Provided by: x11vnc_0.9.17-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       x11vnc - allow VNC connections to real X11 displays
                version: 0.9.17, lastmod: 2025-04-11

SYNOPSIS

       x11vnc [OPTION]...

DESCRIPTION

       Typical usage is:

              Run this command in a shell on the remote machine "far-host" with X session you wish to view:

              x11vnc -display :0

              Then run this in another window on the machine you are sitting at:

              vncviewer far-host:0

       Once  x11vnc  establishes  connections  with  the X11 server and starts listening as a VNC server it will
       print out a string: PORT=XXXX where XXXX is typically 5900 (the default VNC server port).  One would next
       run something like this on the local machine: "vncviewer hostname:N" where "hostname" is the name of  the
       machine running x11vnc and N is XXXX - 5900, i.e. usually "vncviewer hostname:0".

       By  default  x11vnc  will  not  allow  the  screen  to  be  shared and it will exit as soon as the client
       disconnects.  See -shared and -forever below to override these protections.  See the FAQ for details  how
       to tunnel the VNC connection through an encrypted channel such as ssh(1).  In brief:

              ssh -t -L 5900:localhost:5900 far-host 'x11vnc -localhost -display :0'

       % vncviewer -encodings 'copyrect tight zrle hextile' localhost:0

       Also, use of a VNC password (-rfbauth or -passwdfile) is strongly recommended.

       For additional info see: http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/ and  http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/faq.html

       Config  file  support:  if  the  file  $HOME/.x11vncrc exists then each line in it is treated as a single
       command line option.  Disable with -norc.  For each  option  name,  the  leading  character  "-"  is  not
       required.   E.g.  a line that is either "forever" or "-forever" may be used and are equivalent.  Likewise
       "wait 100" or "-wait 100" are acceptable and equivalent lines.  The "#" character comments out to the end
       of the line in the usual way (backslash it for a literal).  Leading and trailing  whitespace  is  trimmed
       off.  Lines may be continued with a "\" as the last character of a line (it becomes a space character).

OPTIONS

       -display disp

              X11  server  display  to  connect  to,  usually  :0.  The X server process must be running on same
              machine and support MIT-SHM.  Equivalent to setting the DISPLAY environment variable to disp.

              See the description below of the "-display WAIT:..."  extensions, where alias  "-find"  will  find
              the user's display automatically, and "-create" will create a Xvfb session if no session is found.

       -auth file

              Set  the X authority file to be file, equivalent to setting the XAUTHORITY environment variable to
              file before startup.  Same as -xauth file.  See Xsecurity(7) , xauth(1) man pages for more info.

              Use '-auth guess' to have x11vnc use its -findauth mechanism (described below) to try to guess the
              XAUTHORITY filename and use it.

              XDM/GDM/KDM: if you are running x11vnc as root and want to find the XAUTHORITY before  anyone  has
              logged  into an X session yet, use: x11vnc -env FD_XDM=1 -auth guess ...  (This will also find the
              XAUTHORITY if a user is already logged into the X session.)  When running as root,  FD_XDM=1  will
              be tried if the initial -auth guess fails.

       -N

              If  the  X  display  is  :N,  try to set the VNC display to also be :N This just sets the -rfbport
              option to 5900+N The program will exit immediately if that port is not available.  The  -N  option
              only  works  with  normal  -display  usage, e.g. :0 or :8, -N is ignored in the -display WAIT:...,
              -create, -find, -svc, -redirect, etc modes.

       -autoport n

              Automatically probe for a free VNC port starting at n.  The default is to start probing  at  5900.
              Use this to stay away from other VNC servers near 5900.

       -rfbport str

              The  VNC  port  to  listen  on  (a  LibVNCServer  option), e.g.  5900, 5901, etc.  If specified as
              "-rfbport PROMPT" then the x11vnc -gui is used to prompt the user to enter the port number.

       -6

              IPv6 listening support.  In addition to IPv4,  the  IPv6  address  is  listened  on  for  incoming
              connections.  The same port number as IPv4 is used.

              NOTE:   This  x11vnc  binary  was compiled to have the "-6" IPv6 listening mode ENABLED by default
              (CPPFLAGS -DX11VNC_LISTEN6=1).  So to disable IPv6 listening  mode  you  MUST  supply  the  "-no6"
              option (see below.)

              The  "-6"  mode  works  for both normal connections and -ssl encrypted ones.  Nearly everything is
              supported for the IPv6 case, but there are a few exceptions.  See -stunnel for its IPv6 support.

              Currently, for absolutely everything to work correctly the machine may  need  to  have  some  IPv4
              support,  at  the  least  for the loopback interface.  However, for nearly all usage modes no IPv4
              support is required. See -noipv4.

              If you have trouble compiling or running in  IPv6  mode,  set  -DX11VNC_IPV6=0  in  CPPFLAGS  when
              configuring to disable IPv6 support.

       -no6

              Disable IPv6 listening support (only useful if the "-6" mode is compiled in to be the default; see
              the X11VNC_LISTEN6 description above under "-6".)

       -noipv6

              Do  not try to use IPv6 for any listening or connecting sockets.  This includes both the listening
              service port(s) and outgoing connections from -connect, -connect_or_exit, or -proxy.  Use this  if
              you are having problems due to IPv6.

       -noipv4

              Do  not try to use IPv4 for any listening or connecting sockets.  This is mainly for exploring the
              behavior of x11vnc on an IPv6-only system, but may have other uses.

       -reopen

              If the X server connection is disconnected, try to reopen the X display (up to one time.)  This is
              of use for display managers like GDM (KillInitClients option) that kill x11vnc just after the user
              logs into the X session.  Note: the reopened state may be unstable.   Set  X11VNC_REOPEN_DISPLAY=n
              to  reopen  n  times and set X11VNC_REOPEN_SLEEP_MAX to the number of seconds, default 10, to keep
              trying to reopen the display (once per second.)

              Update: as of 0.9.9, x11vnc tries to automatically avoid being killed by the  display  manager  by
              delaying  creating windows or using XFIXES.  So you shouldn't need to use KillInitClients=false as
              long as you log in quickly enough (within 45 seconds of connecting.)   You  can  disable  this  by
              setting X11VNC_AVOID_WINDOWS=never.  You can also set it to the number of seconds to delay.

       -reflect host:N

              Instead  of connecting to and polling an X display, connect to the remote VNC server host:N and be
              a reflector/repeater for it.  This is useful for trying to manage the case  of  many  simultaneous
              VNC  viewers  (e.g. classroom broadcasting) where, e.g. you put a repeater on each network switch,
              etc, to improve performance by distributing the load and network traffic.   Implies  -shared  (use
              -noshared as a later option to disable). See the discussion below under -rawfb vnc:host:N for more
              details.

       -id windowid

              Show the X window corresponding to windowid not the entire display.  New windows like popup menus,
              transient toplevels, etc, may not be seen or may be clipped.  Disabling SaveUnders or BackingStore
              in  the  X  server  may  help  show  them.   x11vnc may crash if the window is initially partially
              obscured, changes size, is iconified, etc.  Some steps are taken to avoid  this  and  the  -xrandr
              mechanism  is  used  to track resizes.  Use xwininfo(1) to get the window id, or use "-id pick" to
              have x11vnc run xwininfo(1) for you and extract the id.  The -id option is  useful  for  exporting
              very simple applications (e.g. the current view on a webcam).

       -sid windowid

              As  -id,  but  instead  of  using  the  window  directly  it  shifts a root view to it: this shows
              SaveUnders menus, etc, although they will be clipped if they extend beyond the window.

       -appshare

              Simple application sharing based on the -id/-sid mechanism.  Every new toplevel  window  that  the
              application  creates  induces  a  new  viewer  window  via a reverse connection.  The -id/-sid and
              -connect options are required.  Run 'x11vnc -appshare -help' for more info.

       -clip WxH+X+Y

              Only show the sub-region of the full display that corresponds to the rectangle geometry with  size
              WxH  and  offset  +X+Y.   The VNC display has size WxH (i.e. smaller than the full display).  This
              also works for -id/-sid mode where the offset is relative to the upper left corner of the selected
              window.  An example use of this option would be to split a large (e.g. Xinerama) display into  two
              parts to be accessed via separate viewers by running a separate x11vnc on each part.

              Use '-clip xinerama0' to clip to the first xinerama sub-screen (if xinerama is active).  xinerama1
              for  the  2nd  sub-screen,  etc.  This way you don't need to figure out the WxH+X+Y of the desired
              xinerama sub-screen.  screens are sorted in increasing distance from the (0,0)  origin  (I.e.  not
              the Xserver's order).

       -flashcmap

              In 8bpp indexed color, let the installed colormap flash as the pointer moves from window to window
              (slow).  Also try the -8to24 option to avoid flash altogether.

       -shiftcmap n

              Rare  problem,  but  some  8bpp  displays  use  less than 256 colorcells (e.g. 16-color grayscale,
              perhaps the other bits are used for double buffering) *and* also need to shift the  pixels  values
              away  from  0,  ..,  ncells.  n indicates the shift to be applied to the pixel values.  To see the
              pixel values set DEBUG_CMAP=1 to print out a colormap histogram.  Example: -shiftcmap 240

       -notruecolor

              For 8bpp displays, force indexed color (i.e. a colormap) even if  it  looks  like  8bpp  TrueColor
              (rare problem).

       -advertise_truecolor

              If  the X11 display is indexed color, lie to clients when they first connect by telling them it is
              truecolor.  To workaround RealVNC: inPF has  colourMap  but  not  8bpp  Use  '-advertise_truecolor
              reset' to reset client fb too.

       -visual n

              This  option  probably  does  not  do  what you think.  It simply *forces* the visual used for the
              framebuffer; this may be a bad thing... (e.g. messes up colors or cause a crash). It is useful for
              testing and for some workarounds.  n may be a decimal number, or 0x hex.  Run xdpyinfo(1) for  the
              values.   One may also use "TrueColor", etc. see <X11/X.h> for a list.  If the string ends in ":m"
              then for better or for worse the visual depth is forced to be m.  You may want to use -noshm  when
              using this option (so XGetImage may automatically translate the pixel data).

       -overlay

              Handle  multiple  depth visuals on one screen, e.g. 8+24 and 24+8 overlay visuals (the 32 bits per
              pixel are packed with 8 for PseudoColor and 24 for TrueColor).

              Currently -overlay only works on Solaris via XReadScreen(3X11) and IRIX using XReadDisplay(3).  On
              Solaris there is a problem with image "bleeding" around transient popup menus  (but  not  for  the
              menu  itself):  a  workaround  is  to disable SaveUnders by passing the "-su" argument to Xsun (in
              /etc/dt/config/Xservers).

              Use -overlay as a workaround for situations like  these:  Some  legacy  applications  require  the
              default  visual  to be 8bpp (8+24), or they will use 8bpp PseudoColor even when the default visual
              is depth 24 TrueColor (24+8).  In these cases colors in some windows will be incorrect  in  x11vnc
              unless  -overlay  is  used.   Another  use of -overlay is to enable showing the exact mouse cursor
              shape (details below).

              Under -overlay, performance will be  somewhat  slower  due  to  the  extra  image  transformations
              required.   For optimal performance do not use -overlay, but rather configure the X server so that
              the default visual is depth 24 TrueColor and try to have all apps use that visual (e.g. some  apps
              have -use24 or -visual options).

       -overlay_nocursor

              Sets -overlay, but does not try to draw the exact mouse cursor shape using the overlay mechanism.

       -8to24 [opts]

              Try  this  option if -overlay is not supported on your OS, and you have a legacy 8bpp app that you
              want to view on a multi-depth display with default depth 24 (and is 32  bpp)  OR  have  a  default
              depth  8  display  with depth 24 overlay windows for some apps.  This option may not work on all X
              servers and hardware (tested on XFree86/Xorg mga driver and  Xsun).   The  "opts"  string  is  not
              required and is described below.

              This  mode  enables a hack where x11vnc monitors windows within 3 levels from the root window.  If
              it finds any that are 8bpp it extracts the indexed color pixel values using XGetImage()  and  then
              applies  a  transformation  using  the  colormap(s) to create TrueColor RGB values that it in turn
              inserts into bits 1-24 of the framebuffer.  This creates a depth 24 "view" of the display that  is
              then exported via VNC.

              Conversely,  for  default  depth  8  displays,  the  depth  24 regions are read by XGetImage() and
              everything is transformed and inserted into a depth 24 TrueColor framebuffer.

              Note that even if there are *no* depth 24 visuals or  windows  (i.e.  pure  8bpp),  this  mode  is
              potentially an improvement over -flashcmap because it avoids the flashing and shows each window in
              the correct color.

              This  method  works  OK, but may still have bugs and it does hog resources.  If there are multiple
              8bpp windows using different colormaps, one may have to iconify all but one for the colors  to  be
              correct.

              There  may  be  painting  errors  for  clipping  and switching between windows of depths 8 and 24.
              Heuristics are applied to try to minimize the painting errors.  One can also press 3 Alt_L's in  a
              row  to  refresh the screen if the error does not repair itself.  Also the option -fixscreen 8=3.0
              or -fixscreen V=3.0 may be used to periodically refresh the screen at the cost of bandwidth (every
              3 sec for this example).

              The [opts] string can contain the following settings.  Multiple settings are separated by commas.

              For for some X  servers  with  default  depth  24  a  speedup  may  be  achieved  via  the  option
              "nogetimage".   This  enables  a  scheme  were  XGetImage() is not used to retrieve the 8bpp data.
              Instead, it assumes that the 8bpp data is in bits 25-32 of  the  32bit  X  pixels.   There  is  no
              requirement  that the X server should put the data there for our poll requests, but some do and so
              the extra steps to retrieve it can be skipped.  Tested with mga driver with XFree86/Xorg.  For the
              default depth 8 case this option is ignored.

              To adjust how often XGetImage() is used to poll the non-default visual regions  for  changes,  use
              the option "poll=t" where "t" is a floating point time.  (default: 0.05)

              Setting  the  option  "level2"  will limit the search for non-default visual windows to two levels
              from the root window.  Do this on slow machines where you know the window manager only imposes one
              extra window between the app window and the root window.

              Also for very slow machines use "cachewin=t" where t is a floating point amount of time  to  cache
              XGetWindowAttributes  results.   E.g.  cachewin=5.0.  This may lead to the windows being unnoticed
              for this amount of time when deiconifying, painting errors, etc.

              While  testing  on  a  very   old   SS20   these   options   gave   tolerable   response:   -8to24
              poll=0.2,cachewin=5.0. For this machine -overlay is supported and gives better response.

              Debugging for this mode can be enabled by setting "dbg=1", "dbg=2", or "dbg=3".

       -24to32

              Very  rare  problem: if the framebuffer (X display or -rawfb) is 24bpp instead of the usual 32bpp,
              then dynamically transform the pixels to 32bpp.  This will be slower, but  can  be  used  to  work
              around  problems where VNC viewers cannot handle 24bpp (e.g. "main: setPF: not 8, 16 or 32 bpp?").
              See the FAQ for more info.

              In the case of -rawfb mode, the pixels are directly modified by inserting a 0 byte to pad them out
              to 32bpp.  For X displays, a kludge is done that is equivalent to "-noshm  -visual  TrueColor:32".
              (If better performance is needed for the latter, feel free to ask).

