0 -auth /var/lib/gdm/:0.Xauth
Newer versions of GDM uses /run/user. Example for user 120 (gdm), used for login screen.
# x11vnc -display :0 -auth /run/user/120/gdm/Xauthority
or see Troubleshooting section below
SLIM
# x11vnc -display :0 -auth /var/run/slim.auth
LXDM
# x11vnc -display :0 -auth /var/run/lxdm/lxdm-\:0.auth
Setting a password
$ mkdir ~/.x11vnc $ x11vnc -storepasswd password ~/.x11vnc/passwd
To connect using the stored password use the -rfbauth
argument and point to the passwd file you created, like so:
$ x11vnc -display :0 -rfbauth ~/.x11vnc/passwd
Your viewer should prompt for a password when connecting.
Running constantly
By default, x11vnc will accept the first VNC session and shutdown when the session disconnects.
In order to avoid that, start x11vnc with either the -many
or the -forever
argument, like this:
$ x11vnc -many -display :0
It is also possible to use the following command :
$ x11vnc --loop
this will restart the server once the session is finished
Accessing
Get a VNC client on another computer, and type in the IP address of the computer running x11vnc. Hit connect, and you should be set.
If you are attempting to access a VNC server / computer (running x11vnc) from outside of its network then you will need to ensure that it has port 5900 forwarded.
SSH Tunnel
You need to have SSH installed and configured.
Use the -localhost
flag with x11vnc for it to bind to the local interface. Once that is done, you can use SSH to tunnel the port; then, connect to VNC through SSH.
Simple example (from http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/index.html#tunnelling ):
$ ssh -t -L 5900:localhost:5900 remote_host 'x11vnc -localhost -display :0'
(You will likely have to provide passwords/passphrases to login from your current location into your remote_host Unix account; we assume you have a login account on remote_host and it is running the SSH server)
And then in another terminal window on your current machine run the command:
$ vncviewer -PreferredEncoding=ZRLE localhost:0
Troubleshooting
1. You can check your ip address and make sure port 5900 is forwarded by visiting this website.
If you cannot start the tunnel, and get error like XOpenDisplay(":0") failed,
Check if you have a ~/.Xauthority
directory.
If that does not exist, You can create one easily (Actually a symlink to actual one) by running command given below as normal user NOT ROOT OR USING Sudo as below:
$ ln -sv $(dirname $(xauth info | awk '/Authority file/{print $3}')) ~/.Xauthority
then try above tunneling example and it should work fine. Further if you want this to be automatically done each time Xorg is restarted, create the Xprofile file & make is executable as below
$ ln -sf $(dirname $(xauth info | awk '/Authority file/{print $3}')) ~/.Xauthority
3. GNOME 3 and x11vnc
If you are using GNOME 3 and x11vnc and you get the following errors
*** XOpenDisplay failed (:0) *** x11vnc was unable to open the X DISPLAY: ":0", it cannot continue.
Try running x11vnc like
$ x11vnc -noxdamage -many -display :0 -auth /var/run/gdm/$(sudo ls /var/run/gdm | grep $(whoami))/database -forever -bg
Please update if this works / not works for any other display manager or desktop environment.
4. Screensaver problem
If screensaver starts every 1-2 second, start x11vnc with -nodpms key.