       -scale fraction

              Scale  the  framebuffer  by factor fraction.  Values less than 1 shrink the fb, larger ones expand
              it. Note: the image may not be sharp and response may be slower.  If fraction contains  a  decimal
              point  "." it is taken as a floating point number, alternatively the notation "m/n" may be used to
              denote fractions exactly, e.g. -scale 2/3

              To scale asymmetrically in the horizontal and vertical  directions,  specify  a  WxH  geometry  to
              stretch to: e.g. '-scale 1024x768', or also '-scale 0.9x0.75'

              Scaling  Options:  can be added after fraction via ":", to supply multiple ":" options use commas.
              If you just want a quick, rough scaling without blending, append ":nb" to  fraction  (e.g.  -scale
              1/3:nb).   No  blending is the default for 8bpp indexed color, to force blending for this case use
              ":fb".

              To disable -scrollcopyrect and -wirecopyrect under -scale use ":nocr".  If you need to  to  enable
              them  use  ":cr"  or  specify  them  explicitly  on the command line.  If a slow link is detected,
              ":nocr" may be applied automatically.  Default: :cr

              More esoteric options: for compatibility with vncviewers the scaled width  is  adjusted  to  be  a
              multiple  of  4:  to  disable this use ":n4".  ":in" use interpolation scheme even when shrinking,
              ":pad" pad scaled width and height to be multiples of scaling denominator (e.g. 3 for 2/3).

       -geometry WxH

              Same as -scale WxH

       -scale_cursor frac

              By default if -scale is supplied the cursor shape is scaled by the same factor.  Depending on your
              usage, you may want to scale the cursor independently of the screen or not at all.  If you specify
              -scale_cursor the cursor will be scaled by that factor.  When using -scale mode to keep the cursor
              at its "natural" size use "-scale_cursor 1".  Most of the ":" scaling options apply here as well.

       -viewonly

              All VNC clients can only watch (default off).

       -shared

              VNC display is shared, i.e. more than one viewer can connect at the same time (default off).

       -once

              Exit after the first successfully connected viewer disconnects, opposite of -forever. This is  the
              Default.

       -forever

              Keep listening for more connections rather than exiting as soon as the first client(s) disconnect.
              Same as -many

              To  get the standard non-shared VNC behavior where when a new VNC client connects the existing VNC
              client is dropped use:  -nevershared -forever   This method can also be used to guard against hung
              TCP connections that do not go away.

       -loop

              Create an outer loop restarting the x11vnc process whenever it terminates.   -bg  and  -inetd  are
              ignored in this mode (however see -loopbg below).

              Useful  for  continuing  even  if the X server terminates and restarts (at that moment the process
              will need permission to reconnect to the new X server of course).

              Use, e.g., -loop100 to sleep 100 millisecs between restarts, etc.  Default is 2000ms (i.e. 2 secs)
              Use, e.g. -loop300,5 to sleep 300 ms and only loop 5 times.

              If -loopbg (plus any numbers) is specified instead, the "-bg"  option  is  implied  and  the  mode
              approximates  inetd(8)  usage  to  some degree.  In this case when it goes into the background any
              listening sockets (i.e. ports 5900, 5800) are closed, so the next one in the loop  can  use  them.
              This  mode  will  only  be  of  use  if a VNC client (the only client for that process) is already
              connected before the process goes into the background, for example,  usage  of  -display  WAIT:..,
              -svc,  and  -connect can make use of this "poor man's" inetd mode.  The default wait time is 500ms
              in this mode.  This usage could use useful:  -svc -bg -loopbg

       -timeout n

              Exit unless a client connects within the first n seconds after startup.

              If there have been no connection attempts after n seconds x11vnc exits immediately.  If  a  client
              is  trying  to connect but has not progressed to the normal operating state, x11vnc gives it a few
              more seconds to finish and exits if it does not make it to the normal state.

              For reverse connections via -connect or -connect_or_exit a timeout of n seconds will  be  set  for
              all reverse connects.  If the connect timeout alarm goes off, x11vnc will exit immediately.

       -sleepin n

              At  startup sleep n seconds before proceeding (e.g. to allow redirs and listening clients to start
              up)

              If a range is given: '-sleepin min-max', a random  value  between  min  and  max  is  slept.  E.g.
              '-sleepin 0-20' and '-sleepin 10-30'.  Floats are allowed too.

       -inetd

              Launched  by inetd(8): stdio instead of listening socket.  Note: if you are not redirecting stderr
              to a log file (via shell 2> or -o option) you MUST also  specify  the  -q  option,  otherwise  the
              stderr  goes  to the viewer which will cause it to abort.  Specifying both -inetd and -q and no -o
              will automatically close the stderr.

       -tightfilexfer

              Enable the TightVNC file transfer extension. Note that that when the -viewonly option is  supplied
              all  file  transfers  are  disabled.   Also  clients  that  log in viewonly cannot transfer files.
              However, if the remote control mechanism is used to change the global or per-client viewonly state
              the filetransfer permissions will NOT change.

              IMPORTANT: please understand if -tightfilexfer is specified and you run x11vnc as root  for,  say,
              inetd or display manager (gdm, kdm, ...) access and you do not have it switch users via the -users
              option, then VNC Viewers that connect are able to do filetransfer reads and writes as *root*.

              Also, tightfilexfer is disabled in -unixpw mode.

       -ultrafilexfer

              Note:  to  enable  UltraVNC  filetransfer  and to get it to work you probably need to supply these
              LibVNCServer options: "-rfbversion 3.6 -permitfiletransfer" "-ultrafilexfer" is an alias for  this
              combination.

              IMPORTANT:  please  understand if -ultrafilexfer is specified and you run x11vnc as root for, say,
              inetd or display manager (gdm, kdm, ...) access and you do not have it switch users via the -users
              option, then VNC Viewers that connect are able to do filetransfer reads and writes as *root*.

              Note that sadly you cannot do both -tightfilexfer and -ultrafilexfer at the same time because  the
              latter requires setting the version to 3.6 and tightvnc will not do filetransfer when it sees that
              version number.

       -http

              Instead  of  using -httpdir (see below) to specify where the Java vncviewer applet is, have x11vnc
              try to *guess* where the directory is by looking relative to the program location and in  standard
              locations  (/usr/local/share/x11vnc/classes,  etc).   Under  -ssl  or  -stunnel  the  ssl  classes
              subdirectory is sought.

       -http_ssl

              As -http, but force lookup for ssl classes subdir.

              Note that for HTTPS, single-port Java applet delivery you can set  X11VNC_HTTPS_DOWNLOAD_WAIT_TIME
              to the max number of seconds to wait for the applet download to finish.  The default is 15.

       -avahi

              Use  the  Avahi/mDNS ZeroConf protocol to advertise this VNC server to the local network. (Related
              terms: Rendezvous, Bonjour).  Depending on your setup, you may need to start avahi-daemon and open
              udp port 5353 in your firewall.

              You can set X11VNC_AVAHI_NAME, X11VNC_AVAHI_HOST, and/or X11VNC_AVAHI_PORT  environment  variables
              to override the default values.  For example: -env X11VNC_AVAHI_NAME=wally

              If  the  avahi  API cannot be found at build time, a helper program like avahi- publish(1) or dns-
              sd(1) will be tried

       -mdns

              Same as -avahi.

       -zeroconf

              Same as -avahi.

       -connect string

              For use with  "vncviewer  -listen"  reverse  connections.   If  string  has  the  form  "host"  or
              "host:port" the connection is made once at startup.

              Use commas for a list of host's and host:port's.  E.g. -connect host1,host2 or host1:0,host2:5678.
              Note  that  to  reverse  connect  to  multiple hosts at the same time you will likely need to also
              supply: -shared

              Note that unlike most vnc servers, x11vnc will require a password  for  reverse  as  well  as  for
              forward  connections.  (provided password auth has been enabled, -rfbauth, etc) If you do not want
              to require a password for reverse  connections  set  X11VNC_REVERSE_CONNECTION_NO_AUTH=1  in  your
              environment before starting x11vnc.

              If  string  contains  "/" it is instead interpreted as a file to periodically check for new hosts.
              The first line is read and then the file is truncated.  Be careful about the location of this file
              if x11vnc is running as root (e.g. via gdm(1) , etc).

              Repeater    mode:    Some     services     provide     an     intermediate     "vnc     repeater":
              http://www.uvnc.com/addons/repeater.html (and also http://koti.mbnet.fi/jtko/ for linux port) that
              acts  as  a  proxy/gateway.  Modes like these require an initial string to be sent for the reverse
              connection before the VNC protocol is started.  Here are the ways to do this:

              -connect     pre=some_string+host:port     -connect     pre128=some_string+host:port      -connect
              repeater=ID:1234+host:port -connect repeater=23.45.67.89::5501+host:port

              SSVNC notation is also supported:

              -connect repeater://host:port+ID:1234

              As with normal -connect usage, if the repeater port is not supplied 5500 is assumed.

              The basic idea is between the special tag, e.g. "pre=" and "+" is the pre-string to be sent.  Note
              that  in  this  case host:port is the repeater server, NOT the vnc viewer.  Somehow the pre-string
              tells the repeater server how to find the vnc viewer and connect you to it.

              In  the  case   pre=some_string+host:port,   "some_string"   is   simply   sent.   In   the   case
              preNNN=some_string+host:port  "some_string"  is  sent  in  a  null  padded  buffer  of length NNN.
              repeater= is the same as pre250=, this is the ultravnc repeater buffer size.

              Strings like "\n" and "\r", etc. are expanded to newline and carriage return.  "\c" is expanded to
              "," since the connect string is comma separated.

              See also the -proxy option below for additional ways to plumb reverse connections.

              Reverse SSL: using -connect in -ssl mode  makes  x11vnc  act  as  an  SSL  client  (initiates  SSL
              connection)  rather  than an SSL server.  The idea is x11vnc might be connecting to stunnel on the
              viewer side with the viewer in listening mode.  If  you  do  not  want  this  behavior,  use  -env
              X11VNC_DISABLE_SSL_CLIENT_MODE=1.   With  this  the  viewer  side  can act as the SSL client as it
              normally does for forward connections.

              Reverse SSL Repeater mode:  This will work, but note that if the VNC Client does  any  sort  of  a
              'Fetch  Cert' action before connecting, then the Repeater will likely drop the connection and both
              sides will need to restart.  Consider the use of -connect_or_exit and -loop300,2  to  have  x11vnc
              reconnect once to the repeater after the fetch.  You will probably also want to supply -sslonly to
              avoid  x11vnc  thinking  the  delay  in  response  means  the connection is VeNCrypt.  The env var
              X11VNC_DISABLE_SSL_CLIENT_MODE=1 discussed above may also be useful (i.e.  the  viewer  can  do  a
              forward connection as it normally does.)

              IPv6: as of x11vnc 0.9.10 the -connect option should connect to IPv6 hosts properly.  If there are
              problems  you  can disable IPv6 by setting -DX11VNC_IPV6=0 in CPPFLAGS when configuring.  If there
              problems connecting to IPv6 hosts consider a relay like the included inet6to4 script or the -proxy
              option.

       -connect_or_exit str

              As with -connect, except if none of the  reverse  connections  succeed,  then  x11vnc  shuts  down
              immediately

              An easier to type alias for this option is '-coe'

              By  the  way,  if you do not want x11vnc to listen on ANY interface use -rfbport 0  which is handy
              for the -connect_or_exit mode.

       -proxy string

              Use proxy in string (e.g. host:port) as a  proxy  for  making  reverse  connections  (-connect  or
              -connect_or_exit options).

              Web  proxies  are supported, but note by default most of them only support destination connections
              to ports 443 or 563, so this might not be very useful (the viewer would need  to  listen  on  that
              port or the router would have to do a port redirection).

              A  web  proxy  may  be specified by either "host:port" or "http://host:port" (the port is required
              even if it is the common choices 80 or 8080)

              SOCKS4, SOCKS4a, and SOCKS5 are also supported.  SOCKS proxies normally do not  have  restrictions
              on the destination port number.

              Use  a  format  like  this:  socks://host:port  or  socks5://host:port.  Note that ssh -D does not
              support SOCKS4a, so use socks5://.  For socks:// SOCKS4 is used on a numerical IP and "localhost",
              otherwise SOCKS4a is used (and so the proxy tries to do the DNS lookup).

              An experimental  mode  is  "-proxy  http://host:port/..."   Note  the  "/"  after  the  port  that
              distinguishes it from a normal web proxy.  The port must be supplied even if it is the default 80.
              For  this  mode a GET is done to the supplied URL with the string host=H&port=P appended.  H and P
              will be the -connect reverse connect host and port.  Use  the  string  "__END__"  to  disable  the
              appending.   The  basic  idea here is that maybe some cgi script provides the actual viewer hookup
              and tunnelling.  How to actually achieve this within cgi, php, etc. is not clear...  A custom  web
              server or apache module would be straight-forward.

              Another  experimental  mode is "-proxy ssh://user@host" in which case a SSH tunnel is used for the
              proxying.  "user@" is not needed unless your unix username is different on  "host".   For  a  non-
              standard  SSH port use ssh://user@host:port.  If proxies are chained (see next paragraph) then the
              ssh one must be the first one.  If ssh-agent is not active, then the  ssh  password  needs  to  be
              entered in the terminal where x11vnc is running.  Examples:

              -connect localhost:0 -proxy ssh://me@friends-pc:2222

              -connect snoopy:0 -proxy ssh://ssh.company.com

              Multiple proxies may be chained together in case one needs to ricochet off of a number of hosts to
              finally  reach  the VNC viewer.  Up to 3 may be chained, separate them by commas in the order they
              are  to  be  connected  to.   E.g.:   http://host1:port1,socks5://host2:port2   or   three   like:
              first,second,third

              IPv6:  as  of x11vnc 0.9.10 the -proxy option should connect to IPv6 hosts properly.  If there are
              problems you can disable IPv6 by setting -DX11VNC_IPV6=0 in CPPFLAGS when configuring.   If  there
              problems connecting to IPv6 hosts consider a relay like the included inet6to4 script.

       -vncconnect, -novncconnect

              Monitor  the  VNC_CONNECT  X  property  set  by  the standard VNC program vncconnect(1).  When the
              property is set to "host" or "host:port" establish a reverse connection.  Using  xprop(1)  instead
              of  vncconnect  may work (see the FAQ).  The -remote control mechanism uses X11VNC_REMOTE channel,
              and this option disables/enables it as well.  Default: -vncconnect

              To use different names for these X11 properties (e.g. to have separate communication channels  for
              multiple  x11vnc's  on  the  same  display) set the VNC_CONNECT or X11VNC_REMOTE env. vars. to the
              string you want, for example: -env X11VNC_REMOTE=X11VNC_REMOTE_12345 Both  sides  of  the  channel
              must  use  the  same  unique  name.   The same can be done for the internal X11VNC_TICKER property
              (heartbeat and timestamp) if desired.

       -allow host1[,host2..]

              Only allow client connections from hosts matching the comma separated  list  of  hostnames  or  IP
              addresses.   Can also be a numerical IP prefix, e.g. "192.168.100."  to match a simple subnet, for
              more control build LibVNCServer with libwrap support (See the FAQ).  If the list contains a "/" it
              instead is a interpreted as a file containing addresses or prefixes that is re-read  each  time  a
              new client connects.  Lines can be commented out with the "#" character in the usual way.

              -allow applies in -ssl mode, but not in -stunnel mode.

              IPv6:   as   of   x11vnc   0.9.10  a  host  can  be  specified  in  IPv6  numerical  format,  e.g.
              2001:4860:b009::93.

       -localhost

              Basically the same as "-allow 127.0.0.1".

              Note: if you want to restrict which network interface x11vnc listens on, see  the  -listen  option
              below.   E.g.  "-listen  localhost"  or  "-listen  192.168.3.21".   As  a special case, the option
              "-localhost" implies "-listen localhost".

              A rare case, but for non-localhost -listen usage, if you use the remote control mechanism (-R)  to
              change  the  -listen interface you may need to manually adjust the -allow list (and vice versa) to
              avoid situations where no connections (or too many) are allowed.

              If you do not want x11vnc to listen  on  ANY  interface  (evidently  you  are  using  -connect  or
              -connect_or_exit, or plan to use remote control: -R connect:host), use -rfbport 0

              IPv6:  if  IPv6 is supported, this option automatically implies the IPv6 loopback address '::1' as
              well.

       -unixsock str

              Listen on the unix socket (AF_UNIX)  'str'  for  connections.   This  mode  is  for  either  local
              connections  or  a  tunnel endpoint where one wants the file permission of the unix socket file to
              determine what can connect to it.  (This currently requires an  edit  to  libvnserver/rfbserver.c:
              comment  out  lines  310  and  311,  'close(sock)'  and  'return  NULL'  in  rfbserver.c after the
              setsockopt() call.) Note that to disable all tcp listening ports specify '-rfbport 0'  and  should
              be useful with this mode.  Example: mkdir ~/s; chmod 700 ~/s; x11vnc -unixsock ~/s/mysock -rfbport
              0 ...  The SSVNC unix vncviewer can connect to unix sockets.

       -listen6 str

              When  in  IPv6  listen  mode "-6", listen only on the network interface with address str.  It also
              works for link scope addresses (fe80::219:dbff:fee5:3f92%eth0) and  IPv6  hostname  strings  (e.g.
              ipv6.google.com.)  Use LibVNCServer -listen option for the IPv4 interface.

       -nolookup

              Do  not  use  gethostbyname() or gethostbyaddr() to look up host names or IP numbers.  Use this if
              name resolution is incorrectly set up and leads to long pauses as name lookups time out, etc.

       -input string

              Fine tuning of allowed user input.  If string does not contain a comma "," the tuning applies only
              to normal clients.  Otherwise the part before "," is for normal clients and  the  part  after  for
              view-only  clients.   "K" is for Keystroke input, "M" for Mouse-motion input, "B" for Button-click
              input, "C" is for Clipboard input, and "F" is for File transfer (ultravnc only).   Their  presence
              in  the  string  enables that type of input.  E.g. "-input M" means normal users can only move the
              mouse and  "-input KMBCF,M" lets normal users do anything and enables view-only users to move  the
              mouse.   This  option  is  ignored when a global -viewonly is in effect (all input is discarded in
              that case).

       -grabkbd

              When VNC viewers are connected, attempt to the grab the keyboard so a (non-malicious) user sitting
              at the physical display is not able to enter keystrokes.  This method uses XGrabKeyboard(3X11) and
              so it is not secure and does not rule out the person at the physical display injecting  keystrokes
              by  flooding the server with them, grabbing the keyboard himself, etc.  Some degree of cooperation
              from the person at the display is assumed.  This is intended for remote help-desk  or  educational
              usage modes.

              Note:  on  some  recent (12/2010) X servers and/or desktops, -grabkbd no longer works: it prevents
              the window manager from resizing windows and similar things.  Try  -ungrabboth  below  (might  not
              work.)

       -grabptr

              As -grabkbd, but for the mouse pointer using XGrabPointer(3X11).  Unfortunately due to the way the
              X  server  works,  the mouse can still be moved around by the user at the physical display, but he
              will not be  able  to  change  window  focus  with  it.   Also  some  window  managers  that  call
              XGrabServer(3X11)  for  resizes,  etc,  will act on the local user's input.  Again, some degree of
              cooperation from the person at the display is assumed.

       -ungrabboth

              Whenever there is any input (either keyboard or pointer),  ungrab  *both*  the  keyboard  and  the
              pointer  while  injecting the synthetic input.  This is to allow window managers, etc. a chance to
              grab.

       -grabalways

              Apply both -grabkbd and -grabptr even when no VNC viewers are connected.  If you only want one  of
              them, use the -R remote control to turn the other back on, e.g. -R nograbptr.

       -viewpasswd string

              Supply  a  2nd  password  for  view-only  logins.  The -passwd (full-access) password must also be
              supplied.

       -passwdfile filename

              Specify the LibVNCServer password via the first line of the file filename (instead of via  -passwd
              on the command line where others might see it via ps(1) ).

              See  the  descriptions below for how to supply multiple passwords, view-only passwords, to specify
              external programs for the authentication, and other features.

              If the filename is prefixed with "rm:" it will be removed  after  being  read.   Perhaps  this  is
              useful  in  limiting  the  readability  of  the file.  In general, the password file should not be
              readable by untrusted users (BTW: neither should the VNC -rfbauth file: it is NOT encrypted,  only
              obscured with a fixed key).

              If  the  filename is prefixed with "read:" it will periodically be checked for changes and reread.
              It is guaranteed to be reread just when a new client connects so that the latest passwords will be
              used.

              If filename is prefixed with "cmd:" then the string after the ":" is run as an  external  command:
              the output of the command will be interpreted as if it were read from a password file (see below).
              If  the  command  does  not exit with 0, then x11vnc terminates immediately.  To specify more than
              1000 passwords this way set X11VNC_MAX_PASSWDS before starting x11vnc.  The environment  variables
              are set as in -accept.

              Note that due to the VNC protocol only the first 8 characters of a password are used (DES key).

              If  filename  is prefixed with "custom:" then a custom password checker is supplied as an external
              command following the ":". The command will be run when a client authenticates.   If  the  command
              exits  with 0 the client is accepted, otherwise it is rejected.  The environment variables are set
              as in -accept.

              The standard input to the custom command will be a decimal digit  "len"  followed  by  a  newline.
              "len" specifies the challenge size and is usually 16 (the VNC spec).  Then follows len bytes which
              is  the  random  challenge  string  that was sent to the client. This is then followed by len more
              bytes holding the client's response (i.e. the challenge string encrypted via  DES  with  the  user
              password in the standard situation).

              The  "custom:"  scheme  can be useful to implement dynamic passwords or to implement methods where
              longer passwords and/or different  encryption  algorithms  are  used.   The  latter  will  require
              customizing the VNC client as well.  One could create an MD5SUM based scheme for example.

              File format for -passwdfile:

              If  multiple non-blank lines exist in the file they are all taken as valid passwords.  Blank lines
              are ignored.  Password lines may be "commented out" (ignored) if they begin with the character "#"
              or the line contains the string "__SKIP__".  Lines may be  annotated  by  use  of  the  "__COMM__"
              string:  from  it  to  the end of the line is ignored.  An empty password may be specified via the
              "__EMPTY__" string on a line by itself (note your viewer might not accept empty passwords).

              If the string "__BEGIN_VIEWONLY__" appears on a line by itself, the remaining passwords  are  used
              for  viewonly access.  For compatibility, as a special case if the file contains only two password
              lines  the  2nd  one  is  automatically  taken  as   the   viewonly   password.    Otherwise   the
              "__BEGIN_VIEWONLY__"  token  must be used to have viewonly passwords.  (tip: make the 3rd and last
              line be "__BEGIN_VIEWONLY__" to have 2 full-access passwords)

       -showrfbauth filename

              Print to the screen the obscured VNC password kept in the rfbauth file filename and then exit.

       -unixpw [list]

              Use Unix username and password authentication.  x11vnc will use the su(1) program  to  verify  the
              user's  password.   [list]  is an optional comma separated list of allowed Unix usernames.  If the
              [list] string begins with the character "!" then the entire list is taken as an exclude list.  See
              below for per-user options that can be applied.

              A familiar "login:" and "Password:" dialog is presented to the user on a black screen  inside  the
              vncviewer.   The connection is dropped if the user fails to supply the correct password in 3 tries
              or does not send one before a 45 second timeout.   Existing  clients  are  view-only  during  this
              period.

              If  the  first  character  received is "Escape" then the unix username will not be displayed after
              "login:" as it is typed.  This could be of  use  for  VNC  viewers  that  automatically  type  the
              username and password.

              Since the detailed behavior of su(1) can vary from OS to OS and for local configurations, test the
              mode  before  deployment  to  make  sure  it  is  working  properly.   x11vnc  will  attempt to be
              conservative and reject a login if anything abnormal occurs.

              One case to note: FreeBSD and the other BSD's by default it is impossible  for  the  user  running
              x11vnc  to  validate  his  *own*  password  via  su(1)  (commenting  out  the pam_self.so entry in
              /etc/pam.d/su eliminates this behavior).  So the x11vnc login will always  *FAIL*  for  this  case
              (even when the correct password is supplied).

              A  possible workaround for this on *BSD would be to start x11vnc as root with the "-users +nobody"
              option to immediately switch to user nobody where the su'ing will proceed normally.

              Another source of potential problems are PAM modules that prompt for  extra  info,  e.g.  password
              aging modules.  These logins will fail as well even when the correct password is supplied.

              **IMPORTANT**:  to  prevent  the Unix password being sent in *clear text* over the network, one of
              two schemes will be enforced: 1) the -ssl builtin SSL mode, or  2)  require  both  -localhost  and
              -stunnel be enabled.

              Method  1)  ensures  the  traffic  is  encrypted  between  viewer  and server.  A PEM file will be
              required, see the discussion under -ssl below (under some circumstances a  temporary  one  can  be
              automatically generated).

              Method 2) requires the viewer connection to appear to come from the same machine x11vnc is running
              on  (e.g.  from a ssh -L port redirection).  And that the -stunnel SSL mode be used for encryption
              over the network. (see the description of -stunnel below).

              Note: as a convenience, if you ssh(1) in and  start  x11vnc  it  will  check  if  the  environment
              variable  SSH_CONNECTION  is  set  and  appears reasonable.  If it does, then the -ssl or -stunnel
              requirement will be dropped since it is assumed you are using ssh for  the  encrypted  tunnelling.
              -localhost  is  still enforced.  Use -ssl or -stunnel to force SSL usage even if SSH_CONNECTION is
              set.

              To override the above restrictions you can set environment variables before starting x11vnc:

              Set UNIXPW_DISABLE_SSL=1 to disable requiring either -ssl or -stunnel (as  under  SSH_CONNECTION.)
              Evidently  you  will  be  using  a  different method to encrypt the data between the vncviewer and
              x11vnc: perhaps ssh(1) or an IPSEC VPN. -localhost  is  still  enforced  (however,  see  the  next
              paragraph.)

              Set UNIXPW_DISABLE_LOCALHOST=1 to disable the -localhost requirement in -unixpw modes.  One should
              never  do  this  (i.e. allow the Unix passwords to be sniffed on the network.)  This also disables
              the localhost requirement for reverse connections (see below.)

              Note that use of -localhost with ssh(1) (and no -unixpw) is roughly the same as requiring  a  Unix
              user  login  (since a Unix password or the user's public key authentication is used by sshd on the
              machine where x11vnc runs and only local connections from that machine are accepted).

              Regarding reverse connections (e.g. -R  connect:host  and  -connect  host),  when  the  -localhost
              constraint  is  in effect then reverse connections can only be used to connect to the same machine
              x11vnc is running on (default port 5500).  Please use a ssh or stunnel  port  redirection  to  the
              viewer machine to tunnel the reverse connection over an encrypted channel.

              In  -inetd  mode  the  Method  1)  will  be  enforced (not Method 2).  With -ssl in effect reverse
              connections are disabled.  If you override this via env. var, be sure to also use encryption  from
              the viewer to inetd.  Tip: you can also have your own stunnel spawn x11vnc in -inetd mode (thereby
              bypassing inetd).  See the FAQ for details.

              The  user  names  in  the  comma  separated  [list]  may  have  per-user options after a ":", e.g.
              "fred:opts" where "opts" is a "+" separated list of  "viewonly",  "fullaccess",  "input=XXXX",  or
              "deny",  e.g.  "karl,wally:viewonly,boss:input=M".  For "input=" it is the K,M,B,C described under
              -input.

              If an item in the list is "*" that means those options apply to all users.  It  ALSO  implies  all
              users  are allowed to log in after supplying a valid password.  Use "deny" to explicitly deny some
              users if you use "*" to set a global option.  If [list] begins with the "!" character then "*"  is
              ignored  for checking if the user is allowed, but the option values associated with it do apply as
              normal.

              There are also some utilities for checking passwords if [list] starts with the "%" character.  See
              the quick_pw() function for more details.  Description: "%-" or "%stdin" means read one line  from
              stdin.   "%env"  means it is in $UNIXPW env var.  A leading "%/" or "%." means read the first line
              from the filename that follows after the % character. % by itself means prompt  for  the  username
              and  password.  Otherwise: %user:pass   E.g. -unixpw %fred:swordfish For the other cases user:pass
              is read from the indicated source.  If the password is correct 'Y user' is printed and the program
              exit code is 0.  If the password is incorrect it prints 'N user' and the exit code is 1.  If there
              is some other error the exit code is 2.  This feature enables x11vnc to be  a  general  unix  user
              password  checking tool; it could be used from scripts or other programs.  These % password checks
              also apply to the -unixpw_nis and -unixpw_cmd options.

              For the % password check, if the env. var. UNIXPW_CMD is set to a command then it is  run  as  the
              user (assuming the password is correct.)  The output of the command is not printed, the program or
              script must manage that by some other means.  The exit code of x11vnc will depend on the exit code
              of the command that is run.

              Use -nounixpw to disable unixpw mode if it was enabled earlier in the cmd line (e.g. -svc mode)

       -unixpw_nis [list]

              As  -unixpw  above, however do not use su(1) but rather use the traditional getpwnam(3) + crypt(3)
              method to verify passwords. All of the above -unixpw options and constraints apply.

              This mode requires that the encrypted  passwords  be  readable.   Encrypted  passwords  stored  in
              /etc/shadow will be inaccessible unless x11vnc is run as root.

              This  is  called  "NIS"  mode  simply  because  in  most  NIS  setups user encrypted passwords are
              accessible (e.g. "ypcat passwd") by an ordinary user and so that user can authenticate ANY user.

              NIS is not required for this mode to work (only that getpwnam(3) return the encrypted password  is
              required),  but  it  is  unlikely  it will work (as an ordinary user) for most modern environments
              unless NIS is available.  On the other hand, when x11vnc is run as root it  will  be  able  to  to
              access  /etc/shadow  even if NIS is not available (note running as root is often done when running
              x11vnc from inetd and xdm/gdm/kdm).

              Looked at another way, if you do not want to use  the  su(1)  method  provided  by  -unixpw  (i.e.
              su_verify()),  you  can  run  x11vnc  as  root  and  use -unixpw_nis.  Any users with passwords in
              /etc/shadow can then be authenticated.

              In -unixpw_nis mode, under no circumstances is x11vnc's user password verifying function based  on
              su  called  (i.e.  the  function  su_verify()  that  runs  /bin/su  in  a pseudoterminal to verify
              passwords.)  However, if -unixpw_nis is used in conjunction with the -find  and  -create  -display
              WAIT:...  modes  then,  if  x11vnc is running as root, /bin/su may be called externally to run the
              find or create commands.

       -unixpw_cmd cmd

              As -unixpw above, however do not use su(1) but rather run the  externally  supplied  command  cmd.
              The  first  line  of its stdin will be the username and the second line the received password.  If
              the command exits with status 0 (success) the VNC user will be accepted.  It will be rejected  for
              any other return status.

              Dynamic passwords and non-unix passwords, e.g. LDAP, can be implemented this way by providing your
              own  custom  helper  program.   Note  that the remote viewer is given 3 tries to enter the correct
              password, and so the program may be called in a row that many (or more) times.

              If a list of allowed users is needed to limit who can log in, use -unixpw [list]  in  addition  to
              this option.

              In  FINDDISPLAY  and  FINDCREATEDISPLAY modes the cmd will also be run with the RFB_UNIXPW_CMD_RUN
              env. var.  non-empty and set to the corresponding display  find/create  command.   The  first  two
              lines  of  input  are  the  username and passwd as in the normal case described above.  To support
              FINDDISPLAY and FINDCREATEDISPLAY, cmd should run the requested command  as  the  user  (and  most
              likely refusing to run it if the password is not correct.)  Here is an example script (note it has
              a hardwired bogus password "abc"!)

              #!/bin/sh  #  Example  x11vnc  -unixpw_cmd  script.  # Read the first two lines of stdin (user and
              passwd) read user read pass

              debug=0 if [ $debug = 1 ]; then echo "user: $user" 1>&2 echo "pass: $pass" 1>&2  env  |  egrep  -i
              'rfb|vnc' 1>&2 fi

              #  Check  if the password is valid.  # (A real example would use ldap lookup, etc!)  if [ "X$pass"
              != "Xabc" ]; then exit 1    # incorrect password fi

              if [ "X$RFB_UNIXPW_CMD_RUN" = "X" ]; then exit 0    # correct password else #  Run  the  requested
              command (finddisplay) if [ $debug = 1 ]; then echo "run: $RFB_UNIXPW_CMD_RUN" 1>&2 fi exec /bin/su
              - "$user" -c "$RFB_UNIXPW_CMD_RUN" fi

              In  -unixpw_cmd mode, under no circumstances is x11vnc's user password verifying function based on
              su called (i.e. the  function  su_verify()  that  runs  /bin/su  in  a  pseudoterminal  to  verify
              passwords.)  It is up to the supplied unixpw_cmd to do user switching if desired and if it has the
              permissions to do so.

       -find

              Find the user's display using FINDDISPLAY. This is an alias for "-display WAIT:cmd=FINDDISPLAY".

              Note: if a -display occurs later on the command line it will override the -find setting.

              For this and the next few options see -display WAIT:...  below for all of the details.

       -finddpy

              Run  the  FINDDISPLAY  program,  print  out  the found display (if any) and exit.  Output is like:
              DISPLAY=:0.0 DISPLAY=:0.0,XPID=12345 or DISPLAY=:0.0,VT=7.  XPID is the process ID of the found  X
              server.  VT is the Linux virtual terminal of the X server.

       -listdpy

              Have  the  FINDDISPLAY  program  list  all  of your displays (i.e. all the X displays on the local
              machine that you have access rights to).  x11vnc then exits.

       -findauth [disp]

              Apply the -find/-finddpy heuristics to try to guess the XAUTHORITY file for  DISPLAY  'disp'.   If
              'disp'  is  not  supplied,  then  the  value  in the -display on the cmdline is used; failing that
              $DISPLAY is used; and failing that ":0" is used.  x11vnc then exits.

              If nothing is printed out, that means no XAUTHORITY  was  found  for  'disp';  i.e.  failure.   If
              "XAUTHORITY="  is  printed  out,  that  means  use  the  default (i.e. do not set XAUTHORITY).  If
              "XAUTHORITY=/path/to/file" is printed out, then use that file.

              XDM/GDM/KDM: if you are running x11vnc as root and want to find the XAUTHORITY before  anyone  has
              logged  into  an  X session yet, use: x11vnc -env FD_XDM=1 -findauth ...  (This will also find the
              XAUTHORITY if a user is already logged into the X session.)  When running as root,  FD_XDM=1  will
              be tried if the initial -findauth fails.

       -create

              First  try  to  find  the  user's  display  using FINDDISPLAY, if that doesn't succeed create an X
              session   via   the   FINDCREATEDISPLAY   method.    This    is    an    alias    for    "-display
              WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY-Xvfb".

              Note: if a -display occurs later on the command line it will override the -create setting.

              SSH  NOTE:  for both -find and -create you can (should!)  add the "-localhost" option to force SSH
              tunnel access.

       -xdummy

              As in -create, except Xdummy instead of Xvfb.

       -xvnc

              As in -create, except Xvnc instead of Xvfb.

       -xvnc_redirect

              As in -create, except Xvnc.redirect instead of Xvfb.

       -xdummy_xvfb

              Sets WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY-Xdummy,Xvfb

       -create_xsrv str

              Sets WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY-<str>  Can be on cmdline after  anything  that  sets  WAIT:..  and
              other  things  (e.g.  -svc,  -xdmsvc) to adjust the X server list.  Example: -svc ... -create_xsrv
              Xdummy,X

       -svc

              Terminal services mode based on SSL access.  Alias  for  -display  WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY-Xvfb
              -unixpw -users unixpw= -ssl SAVE   Also "-service".

              Note:  if  a  -display, -unixpw, -users, or -ssl occurs later on the command line it will override
              the -svc setting.

       -svc_xdummy

              As -svc except Xdummy instead of Xvfb.

       -svc_xvnc

              As -svc except Xvnc instead of Xvfb.

       -svc_xdummy_xvfb

              As -svc with Xdummy,Xvfb.

       -xdmsvc

              Display   manager   Terminal   services   mode    based    on    SSL.     Alias    for    -display
              WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY-Xvfb.xdmcp -unixpw -users unixpw= -ssl SAVE  Also "-xdm_service".

              Note:  if  a  -display, -unixpw, -users, or -ssl occurs later on the command line it will override
              the -xdmsvc setting.

              To create a session a user will have to first log in to the -unixpw dialog and then log  in  again
              to the XDM/GDM/KDM prompt.  Subsequent re-connections will only require the -unixpw password.  See
              the discussion under -display WAIT:... for more details about XDM, etc configuration.

              Remember  to  enable XDMCP in the xdm-config, gdm.conf, or kdmrc configuration file.  See -display
              WAIT: for more info.

       -sshxdmsvc

              Display   manager   Terminal   services   mode    based    on    SSH.     Alias    for    -display
              WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY-Xvfb.xdmcp -localhost.

              The  -localhost  option  constrains  connections to come in via a SSH tunnel (which will require a
              login).  To create a session a user will also have to log into the XDM GDM KDM prompt.  Subsequent
              re-connections  will  only only require the SSH login.  See the discussion under -display WAIT:...
              for more details about XDM, etc configuration.

              Remember to enable XDMCP in the xdm-config, gdm.conf, or kdmrc configuration file.   See  -display
              WAIT: for more info.

       -unixpw_system_greeter

              Present  a  "Press  'Escape'  for  System Greeter" option to the connecting VNC client in combined
              -unixpw and xdmcp FINDCREATEDISPLAY modes (e.g. -xdmsvc).

              Normally in a -unixpw mode the VNC client must supply  a  valid  username  and  password  to  gain
              access.   However, if -unixpw_system_greeter is supplied AND the FINDCREATEDISPLAY command matches
              'xdmcp', then the user has the option to press Escape and then  get  a  XDM/GDM/KDM  login/greeter
              panel instead. They will then supply a username and password directly to the greeter.

              Otherwise,  in  xdmcp FINDCREATEDISPLAY mode the user must supply his username and password TWICE.
              First to the initial unixpw login dialog, and second to the subsequent XDM/GDM/KDM greeter.   Note
              that if the user re-connects and supplies his username and password in the unixpw dialog the xdmcp
              greeter   is   skipped  and  he  is  connected  directly  to  his  existing  X  session.   So  the
              -unixpw_system_greeter option avoids the extra password at X session creation time.

              Example:  x11vnc -xdmsvc -unixpw_system_greeter See -unixpw and -display WAIT:... for more info.

              The special options after a colon at the end of the username  (e.g.  user:solid)  described  under
              -display  WAIT:  are  also  applied in this mode if they are typed in before the user hits Escape.
              The username is ignored but the colon options are not.

              The default message is 2 lines in a small font, set the env. var. X11VNC_SYSTEM_GREETER1=true  for
              a 1 line message in a larger font.

              If  the  user  pressed  Escape  the  FINDCREATEDISPLAY  command  will  be  run  with the env. var.
              X11VNC_XDM_ONLY=1.

              Remember to enable XDMCP in the xdm-config, gdm.conf, or kdmrc configuration file.   See  -display
              WAIT: for more info.

       -redirect port

              As  in  FINDCREATEDISPLAY-Xvnc.redirect  mode  except redirect immediately (i.e. without X session
              finding or creation) to a VNC server listening on port. You can also supply host:port to  redirect
              to a different machine.

              If  0 <= port < 200 it is taken as a VNC display (5900 is added to get the actual port), if port <
              0 then -port is used.

              Probably the only reason to use the -redirect option is in conjunction with SSL support, e.g. -ssl
              SAVE.  This provides an easy way to add SSL encryption to a VNC server that does not  support  SSL
              (e.g.  Xvnc  or vnc.so) In fact, the protocol does not even need to be VNC, and so "-rfbport port1
              -ssl SAVE -redirect host:port2" can act as a replacement for stunnel(1).

              This mode only allows one redirected connection.  The -forever option does not apply.  Use  -inetd
              or -loop for persistent service.

       -display WAIT:...

              A  special  usage  mode  for  the  normal  -display  option.  Useful with -unixpw, but can be used
              independently of it.  If the display string begins with WAIT: then x11vnc waits until a VNC client
              connects before opening the X display (or -rawfb device).

              This could be useful for delaying opening the display for certain usage modes (say  if  x11vnc  is
              started at boot time and no X server is running or users logged in yet).

              If  the  string is, e.g. WAIT:0.0 or WAIT:1, i.e. "WAIT" in front of a normal X display, then that
              indicated display is used.

              One can also insert a geometry between colons, e.g.  WAIT:1280x1024:... to set  the  size  of  the
              display the VNC client first attaches to since some VNC viewers will not automatically adjust to a
              new framebuffer size.

              A more interesting case is like this:

              WAIT:cmd=/usr/local/bin/find_display

              in  which  case the command after "cmd=" is run to dynamically work out the DISPLAY and optionally
              the XAUTHORITY data.  The first line of the command output must be of the form DISPLAY=<xdisplay>.
              On Linux if the virtual terminal is known append ",VT=n" to this string and  the  chvt(1)  program
              will also be run.  Any remaining output is taken as XAUTHORITY data.  It can be either of the form
              XAUTHORITY=<file> or raw xauthority data for the display. For example;

              xauth extract - $DISPLAY"

              NOTE:  As  specified  in  the  previous paragraph, you can supply your own WAIT:cmd=... program or
              script, BUT there are two very  useful  *BUILT-IN*  ones:  FINDDISPLAY  (alias  -find  above)  and
              FINDCREATEDISPLAY  (alias  -create  above.)   Most  people use these instead of creating their own
              script.  Read the following (especially the BUILT-IN modes sections) to see how to configure these
              two useful builtin -display WAIT: modes.

              In the case of -unixpw (and -unixpw_nis only if x11vnc is running as root), then the cmd=  command
              is run as the user who just authenticated via the login and password prompt.

              In  the  case  of -unixpw_cmd, the commands will also be run as the logged-in user, as long as the
              user-supplied helper program supports RFB_UNIXPW_CMD_RUN (see the -unixpw_cmd option.)

              Also in the case of -unixpw, the user logging in can place a colon at the end of her username  and
              supply  a  few  options:  scale=,  scale_cursor= (or sc=), solid (or so), id=, clear_mods (or cm),
              clear_keys (or ck), clear_all (or ca), repeat, speeds= (or sp=), readtimeout= (or  rd=),  viewonly
              (or  vo),  nodisplay=  (or nd=), rotate= (or ro=), or noncache (or nc), all separated by commas if
              there is more than one.  After the user logs in successfully, these options will be applied to the
              VNC screen.  For example,

              login: fred:scale=3/4,sc=1,repeat Password: ...

              login: runge:sp=modem,rd=120,solid

              for convenience m/n implies scale= e.g. fred:3/4  If you type and enter your password incorrectly,
              to retrieve your long "login:" line press the Up arrow once (before typing anything else).

              Most of these colon options only apply to the builtin FINDDISPLAY and FINDCREATEDISPLAY modes, but
              note that they are passed to the extrenal command in the environment as well and so could be used.

              In the login panel, press F1 to get a list of the available options that you  can  add  after  the
              username.

              Another   option   is   "geom=WxH"   or  "geom=WxHxD"  (or  ge=).  This  only  has  an  effect  in
              FINDCREATEDISPLAY mode when a virtual X server such as Xvfb is going to be created.  It  sets  the
              width and height of the new display, and optionally the color depth as well.

              You  can  also  supply  "gnome",  "kde",  "twm",  "fvwm", "mwm", "dtwm", "wmaker", "xfce", "lxde",
              "enlightenment", "Xsession", or "failsafe" (same as "xterm") to have the created display use  that
              mode for the user session.

              Specify "tag=..." to set the unique FD_TAG desktop session tag described below.  Note: this option
              will be ignored if the FD_TAG env. var. is already set or if the viewer-side supplied value is not
              completely composed of alphanumeric or '_' or '-' characters.

              User  preferences file: Instead of having the user type in geom=WxH,... etc. every time he logs in
              to find or create his X session, if you set FD_USERPREFS to a string that does not contain the "/"
              character, then the user's home directory is prepended to that string and if the file  exists  its
              first line is read and appended to any options he supplied at the login: prompt.  For example -env
              FD_USERPREFS=.x11vnc_create and the user put "geom=1600x1200" in his ~/.x11vnc_create file.

              To disable the option setting set the environment variable X11VNC_NO_UNIXPW_OPTS=1 before starting
              x11vnc.   To  set  any other options, the user can use the gui (x11vnc -gui connect) or the remote
              control method (x11vnc -R opt:val) during his VNC session.

              So we see the combination of -display WAIT:cmd=... and -unixpw allows automatic pairing of an unix
              authenticated VNC user with his desktop.  This could be very useful on SunRays and also any system
              where multiple users share a given machine.  The user does not need to remember special  ports  or
              passwords set up for his desktop and VNC.

              A  nice  way  to use WAIT:cmd=... is out of inetd(8) (it automatically forks a new x11vnc for each
              user).  You can have the x11vnc inetd spawned process run as, say, root or nobody.   When  run  as
              root  (for  either  inetd  or display manager), you can also supply the option "-users unixpw=" to
              have the x11vnc process switch to the user as well.  Note: there will be a 2nd SSL helper  process
              that will not switch, but it is only encoding and decoding the encrypted stream at that point.

              BUILT-IN modes:

              -- Automatic Finding of User X Sessions --

              As a special case, WAIT:cmd=FINDDISPLAY will run a script that works on most Unixes to determine a
              user's DISPLAY variable and xauthority data (see who(1) ).

              NOTE: The option "-find" is an alias for this mode.

              To   have   this   default   script   printed   to   stdout  (e.g.  for  customization)  run  with
              WAIT:cmd=FINDDISPLAY-print To have the script  run  to  print  what  display  it  would  find  use
              "-finddpy" or WAIT:cmd=FINDDISPLAY-run

              The  standard script runs xdpyinfo(1) run on potential displays.  If your X server(s) have a login
              greeter that exclusively grabs the Xserver, then xdpyinfo blocks forever and this  mode  will  not
              work.   See  www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/faq.html#faq-display-manager  for  how  to  disable this for
              dtgreet on Solaris and possibly for other greeters.

              In -find/cmd=FINDDISPLAY mode, if you set FD_XDM=1, e.g. 'x11vnc  -env  FD_XDM=1  -find  ...'  and
              x11vnc  is  running as root (e.g. inetd) then it will try to find the XAUTHORITY file of a running
              XDM/GDM/KDM login greeter (i.e. no user has logged into an X session yet.)

              As another special case, WAIT:cmd=HTTPONCE will allow x11vnc to service one http request and  then
              exit.   This is usually done in -inetd mode to run on, say, port 5800 and allow the Java vncviewer
              to be downloaded by client web browsers.  For example:

              5815 stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd /.../x11vnc \ -inetd -q -http_ssl -prog  /.../x11vnc  \
              -display WAIT:cmd=HTTPONCE

              Where  /.../x11vnc  is  the full path to x11vnc.  It is used in the Apache SSL-portal example (see
              FAQ).

              In this mode you can set X11VNC_SKIP_DISPLAY to a comma separated list of displays (e.g.  ":0,:1")
              to  ignore  in  the  finding  process.   The  ":"  is  optional.  Ranges n-m e.g. 0-20 can also be
              supplied. This string can also be set by the connecting user via "nd=" using "+"  instead  of  ","
              If  "nd=all"  or  you  set  X11VNC_SKIP_DISPLAY=all  then  all display finding fails as if you set
              X11VNC_FINDDISPLAY_ALWAYS_FAILS=1 (below.)

              On some systems lsof(1) can be very slow.  Set the env. var. FIND_DISPLAY_NO_LSOF=1 to skip  using
              lsof  to  try  to  find the Linux VT the X server is running on.  set FIND_DISPLAY_NO_VT_FIND=1 to
              avoid looking at all.

              -- Automatic Creation of User X Sessions --

              An interesting option is WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY that is like FINDDISPLAY in that is  uses  the
              same  method to find an existing display.  However, if it does not find one it will try to *start*
              up an X server session for the user.  This is the only time x11vnc tries to actually start up an X
              server.

              NOTE: The option "-create" is an alias for this mode.

              It   will   start   looking   for   an   open    display    number    at    :20    Override    via
              X11VNC_CREATE_STARTING_DISPLAY_NUMBER=n  By  default 80 X displays are allowed (i.e. going to :99)
              Override via X11VNC_CREATE_MAX_DISPLAYS=n

              For its heuristics, the create display script sets LC_ALL=C so that command output is uniform.  By
              default it will try to restore LC_ALL right before starting the user  session.   However,  if  you
              don't mind it keeping LC_ALL=C set the env. var.: X11VNC_CREATE_LC_ALL_C_OK=1

              By default FINDCREATEDISPLAY will try Xvfb and then Xdummy:

              The  Xdummy wrapper is part of the x11vnc source code (x11vnc/misc/Xdummy)  It should be available
              in PATH and have run "Xdummy -install" once to create the shared library.  Xdummy  only  works  on
              Linux.  As of 12/2009 it no longer needs to be run as root, and the default is to not run as root.
              In  some  circumstances  permissions  may  require  running  it  as  root,  in these cases specify
              FD_XDUMMY_RUN_AS_ROOT=1, this is the same as supplying -root to the Xdummy cmdline.

              Xvfb is available on most platforms and does not require root.

              An advantage of Xdummy over Xvfb is that Xdummy supports RANDR dynamic screen resizing.

              When x11vnc exits (i.e. user disconnects) the X server session stays running  in  the  background.
              The  FINDDISPLAY  will  find it directly next time.  The user must exit the X session in the usual
              way for it to terminate (or kill the X server process if all else fails).

              To troubleshoot the FINDCREATEDISPLAY mechanism, set the following env.  var.  to  an  output  log
              file, e.g -env CREATE_DISPLAY_OUTPUT=/tmp/mydebug.txt

              So  this  is  a  somewhat odd mode for x11vnc in that it will start up and poll virtual X servers!
              This can be used from, say, inetd(8) to provide a means of definitely getting  a  desktop  (either
              real or virtual) on the machine.  E.g. a desktop service:

              5900  stream  tcp  nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd /.../x11vnc -inetd -q -http -ssl SAVE -unixpw -users
              unixpw=\ -passwd secret -prog /.../x11vnc \ -display WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY

              Where /.../x11vnc is the full path to x11vnc.

              See the -svc/-service option alias above.

              If for some reason you do not want x11vnc to ever try to find an existing display set the env. var
              X11VNC_FINDDISPLAY_ALWAYS_FAILS=1   (also   -env   ...)    This   is   the   same    as    setting
              X11VNC_SKIP_DISPLAY=all or supplying "nd=all" after "username:"

              Use WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY-print to print out the script that is used for this.

              You  can  specify  the preferred X server order via e.g., WAIT:cmd=FINDCREATEDISPLAY-Xdummy,Xvfb,X
              and/or leave out ones you do not want.  The the case "X" means try to start up a real, hardware  X
              server  using  xinit(1) or startx(1).  If there is already an X server running the X case may only
              work on Linux (see startx(1) ).

              "Xvnc" will start up a VNC X server (real- or tight-vnc, e.g.  use  if  Xvfb  is  not  available).
              "Xsrv" will start up the server program in the variable "FD_XSRV" if it is non-empty. You can make
              this  be a wrapper script if you like (it must handle :N, -geometry, and -depth and other X server
              options).

              You can set the environment variable FD_GEOM (or X11VNC_CREATE_GEOM) to WxH or WxHxD  to  set  the
              width  and height and optionally the color depth of the created display.  You can also set FD_SESS
              to be the session (short name of the windowmanager: kde,  gnome,  twm,  failsafe,  etc.).  FD_OPTS
              contains  extra  options  to pass to the X server. You can also set FD_PROG to be the full path to
              the session/windowmanager program.

              More FD tricks:  FD_CUPS=port  or  FD_CUPS=host:port  will  set  the  cups  printing  environment.
              Similarly  for  FD_ESD=port  or  FD_ESD=host:port for esddsp sound redirection.  Set FD_EXTRA to a
              command to be run a few seconds after the X server starts up.  Set FD_TAG to be a unique name  for
              the  session,  it is set as an X property, that makes FINDDISPLAY only find sessions with that tag
              value.

              Set FD_XDMCP_IF to the network interface that the  display  manager  is  running  on;  default  is
              'localhost' but you may need to set it to '::1' on some IPv6 only systems or misconfigured display
              managers.

              If  you  want the FINDCREATEDISPLAY session to contact an XDMCP login manager (xdm/gdm/kdm) on the
              same machine, then use "Xvfb.xdmcp" instead of "Xvfb", etc.  The user  will  have  to  supply  his
              username  and  password  one  more  time  (but  he  gets to select his desktop type so that can be
              useful).  For this to work, you will need to enable localhost XDMCP (udp port 177) for the display
              manager.  This seems to be:

              for gdm in gdm.conf:   Enable=true in section  [xdmcp]  for  kdm  in  kdmrc:       Enable=true  in
              section [Xdmcp] for xdm in xdm-config: DisplayManager.requestPort: 177

              See  the shorthand options above "-svc", "-xdmsvc" and "-sshxdmsvc" that specify the above options
              for some useful cases.

              If you set the env. var WAITBG=1 x11vnc will go into the background once listening in wait mode.

              Another special mode is FINDCREATEDISPLAY-Xvnc.redirect, (or FINDDISPLAY-Xvnc.redirect).  In  this
              case  it  will  start  up Xvnc as above if needed, but instead of polling it in its normal way, it
              simply does a socket redirection of the connected VNC viewer to the Xvnc.

              So in Xvnc.redirect x11vnc does no VNC but merely transfers the data back and forth.  This  should
              be  faster  then  x11vnc's polling method, but not as fast as connecting directly to the Xvnc with
              the VNC Viewer.  The idea here is to take advantage of x11vnc's display  finding/creating  scheme,
              SSL, and perhaps a few others.  Most of x11vnc's options do not apply in this mode.

              Xvnc.redirect  should also work for the vnc.so X server module for the h/w display however it will
              work only for finding the display and the user must already be logged into the X console.

       -vencrypt mode

              The VeNCrypt extension to the VNC protocol allows encrypted SSL/TLS connections.  If the -ssl mode
              is enabled, then VeNCrypt is enabled as well BY DEFAULT (they both use a SSL/TLS tunnel, only  the
              protocol handshake is a little different.)

              To  control  when  and  how  VeNCrypt  is used, specify the mode string.  If mode is "never", then
              VeNCrypt is not used.  If mode is "support" (the default) then VeNCrypt is supported.  If mode  is
              "only",  then  the  similar  and older ANONTLS protocol is not simultaneously supported.  x11vnc's
              normal SSL mode (vncs://) will be supported under -ssl unless you set mode to "force".

              If mode is prefixed with "nodh:", then Diffie Hellman anonymous key exchange is disabled.  If mode
              is prefixed with "nox509:", then X509 key exchange is disabled.

              To disable all Anonymous Diffie-Hellman access (susceptible to Man-In-The-Middle attack) you  will
              need to supply "-vencrypt nodh:support -anontls never" or "-vencrypt nodh:only"

              If  mode  is  prefixed  with  "newdh:",  then new Diffie Hellman parameters are generated for each
              connection (this can be time consuming: 1-60 secs; see -dhparams below for a  faster  way)  rather
              than using the fixed values in the program.  Using fixed, publicly known values is not known to be
              a security problem.  This setting applies to ANONTLS as well.

              Long example: -vencrypt newdh:nox509:support

              Also,  if  mode  is  prefixed  with "plain:", then if -unixpw mode is active the VeNCrypt "*Plain"
              username+passwd method is enabled for Unix logins.  Otherwise in -unixpw  mode  the  normal  login
              panel is provided.

              You *MUST* supply the -ssl option for VeNCrypt to be active.  The -vencrypt option only fine-tunes
              its operation.

       -anontls mode

              The  ANONTLS extension to the VNC protocol allows encrypted SSL/TLS connections.  If the -ssl mode
              is enabled, then ANONTLS is enabled as well BY DEFAULT (they both use a SSL/TLS tunnel,  only  the
              protocol handshake is a little different.)

              ANONTLS is an older SSL/TLS mode introduced by vino.

              It  is  referred  to  as  'TLS'  for  its  registered  VNC security-type name, but we use the more
              descriptive  'ANONTLS'  here  because  it  provides  only   Anonymous   Diffie-Hellman   encrypted
              connections, and hence no possibility for certificate authentication.

              To  control  when  and  how  ANONTLS  is  used, specify the mode string.  If mode is "never", then
              ANONTLS is not used.  If mode is "support" (the default) then ANONTLS is supported.   If  mode  is
              "only",  then  the similar VeNCrypt protocol is not simultaneously supported.  x11vnc's normal SSL
              mode (vncs://) will be supported under -ssl unless you set mode to "force".

              If mode is prefixed with "newdh:", then new Diffie  Hellman  parameters  are  generated  for  each
              connection  (this  can  be time consuming: 1-60 secs; see -dhparams below for a faster way) rather
              than using the fixed values in the program.  Using fixed, publicly known values is not known to be
              a security problem.  This setting applies to VeNCrypt as well.  See the  description  of  "plain:"
              under -vencrypt.

              Long example: -anontls newdh:plain:support

              You  *MUST*  supply the -ssl option for ANONTLS to be active.  The -anontls option only fine-tunes
              its operation.

       -sslonly

              Same as: "-vencrypt never -anontls never"  i.e. it disables the VeNCrypt  and  ANONTLS  encryption
              methods  and  only  allows  standard SSL tunneling.  You must also supply the -ssl ... option (see
              below.)

       -dhparams file

              For some operations a set of Diffie Hellman parameters (prime and generator) is  needed.   If  so,
              use  the  parameters in file. In particular, the VeNCrypt and ANONTLS anonymous DH mode need them.
              By default a fixed set is used. If you do not want to do that you  can  specify  "newdh:"  to  the
              -vencrypt  and  -anontls options to generate a new set each session.  If that is too slow for you,
              use -dhparams file to a set you created manually via "openssl dhparam -out file 1024"

       -nossl

              Disable the -ssl option (see below). Since -ssl is off by default -nossl would only be used on the
              commandline to unset any *earlier* -ssl option (or -svc...)

       -ssl [pem]

              Use the openssl library (www.openssl.org) to provide a built-in encrypted SSL/TLS  tunnel  between
              VNC  viewers  and  x11vnc.  This requires libssl support to be compiled into x11vnc at build time.
              If x11vnc is not built with libssl support it will exit immediately when -ssl is prescribed.   See
              the -stunnel option below for an alternative.

              The  VNC Viewer-side needs to support SSL/TLS as well.  See this URL and also the discussion below
              for     ideas     on     how     to     enable     SSL      support      for      the      viewer:
              http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/faq.html#faq-ssl-tun nel-viewers .  x11vnc provides an SSL enabled
              Java  viewer  applet  in  the classes/ssl directory (-http or -httpdir options.)  The SSVNC viewer
              package supports SSL tunnels too.

              If the VNC Viewer supports VeNCrypt or ANONTLS (vino's encryption mode) they are also supported by
              the -ssl mode (see the -vencrypt and -anontls options for more info; use -sslonly to disable  both
              of them.)

              Use "-ssl /path/to/mycert.pem" to specify an SSL certificate file in PEM format to use to identify
              and  provide  a  key for this server.  See openssl(1) for more info about PEMs and the -sslGenCert
              and "-ssl SAVE" options below for how to create them.

              The connecting VNC viewer SSL tunnel can (at its option) authenticate this server if  it  has  the
              public key part of the certificate (or a common certificate authority, CA, is a more sophisticated
              way  to  verify  this server's cert, see -sslGenCA below).  This authentication is done to prevent
              Man-In-The-Middle attacks.  Otherwise, if the VNC viewer simply accepts this server's key  WITHOUT
              verification,  the  traffic is protected from passive sniffing on the network, but *NOT* from Man-
              In-The-Middle attacks. There are hacker tools like dsniff/webmitm and cain that implement SSL Man-
              In-The-Middle attacks.

              If [pem] is empty or the string "SAVE" then the openssl(1) command must be available  to  generate
              the  certificate  the  first  time.   A  self-signed  certificate  is generated (see -sslGenCA and
              -sslGenCert  for  use  of  a  Certificate  Authority.)    It   will   be   saved   to   the   file
              ~/.vnc/certs/server.pem.   On  subsequent  calls  if  that  file  already  exists  it will be used
              directly.

              Use "SAVE_NOPROMPT" to avoid being prompted to  protect  the  generated  key  with  a  passphrase.
              However in -inetd and -bg modes there will be no prompting for a passphrase in either case.

              If  [pem] is "SAVE_PROMPT" the server.pem certificate will be created based on your answers to its
              prompts for all info such as OrganizationalName, CommonName, etc.

              Use    "SAVE-<string>"     and     "SAVE_PROMPT-<string>"     to     refer     to     the     file
              ~/.vnc/certs/server-<string>.pem  instead  (it  will  be  generated if it does not already exist).
              E.g. "SAVE-charlie" will store to the file ~/.vnc/certs/server-charlie.pem

              Examples: x11vnc -ssl SAVE -display :0 ...  x11vnc -ssl SAVE-someother -display :0 ...

              If [pem] is "TMP" and the openssl(1) utility command exists in PATH, then a temporary, self-signed
              certificate will be generated for this session.  If  openssl(1)  cannot  be  used  to  generate  a
              temporary  certificate x11vnc exits immediately.  The temporary cert will be discarded when x11vnc
              exits.

              If successful in using openssl(1) to generate a temporary certificate in "SAVE" or "TMP"  creation
              modes,  the  public  part of it will be displayed to stderr (e.g. one could copy it to the client-
              side to provide authentication of the server to VNC viewers.)

              NOTE: In "TMP" mode, unless you safely copy the public part of the temporary Cert  to  the  viewer
              for  authenticate *every time* (unlikely...), then only passive sniffing attacks are prevented and
              you are still open to Man-In-The-Middle attacks.  This is why the default "SAVE" mode is preferred
              (and more sophisticated CA mode too).  Only with saved keys AND the VNC viewer authenticating them
              (via the public certificate), are Man-In-The-Middle attacks prevented.

              If [pem] is "ANON" then the Diffie-Hellman anonymous key exchange method is used.   In  this  mode
              there are *no* SSL certificates and so it is not possible to authenticate either the VNC server or
              VNC  client.   Thus  only  passive  network  sniffing  attacks  are  avoided: the "ANON" method is
              susceptible to Man-In-The-Middle attacks.  "ANON" is not recommended; instead use a  SSL  PEM  you
              created or the default "SAVE" method.

              See -ssldir below to use a directory besides the default ~/.vnc/certs

              If  your  x11vnc binary was not compiled with OpenSSL library support, use of the -ssl option will
              induce an immediate failure and exit.  For such binaries, consider using the -stunnel  option  for
              SSL encrypted connections.

              Misc  Info: In temporary cert creation mode "TMP", set the env. var. X11VNC_SHOW_TMP_PEM=1 to have
              x11vnc print out the entire certificate, including the PRIVATE KEY part,  to  stderr.   There  are
              better ways to get/save this info.  See "SAVE" above and "-sslGenCert" below.

       -ssltimeout n

              Set  SSL  read timeout to n seconds.  In some situations (i.e. an iconified viewer in Windows) the
              viewer stops talking and the connection is dropped after the default timeout (25s  for  about  the
              first  minute,  43200s  later).   Set to zero to poll forever.  Set to a negative value to use the
              builtin setting.

              Note that this value does NOT apply to the *initial* ssl init connection.  The default timeout for
              that is 20sec.  Use -env SSL_INIT_TIMEOUT=n to modify it.

       -sslnofail

              Exit at the first SSL connection failure. Useful when scripting SSL connections  (e.g.  x11vnc  is
              started  via  ssh) and you do not want x11vnc waiting around for more connections, tying up ports,
              etc.

       -ssldir dir

              Use dir as an alternate ssl certificate and key management toplevel  directory.   The  default  is
              ~/.vnc/certs

              This  directory  is used to store server and other certificates and keys and also other materials.
              E.g. in the simplest case, "-ssl SAVE" will store the x11vnc server cert in dir/server.pem

              Use of alternate directories via -ssldir allows you to manage multiple VNC  Certificate  Authority
              (CA)  keys.  Another use is if ~/.vnc/cert is on an NFS share you might want your certificates and
              keys to be on a local filesystem to prevent network snooping (for example -ssldir /var/lib/x11vnc-
              certs).

              -ssldir affects nearly all of the other -ssl* options, e.g. -ssl SAVE, -sslGenCert, etc..

       -sslverify path

              For either of the -ssl or -stunnel  modes,  use  path  to  provide  certificates  to  authenticate
              incoming VNC *Client* connections (normally only the server is authenticated in SSL.)  This can be
              used as a method to replace standard password authentication of clients.

              If  path is a directory it contains the client (or CA) certificates in separate files.  If path is
              a file, it contains one or more certificates. See special tokens below.  These correspond  to  the
              "CApath = dir" and "CAfile = file" stunnel options.  See the stunnel(8) manpage for details.

              Examples: x11vnc -ssl -sslverify ~/my.crt x11vnc -ssl -sslverify ~/my_pem_dir/

              Note that if path is a directory, it must contain the certs in separate files named like <HASH>.0,
              where  the  value  of  <HASH>  is  found  by  running  the  command "openssl x509 -hash -noout -in
              file.crt". Evidently one uses <HASH>.1 if there is a collision...

              The the key-management utility "-sslCertInfo HASHON" and "-sslCertInfo HASHOFF" will create/delete
              these hashes for you automatically (via symlink) in the HASH subdirs it  manages.   Then  you  can
              point -sslverify to the HASH subdir.

              Special  tokens:  in  -ssl  mode,  if  path  is  not a file or a directory, it is taken as a comma
              separated list of tokens that are interpreted as follows:

              If a token is "CA" that means load the CA/cacert.pem file from the ssl directory.  If a  token  is
              "clients"  then  all  the files clients/*.crt in the ssl directory are loaded.  Otherwise the file
              clients/token.crt is attempted to be loaded.  As a kludge, use a token like ../server-foo to  load
              a server cert if you find that necessary.

              Use -ssldir to use a directory different from the ~/.vnc/certs default.

              Note  that  if  the  "CA"  cert  is loaded you do not need to load any of the certs that have been
              signed by it.  You will need to load any additional self-signed certs however.

              Examples: x11vnc  -ssl  -sslverify  CA  x11vnc  -ssl  -sslverify  self:fred,self:jim  x11vnc  -ssl
              -sslverify CA,clients

              Usually  "-sslverify  CA"  is the most effective.  See the -sslGenCA and -sslGenCert options below
              for how to set up and manage the CA framework.

              NOTE: the following utilities, -sslGenCA, -sslGenCert, -sslEncKey, -sslCertInfo, and  -sslCRL  are
              provided for completeness, but for casual usage they are overkill.

              They  provide  VNC  Certificate Authority (CA) key creation and server / client key generation and
              signing.  So they provide a basic Public Key management framework for VNC-ing with  x11vnc.  (note
              that they require openssl(1) be installed on the system)

              However,  the simplest usage mode, "-ssl TMP" (where x11vnc automatically generates its own, self-
              signed, temporary key and the VNC viewers always accept it, e.g. accepting via a  dialog  box)  is
              probably safe enough for most scenarios.  CA management is not needed.

              To  protect  against Man-In-The-Middle attacks the "TMP" mode can be improved by using "-ssl SAVE"
              (same as "-ssl", i.e. the default) to have x11vnc create a longer  term  self-signed  certificate,
              and then (safely) copy the corresponding public key cert to the desired client machines (care must
              be taken the private key part is not stolen; you will be prompted for a passphrase).

              So  keep in mind no CA key creation or management (-sslGenCA and -sslGenCert) is needed for either
              of the above two common usage modes.

              One might want to use -sslGenCA and -sslGenCert if you had a large number of VNC client and server
              workstations.  That way the administrator could generate  a  single  CA  key  with  -sslGenCA  and
              distribute its certificate part to all of the workstations.

              Next, he could create signed VNC server keys (-sslGenCert server ...) for each workstation or user
              that then x11vnc would use to authenticate itself to any VNC client that has the CA cert.

              Optionally, the admin could also make it so the VNC clients themselves are authenticated to x11vnc
              (-sslGenCert  client ...)  For this -sslverify would be pointed to the CA cert (and/or self-signed
              certs).

              x11vnc will be able to use all of these cert and key files.  On the VNC  client  side,  they  will
              need  to  be "imported" somehow.  Web browsers have "Manage Certificates" actions as does the Java
              applet plugin Control Panel.  stunnel can also use  these  files  (see  the  ss_vncviewer  example
              script in the FAQ and SSVNC.)

       -sslCRL path

              Set  the  Certificate  Revocation  Lists  (CRL)  to  path.  This setting applies for both -ssl and
              -stunnel modes.

              If path is a file, the file contains one or more CRLs in PEM format.  If path is a  directory,  it
              contains  hash  named  files  of CRLs in the usual OpenSSL manner.  See the OpenSSL and stunnel(8)
              documentation for more info.

              This option only applies if -sslverify has been supplied:  it  checks  for  revocation  along  the
              certificate  chain  used  to  verify  the  VNC  client.   The -sslCRL setting will be ignored when
              -sslverify is not specified.

              Note that if a CRL's expiration date has passed, all SSL connections will fail  regardless  of  if
              they are related to the subject of the CRL or not.

              Only  rarely  will  one's  x11vnc -ssl infrastructure be so large that this option would be useful
              (since normally maintaining the contents of the -sslverify file or directory  should  be  enough.)
              However,  when  using  x11vnc with a Certificate Authority (see -sslGenCA) to authenticate Clients
              via SSL/TLS, the -sslCRL option can be useful to revoke users' certs whose private SSL  keys  were
              lost  or  stolen  (e.g.  laptop.)   This way a new CA cert+key does not need to be created and new
              signed client keys generated and distributed to all users.

              To create a CRL file with revoked certificates the commands 'openssl ca -revoke ...' and  'openssl
              ca -gencrl ...' are useful.  (Run them in ~/.vnc/certs)

       -sslGenCA [dir]

              Generate  your  own  Certificate  Authority private key, certificate, and other files in directory
              [dir].  x11vnc then exits.

              If [dir] is not supplied, a -ssldir setting is used, or otherwise ~/.vnc/certs is used.

              This command also creates directories where server and client certs and keys will be stored.   The
              openssl(1) program must be installed on the system and available in PATH.

              After  the  CA  files  and directories are created the x11vnc command exits; the VNC server is not
              run.

              You will be prompted for information to put into the CA certificate.  The info does not have to be
              accurate just as long as clients accept the cert for VNC  connections.   You  will  also  need  to
              supply a passphrase of at least 4 characters for the CA private key.

              Once  you  have  generated the CA you can distribute its certificate part, [dir]/CA/cacert.pem, to
              other workstations where VNC viewers will be run.  One will need to "import" this  certificate  in
              the  applications,  e.g.  Web browser, Java applet plugin, stunnel, etc.  Next, you can create and
              sign keys using the CA with the -sslGenCert option below.

              Examples: x11vnc -sslGenCA x11vnc -sslGenCA  ~/myCAdir x11vnc -ssldir ~/myCAdir -sslGenCA

              (the last two lines are equivalent)

       -sslGenCert type name

              Generate a VNC server or client certificate  and  private  key  pair  signed  by  the  CA  created
              previously  with  -sslGenCA.  The openssl(1) program must be installed on the system and available
              in PATH.

              After the Certificate is generated x11vnc exits; the VNC server is not run.

              The type of key to be generated is the string type.  It  is  either  "server"  (i.e.  for  use  by
              x11vnc)  or  "client"  (for  a  VNC  viewer).   Note that typically only "server" is used: the VNC
              clients authenticate themselves by a non-public-key method (e.g. VNC or unix password).   type  is
              required.

              An  arbitrary default name you want to associate with the key is supplied by the name string.  You
              can change it at the various prompts when creating the key.  name is optional.

              If name is left blank for clients keys then "nobody" is used.  If left blank for server keys, then
              the primary server key: "server.pem" is created (this is the saved one referenced by  "-ssl  SAVE"
              when the server is started)

              If  name  begins  with the string "self:" then a self-signed certificate is created instead of one
              signed by your CA key.

              If name begins with the string "req:" then only a key (.key) and a certificate  signing  *request*
              (.req) are generated.  You can then send the .req file to an external CA (even a professional one,
              e.g.  Thawte)  and  then  combine  the .key and the received cert into the .pem file with the same
              basename.

              The distinction between "server" and "client" is simply the choice of output  filenames  and  sub-
              directory.  This makes it so the -ssl SAVE-name option can easily pick up the x11vnc PEM file this
              option  generates.   And  similarly makes it easy for the -sslverify option to pick up your client
              certs.

              There is nothing special about the filename or directory  location  of  either  the  "server"  and
              "client" certs.  You can rename the files or move them to wherever you like.

              Precede  this option with -ssldir [dir] to use a directory other than the default ~/.vnc/certs You
              will need to run -sslGenCA on that directory first before doing any -sslGenCert key creation.

              Note you cannot recreate a cert with exactly the same distiguished name (DN) as an  existing  one.
              To do so, you will need to edit the [dir]/CA/index.txt file to delete the line.

              Similar  to  -sslGenCA,  you will be prompted to fill in some information that will be recorded in
              the certificate when it is created.

              Tip: if you know the fully-qualified hostname other people will be connecting to, you can use that
              as the CommonName "CN" to avoid some applications (e.g. web browsers and java plugin)  complaining
              that it does not match the hostname.

              You  will also need to supply the CA private key passphrase to unlock the private key created from
              -sslGenCA.  This private key is used to sign the server or client certificate.

              The "server" certs can be used by x11vnc directly by pointing to them via the -ssl  [pem]  option.
              The  default  file  will be ~/.vnc/certs/server.pem.  This one would be used by simply typing -ssl
              SAVE.  The pem file contains both the certificate and the private key.  server.crt  file  contains
              the cert only.

              The  "client" cert + private key file will need to be copied and imported into the VNC viewer side
              applications (Web browser, Java plugin, stunnel, etc.)  Once that  is  done  you  can  delete  the
              "client"  private  key  file on this machine since it is only needed on the VNC viewer side.  The,
              e.g. ~/.vnc/certs/clients/<name>.pem contains both the  cert  and  private  key.   The  <name>.crt
              contains the certificate only.

              NOTE:  It  is very important to know one should generate new keys with a passphrase.  Otherwise if
              an untrusted user steals the key file he could use it to masquerade as the x11vnc server  (or  VNC
              viewer  client).  You will be prompted whether to encrypt the key with a passphrase or not.  It is
              recommended that you do.  One inconvenience to a passphrase is that it must be typed in EVERY time
              x11vnc or the client app is started up.

              Examples:

              x11vnc -sslGenCert server x11vnc -ssl SAVE -display :0 ...

              and then on viewer  using  ss_vncviewer  stunnel  wrapper  (see  the  FAQ):  ss_vncviewer  -verify
              ./cacert.crt hostname:0

              (this assumes the cacert.crt cert from -sslGenCA was safely copied to the VNC viewer machine where
              ss_vncviewer is run)

              Example using a name:

              x11vnc -sslGenCert server charlie x11vnc -ssl SAVE-charlie -display :0 ...

              Example for a client certificate (rarely used):

              x11vnc    -sslGenCert    client    roger   scp   ~/.vnc/certs/clients/roger.pem   somehost:.    rm
              ~/.vnc/certs/clients/roger.pem

              x11vnc is then started  with  the  option  -sslverify  ~/.vnc/certs/clients/roger.crt  (or  simply
              -sslverify roger), and on the viewer user on somehost could do for example:

              ss_vncviewer -mycert ./roger.pem hostname:0

              If you set the env. var REQ_ARGS='...' it will be passed to openssl req(1).  A common use would be
              REQ_ARGS='-days 1095' to bump up the expiration date (3 years in this case).

       -sslEncKey pem

              Utility  to encrypt an existing PEM file with a passphrase you supply when prompted.  For that key
              to be used (e.g. by x11vnc) the passphrase must be supplied each time.

              The "SAVE" notation described under -ssl applies as well. (precede this option with -ssldir  [dir]
              to refer a directory besides the default ~/.vnc/certs)

              The  openssl(1) program must be installed on the system and available in PATH.  After the Key file
              is encrypted the x11vnc command exits; the VNC server is not run.

              Examples: x11vnc -sslEncKey /path/to/foo.pem x11vnc -sslEncKey SAVE x11vnc -sslEncKey SAVE-charlie

       -sslCertInfo pem

              Prints out information about an existing PEM file.  In addition the  public  certificate  is  also
              printed.   The  openssl(1)  program must be in PATH. Basically the command "openssl x509 -text" is
              run on the pem.

              After the info is printed the x11vnc command exits; the VNC server is not run.

              The "SAVE" notation described under -ssl applies as well.

              Using  "LIST" will give a list of all certs being managed (in the ~/.vnc/certs dir, use -ssldir to
              refer to another dir).  "ALL" will print out the info for every managed  key  (this  can  be  very
              long).   Giving  a  client  or  server  cert  shortname  will also try a lookup (e.g. -sslCertInfo
              charlie).  Use "LISTL" or "LL" for a long (ls -l style) listing.

              Using "HASHON" will create subdirs [dir]/HASH and [dir]/HASH with  OpenSSL  hash  filenames  (e.g.
              0d5fbbf1.0)  symlinks  pointing up to the corresponding *.crt file.  ([dir] is ~/.vnc/certs or one
              given by -ssldir.)  This is a useful way for other OpenSSL applications (e.g. stunnel)  to  access
              all  of  the  certs  without  having  to  concatenate  them.   x11vnc will not use them unless you
              specifically reference them.  "HASHOFF" removes these HASH subdirs.

              The LIST, LISTL, LL, ALL, HASHON, HASHOFF words can also be lowercase, e.g. "list".

       -sslDelCert pem

              Prompts you to delete all .crt .pem .key .req files associated with  [pem].   x11vnc  then  exits.
              "SAVE" and lookups as in -sslCertInfo apply as well.

       -sslScripts

              Prints  out  both  the  'genCA'  and  'genCert' x11vnc openssl wrapper scripts for you to examine,
              modify, etc.  The scripts are printed to stdout and then the x11vnc program exits.

       -stunnel [pem]

              Use the stunnel(8) (stunnel.mirt.net) to provide an  encrypted  SSL  tunnel  between  viewers  and
              x11vnc.

              This  external  tunnel  method  was  implemented prior to the integrated -ssl encryption described
              above.  It still works well and avoids the requirement of  linking  with  the  OpenSSL  libraries.
              This  mode  requires stunnel to be installed on the system and available via PATH (n.b. stunnel is
              often installed in sbin directories).  Version 4.x  of  stunnel  is  assumed  (but  see  -stunnel3
              below.)

              [pem]  is  optional, use "-stunnel /path/to/stunnel.pem" to specify a PEM certificate file to pass
              to stunnel.  See the -ssl option for more info on certificate files.

              Whether or not your stunnel has its own certificate depends on your stunnel configuration; stunnel
              often generates one at install time.  See your stunnel documentation for details.  In  any  event,
              if  you want to use this certificate you must supply the full path to it as [pem].  Note: the file
              may only be readable by root.

              [pem] may also be the special strings "TMP", "SAVE",  and  "SAVE..."  as  described  in  the  -ssl
              option.  If [pem] is not supplied, "SAVE" is assumed.

              Note that the VeNCrypt, ANONTLS, and "ANON" modes are not supported in -stunnel mode.

              stunnel  is  started  up as a child process of x11vnc and any SSL connections stunnel receives are
              decrypted and sent to x11vnc over a local socket.  The strings "The SSL VNC desktop  is  ..."  and
              "SSLPORT=..."  are printed out at startup to indicate this.

              The  -localhost option is enforced by default to avoid people routing around the SSL channel.  Use
              -env STUNNEL_DISABLE_LOCALHOST=1 to disable this security requirement.

              Set -env STUNNEL_DEBUG=1 for more debugging printout.

              Set -env STUNNEL_PROG=xxx to the  full  path  of  stunnel  program  you  want  to  be  used  (e.g.
              /usr/bin/stunnel4).

              Set  -env  STUNNEL_LISTEN=xxx to the address of the network interface to listen on (the default is
              to listen on all interfaces), e.g. STUNNEL_LISTEN=192.168.1.100.

              A simple way to add IPv6 support is STUNNEL_LISTEN=::

              Your VNC viewer will also need to be able to connect via SSL.  Unfortunately not too many do this.
              See the information about SSL viewers under the -ssl option.  The x11vnc  project's  SSVNC  is  an
              option.

              Also, in the x11vnc distribution, patched TightVNC and UltraVNC Java applet jar files are provided
              in  the  classes/ssl  directory  that  do  SSL  connections.   Enable serving them with the -http,
              -http_ssl, or -httpdir (see the option descriptions for more info.)

              Note that for the Java viewer applet usage the "?PORT=xxxx" in the various URLs printed at startup
              will need to be supplied to the web browser to connect properly.

              Currently the automatic "single port" HTTPS mode of -ssl is not fully supported in -stunnel  mode.
              However, it can be emulated via:

              % x11vnc -stunnel -http_ssl -http_oneport ...

              In  general,  it  is also not too difficult to set up an stunnel or other SSL tunnel on the viewer
              side.  A simple example on Unix using stunnel 3.x is:

              % stunnel -c -d localhost:5901 -r remotehost:5900 % vncviewer localhost:1

              For Windows, stunnel has been ported to it and there are probably other such tools available.  See
              the FAQ and SSVNC for more examples.

       -stunnel3 [pem]

              Use version 3.x stunnel command line syntax instead  of  version  4.x.   The  -http/-httpdir  Java
              applet serving is currently not available in this mode.

       -enc cipher:keyfile

              Use  symmetric  encryption  with  cipher "cipher" and secret key data in "keyfile".  If keyfile is
              pw=<string> then "string" is used as the key data.

              NOTE: It is recommended that you use SSL via the -ssl option instead of this option because SSL is
              well understood and takes great care to establish unique session keys and is more compatible  with
              other  software.   Use  this  option  if  you  do  not  want  to  deal  with  SSL certificates for
              authentication and do not want to use SSH but want some encryption for your VNC  session.   Or  if
              you must interface with a symmetric key tunnel that you do not have control over.

              Note  that  this  mode  will  NOT  work  with  the UltraVNC DSM plugins because they alter the RFB
              protocol  in  addition  to  tunnelling  with  the  symmetric  cipher  (an  unfortunate  choice  of
              implementation...)

              cipher  can  be  one  of:   arc4,  aesv2,  aes-cfb,  blowfish,  aes256,  or 3des.  See the OpenSSL
              documentation for more info.  The keysize is 128 bits (except for aes256).  Here  is  one  way  to
              make a keyfile with that many bits:

              dd if=/dev/random of=./my.key bs=16 count=1

              you  will need to securely share this key with the other side of the VNC connection (See SSVNC for
              examples).

              Example:  -enc blowfish:./my.key Example:  -enc blowfish:pw=swordfish

              By default 16 bytes of random salt followed by 16 bytes of random initialization vector  are  sent
              at  the  very beginning of the stream.  The other side must read these and initialize their cipher
              with them.  These values make the session key unique  (without  them  the  security  is  minimal).
              Similarly, the other side must send us its random salt and IV with those same lengths.

              The  salt  and  key  data  are  combined to create a session key using an md5 hash as described in
              EVP_BytesToKey(3).

              The exact call is: EVP_BytesToKey(Cipher, EVP_md5(), salt, keydata, len, 1, keystr, NULL);   where
              salt  is the random data as described above, and keydata is the shared secret key data.  keystr is
              the resulting  session  key.   The  cipher  is  then  seeded  with  keystr  and  uses  the  random
              initialization vector as its first block.

              To  modify  the amount of random salt and initialization vector use cipher@n,m where n is the salt
              length and m the initialization vector length.  E.g.

              -enc aes-cfb@8,16:./my.key

              It is not a good idea to set either one to zero, although you may be forced to if the  other  side
              of the tunnel is not under your control.

              To  skip  the  salt  and  EVP_BytesToKey MD5 entirely (no hashing is done: the keydata is directly
              inserted into the cipher) specify "-1" for the salt, e.g.

              -enc blowfish@-1,16:./my.key

              The message digest can also be changed to something besides the default  MD5.   Use  cipher@md+n,m
              where "md" can be one of sha, sha1, md5, or ripe.  For example:

              -enc arc4@sha+8,16:./my.key

              The SSVNC vnc viewer project supplies a symmetric encryption tool named "ultravnc_dsm_helper" that
              can be used on the viewer side.  For example:

              ssvncviewer exec='ultravnc_dsm_helper arc4 my.key 0 h:p'

              where  h:p  is  the  hostname and port of the x11vnc server.  ultravnc_dsm_helper may also be used
              standalone to provide a symmetric encryption tunnel for any viewer or server (VNC  or  otherwise.)
              The cipher (1st arg) is basically the same syntax as we use above.

              Also  see  the  'Non-Ultra  DSM'  SSVNC  option  for the 'UltraVNC DSM Encryption Plugin' advanced
              option.

              For both ways of using the  viewer,  you  can  specify  the  salt,ivec  sizes  (in  GUI  or,  e.g.
              arc4@8,16).

       -https [port]

              Use  a  special,  separate  HTTPS port (-ssl and -stunnel modes only) for HTTPS Java viewer applet
              downloading. I.e. not 5900 and not 5800 (the defaults.)

              BACKGROUND: In -ssl mode, it turns out you can use the single VNC port (e.g. 5900)  for  both  VNC
              and  HTTPS  connections.  (HTTPS  is  used  to  retrieve  a SSL-aware VncViewer.jar applet that is
              provided with x11vnc).  Since both use SSL the implementation  was  extended  to  detect  if  HTTP
              traffic (i.e. GET) is taking place and handle it accordingly.  The URL would be, e.g.:

              https://mymachine.org:5900/

              This  is  convenient  for  firewalls, etc, because only one port needs to be allowed in.  However,
              this heuristic adds a few seconds delay to each connection and can be  unreliable  (especially  if
              the  user takes much time to ponder the Certificate dialogs in his browser, Java VM, or VNC Viewer
              applet.  That's right 3 separate "Are you sure you want to connect?" dialogs!)

              END OF BACKGROUND.

              USAGE: So use the -https option to provide a separate, more reliable HTTPS port that  x11vnc  will
              listen  on.   If [port] is not provided (or is 0), one is autoselected.  The URL to use is printed
              out at startup.

              The SSL Java applet directory is specified via the -httpdir option.  If not supplied, -https  will
              try to guess the directory as though the -http option was supplied.

       -httpsredir [port]

              In  -ssl  mode  with  the  Java  applet  retrieved via HTTPS, when the HTML file containing applet
              parameters ('index.vnc' or 'proxy.vnc') is sent do NOT set the applet PORT parameter to the actual
              VNC port but set it to "port" instead.  If "port" is not supplied, then the port number is guessed
              from the Host: HTTP header.

              This  is  useful   when   an   incoming   TCP   connection   redirection   is   performed   by   a
              router/gateway/firewall  from  one  port  to  an  internal  machine where x11vnc is listening on a
              different port. The Java applet needs to connect to the firewall/router port, not the VNC port  on
              the internal workstation. For example, one could redir from mygateway.com:443 to workstation:5900.

              This  spares  the  user  from  having  to  type  in https://mygateway.com/?PORT=443 into their web
              browser. Note that port 443 is the default https port; other ports must be  explicitly  indicated,
              for  example:  https://mygateway.com:8000/?PORT=8000.  To avoid having to include the PORT= in the
              browser URL, simply supply "-httpsredir" to x11vnc.

              This option does not work in -stunnel mode.

              More tricks: set the env var X11VNC_EXTRA_HTTPS_PARAMS to be extra URL parameters  to  use.   This
              way  you  do  not  need  to  specify  extra  PARAMS  in  the  index.vnc  file.   E.g.  x11vnc -env
              X11VNC_EXTRA_HTTPS_PARAMS='?GET=1' ...

              If you do not want to expose the non-SSL HTTP port to the network (i.e. you just want  the  single
              VNC/HTTPS   port,   e.g.   5900,   open   for   connections)   then   specify   the   option  -env
              X11VNC_HTTP_LISTEN_LOCALHOST=1  This way the connection to the LibVNCServer httpd server will only
              be available on localhost (note that in -ssl mode, HTTPS requests are redirected from SSL  to  the
              non-SSL LibVNCServer HTTP server.)

       -http_oneport

              For  UN-encrypted  connections  mode (i.e. no -ssl, -stunnel, or -enc options), allow the Java VNC
              Viewer applet to be downloaded thru the VNC port via HTTP.

              That is to say, you can use a single port for Java applet viewer connections by  using  a  URL  in
              your web browser like this, for example:

              http://hostname:5900

              The regular, two-port mode, URL http://hostname:5800 will continue to work as well.

              As  mentioned  above, this mode will NOT work with the -ssl, -stunnel, or -enc encryption options.
              Note that is it equivalent to '-enc none' (i.e. it uses the same detection mechanism as for HTTPS,
              but with no encryption.)

              HTTPS single-port is on by default in -ssl encrypted  mode  (and  -enc  too),  so  you  only  need
              -http_oneport when doing non-SSL encrypted connections.

              This  mode  could  also  be  useful  for  SSH  tunnels  since  it  means only one port needs to be
              redirected.

              The -httpsredir option may also be useful for this mode when using an SSH tunnel as  well  as  for
              router port redirections.

              Note that the -env X11VNC_HTTP_LISTEN_LOCALHOST=1 option described above under -httpsredir applies
              for the LibVNCServer httpd server in all cases (ssl or not.)

       -ssh user@host:disp

              Create   a   remote   listening   port   on   machine  "host"  via  a  SSH  tunnel  using  the  -R
              rport:localhost:lport method. lport will be the local x11vnc listening port, so  a  connection  to
              rport (5900+disp) on "host" will reach x11vnc.  E.g. fred@snoopy.com:0

              This could be useful if a firewall/router prevents incoming connections to the x11vnc machine, but
              the  ssh  machine "host" can be reached by the VNC viewer. "user@" is not needed unless the remote
              unix username differs from the current one.

              By default the remote sshd is usually configured to listen only on localhost  for  rport,  so  the
              viewer  may need to ssh -L redir to "host" as well (See SSVNC to automate this).  The sshd setting
              GatewayPorts enables listening on all interfaces for rport; viewers can reach it more easily.

              "disp" is the VNC display for the remote SSH side, e.g. 0 corresponds to port 5900, etc.  If  disp
              is greater than 200 the value is used as the port.  Use a negative value to force a low port, e.g.
              host:-80 will use port 80.

              If ssh-agent is not active, then the ssh password needs to be entered in the terminal where x11vnc
              is running.

              By default the remote ssh will issue a 'sleep 300' to wait for the incoming connection for 5 mins.
              To modify this use user@host:disp+secs.

              If the remote SSH server is on a non-standard port (i.e. not 22) use user@host:port:disp+secs.

              Note  that  the  ssh  process  MAY  NOT be killed when x11vnc exits.  It tries by looking at ps(1)
              output.

       -usepw

              If no other password method was supplied on the command line, first look for ~/.vnc/passwd and  if
              found  use  it  with  -rfbauth;  next,  look  for  ~/.vnc/passwdfile  and use it with -passwdfile;
              otherwise, prompt the user for a password to create ~/.vnc/passwd and use  it  with  the  -rfbauth
              option.  If none of these succeed x11vnc exits immediately.

       -storepasswd pass file

              Store password pass as the VNC password in the file file.  Once the password is stored the program
              exits.  Use the password via "-rfbauth file"

              If  called with no arguments, "x11vnc -storepasswd", the user is prompted for a password and it is
              stored in the file ~/.vnc/passwd.  Called with one argument, that will be the file  to  store  the
              prompted password in.

       -nopw

              Disable the big warning message when you use x11vnc without some sort of password.

       -accept string

              Run  a  command  (possibly  to  prompt  the user at the X11 display) to decide whether an incoming
              client should be allowed to connect or not.  string is an external command run  via  system(3)  or
              some  special  cases  described  below.   Be  sure  to  quote  string if it contains spaces, shell
              characters, etc.  If the external command returns 0 the client is accepted, otherwise  the  client
              is rejected.  See below for an extension to accept a client view-only.

              If  x11vnc  is running as root (say from inetd(8) or from display managers xdm(1) , gdm(1) , etc),
              think about the security implications carefully before supplying this  option  (likewise  for  the
              -gone option).

              Environment:  The  RFB_CLIENT_IP environment variable will be set to the incoming client IP number
              and  the  port  in  RFB_CLIENT_PORT  (or  -1  if  unavailable).   Similarly,   RFB_SERVER_IP   and
              RFB_SERVER_PORT  (the  x11vnc  side of the connection), are set to allow identification of the tcp
              virtual circuit.  The x11vnc process  id  will  be  in  RFB_X11VNC_PID,  a  client  id  number  in
              RFB_CLIENT_ID,  and  the  number of other connected clients in RFB_CLIENT_COUNT.  RFB_MODE will be
              "accept".  RFB_STATE will  be  PROTOCOL_VERSION,  SECURITY_TYPE,  AUTHENTICATION,  INITIALISATION,
              NORMAL,  or UNKNOWN indicating up to which state the client has achieved.  RFB_LOGIN_VIEWONLY will
              be 0, 1, or -1 (unknown).  RFB_USERNAME, RFB_LOGIN_TIME, and RFB_CURRENT_TIME may also be set.

              If string is "popup" then a builtin popup window is used.  The  popup  will  time  out  after  120
              seconds, use "popup:N" to modify the timeout to N seconds (use 0 for no timeout).

              In  the  case  of "popup" and when the -unixpw option is specified, then a *second* window will be
              popped up after the user successfully logs in via his UNIX password.  This time the user  will  be
              identified as UNIX:username@hostname, the "UNIX:" prefix indicates which user the viewer logged as
              via  -unixpw.   The  first  popup is only for whether to allow him to even *try* to login via unix
              password.

              If string is "xmessage" then an xmessage(1) invocation is used for the command.  xmessage must  be
              installed on the machine for this to work.

              Both  "popup"  and  "xmessage"  will  present  an option for accepting the client "View-Only" (the
              client can only watch).  This option will not be presented if -viewonly  has  been  specified,  in
              which case the entire display is view only.

              If  the  user  supplied  command is prefixed with something like "yes:0,no:*,view:3 mycommand ..."
              then this associates the numerical command return code  with  the  actions:  accept,  reject,  and
              accept-view-only,  respectively.   Use  "*" instead of a number to indicate the default action (in
              case the command returns an unexpected value).  E.g. "no:*" is a good choice.

              Note that x11vnc blocks while the external command or popup is running (other clients may  see  no
              updates  during  this period).  So a person sitting a the physical display is needed to respond to
              an popup prompt. (use a 2nd x11vnc if you lock yourself out).

              More -accept tricks: use "popupmouse" to only allow mouse  clicks  in  the  builtin  popup  to  be
              recognized.   Similarly  use  "popupkey" to only recognize keystroke responses.  These are to help
              avoid the user accidentally accepting a client by typing or clicking. All 3 of the popup  keywords
              can  be  followed by +N+M to supply a position for the popup window.  The default is to center the
              popup window.

       -afteraccept string

              As -accept, except to  run  a  user  supplied  command  after  a  client  has  been  accepted  and
              authenticated.  RFB_MODE  will  be  set  to  "afteraccept" and the other RFB_* variables are as in
              -accept.  Unlike -accept, the  command  return  code  is  not  interpreted  by  x11vnc.   Example:
              -afteraccept 'killall xlock &'

       -gone string

              As -accept, except to run a user supplied command when a client goes away (disconnects).  RFB_MODE
              will  be set to "gone" and the other RFB_* variables are as in -accept.  The "popup" actions apply
              as well.  Unlike -accept, the command return code is not interpreted by  x11vnc.   Example:  -gone
              'xlock &'

       -users list

              If  x11vnc  is started as root (say from inetd(8) or from display managers xdm(1) , gdm(1) , etc),
              then as soon as possible after connections to the X display are established try to switch  to  one
              of  the  users  in  the  comma  separated  list.   If x11vnc is not running as root this option is
              ignored.

              Why use this option?  In general it is not needed since x11vnc  is  already  connected  to  the  X
              display  and  can  perform  its  primary  functions.   The  option  was  added to make some of the
              *external* utility commands x11vnc occasionally runs work properly.  In particular under GNOME and
              KDE to implement the "-solid color" feature external commands (gconftool-2 and dcop) unfortunately
              must be run as the user owning the desktop session.  Since this option  switches  userid  it  also
              affects  the  userid used to run the processes for the -accept and -gone options.  It also affects
              the ability to read files for options such as -connect, -allow, and -remap and also the ultra  and
              tight filetransfer feature if enabled.  Note that the -connect file is also sometimes written to.

              So be careful with this option since in some situations its use can decrease security.

              In  general  the  switch  to  a user will only take place if the display can still be successfully
              opened as that user (this is primarily to try to guess the actual owner of the session).  Example:
              "-users  fred,wilma,betty".   Note that a malicious local user "barney" by quickly using "xhost +"
              when logging in may possibly get the x11vnc process to switch to user "fred".  What happens next?

              Under display managers it may be a long time before the switch succeeds (i.e. a user logs in).  To
              instead make it switch immediately regardless if the display can be reopened prefix  the  username
              with the "+" character. E.g. "-users +bob" or "-users +nobody".

              The  latter  (i.e.  switching  immediately to user "nobody") is the only obvious use of the -users
              option that increases security.

              Use the following notation to associate a group with a user:  user1.group1,user2.group2,...   Note
              that  initgroups(2) will still be called first to try to switch to ALL of a user's groups (primary
              and additional groups).  Only if that fails or it is not available then the single group specified
              as above (or the user's primary group if not specified) is switched to with setgid(2).   Use  -env
              X11VNC_SINGLE_GROUP=1  to  prevent trying initgroups(2) and only switch to the single group.  This
              sort of setting is only really needed to make the ultra or  tight  filetransfer  permissions  work
              properly.  This  format  applies  to any comma separated list of users, even the special "=" modes
              described below.

              In -unixpw mode, if "-users unixpw=" is supplied then after a user authenticates himself  via  the
              -unixpw  mechanism,  x11vnc  will try to switch to that user as though "-users +username" had been
              supplied.  If you want to limit which users this will  be  done  for,  provide  them  as  a  comma
              separated list after "unixpw=" Groups can also be specified as described above.

              Similarly,  in  -ssl mode, if "-users sslpeer=" is supplied then after an SSL client authenticates
              with his cert (the -sslverify option is required for this) x11vnc will  extract  a  UNIX  username
              from  the  "emailAddress"  field (username@hostname.com) of the "Subject" of the x509 SSL cert and
              then try to switch to that user as though "-users +username" had been supplied.  If  you  want  to
              limit  which users this will be done for, provide them as a comma separated list after "sslpeer=".
              Set the env. var X11VNC_SSLPEER_CN to use the Common Name (normally a  hostname)  instead  of  the
              Email field.

              NOTE:  for  sslpeer= mode the x11vnc administrator must take care that any client certs he adds to
              -sslverify have the intended UNIX username in the "emailAddress" field of the cert.   Otherwise  a
              user  may  be  able  to  log in as another.  This command can be of use in checking: "openssl x509
              -text -in file.crt", see the "Subject:" line.  Also, along with the normal RFB_* env.  vars.  (see
              -accept)  passed  to  external cmd= commands, RFB_SSL_CLIENT_CERT will be set to the client's x509
              certificate string.

              The sslpeer= mode can aid finding X sessions via the FINDDISPLAY and FINDCREATEDISPLAY mechanisms.

              To immediately switch to a user *before* connections to the X display are made or any files opened
              use the "=" character: "-users =bob".  That user needs to be able to open the X  display  and  any
              files of course.

              The  special  user  "guess="  means to examine the utmpx database (see who(1) ) looking for a user
              attached to the display number (from DISPLAY or -display option) and try him/her.   To  limit  the
              list of guesses, use: "-users guess=bob,betty".

              Even  more  sinister  is  the special user "lurk=" that means to try to guess the DISPLAY from the
              utmpx login database as well.  So it "lurks" waiting for anyone to log into an X session and  then
              connects  to  it.   Specify  a  list  of users after the = to limit which users will be tried.  To
              enable a different searching mode, if the first user in the list is something like ":0" or  ":0-2"
              that  indicates  a  range of DISPLAY numbers that will be tried (regardless of whether they are in
              the utmpx database) for  all  users  that  are  logged  in.   Also  see  the  "-display  WAIT:..."
              functionality.  Examples: "-users lurk=" and also "-users lurk=:0-1,bob,mary"

              Be  especially  careful using the "guess=" and "lurk=" modes.  They are not recommended for use on
              machines with untrustworthy local users.

       -noshm

              Do not use the MIT-SHM extension for the polling.  Remote displays can  be  polled  this  way:  be
              careful this can use large amounts of network bandwidth.  This is also of use if the local machine
              has a limited number of shm segments and -onetile is not sufficient.

       -flipbyteorder

              Sometimes needed if remotely polled host has different endianness.  Ignored unless -noshm is set.

       -onetile

              Do  not  use  the new copy_tiles() framebuffer mechanism, just use 1 shm tile for polling.  Limits
              shm segments used to 3.

              To disable any automatic shm reduction set the env. var. X11VNC_NO_LIMIT_SHM.

       -solid [color]

              To improve performance, when VNC clients are connected try to change the desktop background  to  a
              solid  color.  The [color] is optional: the default color is "cyan4".  For a different one specify
              the X color (rgb.txt name, e.g. "darkblue" or numerical "#RRGGBB").

              Currently this option only works on GNOME, KDE, CDE, XFCE, and classic X (i.e. with the background
              image on the root window).  The "gconftool-2", "dcop" and "xfconf-query" external commands are run
              for GNOME, KDE, and XFCE respectively.  This also works on native  MacOSX.   (There  is  no  color
              selection  for MacOSX or XFCE.)  Other desktops won't work, (send us the corresponding commands if
              you find them).  If x11vnc is running as root ( inetd(8) or gdm(1) ), the  -users  option  may  be
              needed  for  GNOME,  KDE,  XFCE.   If x11vnc guesses your desktop incorrectly, you can force it by
              prefixing color with "gnome:", "kde:", "cde:", "xfce:", or "root:".

              Update: -solid no longer works on KDE4.

              This mode works in a limited way on the Mac OS  X  Console  with  one  color  ('kelp')  using  the
              screensaver writing to the background.  Look in "~/Library/Screen Savers" for VncSolidColor.png to
              change the color.

       -blackout string

              Black  out  rectangles  on the screen. string is a comma separated list of WxH+X+Y type geometries
              for each rectangle.  If one of the items on the list is the string "noptr" the mouse pointer  will
              not be allowed to go into a blacked out region.

       -xinerama, -noxinerama

              If  your  screen  is composed of multiple monitors glued together via XINERAMA, and that screen is
              not a rectangle this option will try to  guess  the  areas  to  black  out  (if  your  system  has
              libXinerama).  default: -xinerama

              In general, we have noticed on XINERAMA displays you may need to use the "-xwarppointer" option if
              the  mouse  pointer  misbehaves  and it is enabled by default. Use "-noxwarppointer" if you do not
              want this.

       -xtrap

              Use the DEC-XTRAP extension for keystroke and mouse input insertion.  For use on  legacy  systems,
              e.g.  X11R5,  running an incomplete or missing XTEST extension.  By default DEC-XTRAP will be used
              if XTEST server grab control is missing, use -xtrap to do the keystroke and  mouse  insertion  via
              DEC-XTRAP as well.

       -xrandr [mode]

              If  the  display  supports  the XRANDR (X Resize, Rotate and Reflection) extension, and you expect
              XRANDR events to occur to the display while x11vnc  is  running,  this  options  indicates  x11vnc
              should  try  to  respond  to them (as opposed to simply crashing by assuming the old screen size).
              See the xrandr(1) manpage and run 'xrandr -q' for more info.  [mode]  is  optional  and  described
              below.

              Since  watching  for  XRANDR  events and trapping errors increases polling overhead, only use this
              option if XRANDR changes are expected.  For example on a rotatable screen PDA or laptop, or  using
              a  XRANDR-aware  Desktop  where  you resize often.  It is best to be viewing with a vncviewer that
              supports the NewFBSize encoding, since it knows how to react to screen size  changes.   Otherwise,
              LibVNCServer  tries to do so something reasonable for viewers that cannot do this (portions of the
              screen may be clipped, unused, etc).

              Note: the default now is to check for XRANDR events, but do not trap every X call  that  may  fail
              due  to resize.  If a resize event is received, the full -xrandr mode is enabled.  To disable even
              checking for events supply: -noxrandr.

              "mode" defaults to "resize", which means create a new, resized, framebuffer and hope  all  viewers
              can  cope with the change.  "newfbsize" means first disconnect all viewers that do not support the
              NewFBSize VNC encoding, and then resize the  framebuffer.   "exit"  means  disconnect  all  viewer
              clients, and then terminate x11vnc.

       -rotate string

              Rotate  and/or  flip  the framebuffer view exported by VNC.  This transformation is independent of
              XRANDR and is done in software in main memory and so may be slower.  This mode could be useful  on
              a  handheld  with  portrait or landscape modes that do not correspond to the scanline order of the
              actual framebuffer.  string can be:

              x     flip along x-axis y     flip along y-axis xy     flip along x- and y-axes +90     rotate  90
              degrees  clockwise -90     rotate 90 degrees counter-clockwise +90x     rotate 90 degrees CW, then
              flip along x +90y     rotate 90 degrees CW, then flip along y

              these give all possible rotations and reflections.

              Aliases: same as xy:  yx, +180, -180, 180 same as -90: +270, 270 same as +90: 90, (ditto for  90x,
              90y)

              Like  -scale,  this  transformation  is  applied  at  the  very  end  of  any chain of framebuffer
              transformations and so any options with geometries, e.g. -blackout, -clip, etc.  are  relative  to
              the original X (or -rawfb) framebuffer, not the final one sent to VNC viewers.

              If  you  do  not  want  the  cursor  shape  to be rotated prefix string with "nc:", e.g. "nc:+90",
              "nc:xy", etc.

       -padgeom WxH

              Whenever a new vncviewer connects, the framebuffer is replaced with a fake,  solid  black  one  of
              geometry WxH.  Shortly afterwards the framebuffer is replaced with the real one.  This is intended
              for  use  with  vncviewers  that  do  not support NewFBSize and one wants to make sure the initial
              viewer geometry will be big enough to handle all subsequent resizes (e.g. under  -xrandr,  -remote
              id:windowid, rescaling, etc.)

              In  -unixpw  mode  this sets the size of the login screen.  Use "once:WxH" it ignore padgeom after
              the login screen is set up.

       -o logfile

              Write stderr messages to file logfile instead of to the terminal.  Same as  "-logfile  file".   To
              append  to  the  file  use  "-oa  file"  or  "-logappend  file".   If  logfile contains the string
              "%VNCDISPLAY" it is expanded to the vnc display (the name may need to  be  guessed  at.)   "%HOME"
              works too.

       -flag file

              Write the "PORT=NNNN" (e.g. PORT=5900) string to file in addition to stdout.  This option could be
              useful by wrapper script to detect when x11vnc is ready.

       -rmflag file

              Remove  file at exit to signal when x11vnc is done.  The file is created at startup if it does not
              already exist or if file is prefixed with "create:".  If the file is created, the  x11vnc  PID  is
              placed  in  the  file.   Otherwise  the  files contents is not changed.  Use prefix "nocreate:" to
              prevent creation.

       -rc filename

              Use filename instead of $HOME/.x11vncrc for rc file.

       -norc

              Do not process any .x11vncrc file for options.

       -env VAR=VALUE

              Set the environment variable 'VAR' to value 'VALUE' at x11vnc  startup.   This  is  a  convenience
              utility  to  avoid  shell  script  wrappers, etc. to set the env. var.  You may specify as many of
              these as needed on the command line.

       -prog /path/to/x11vnc

              Set the full path to the x11vnc program for cases when it cannot be determined from argv[0]  (e.g.
              tcpd/inetd)

       -h, -help

              Print this help text.  -?, -opts              Only list the x11vnc options.

       -V, -version

              Print program version and last modification date.

       -license

              Print out license information.  Same as -copying and -warranty.

       -dbg

              Instead  of  exiting  after  cleaning  up,  run a simple "debug crash shell" when fatal errors are
              trapped.

       -q, -quiet

              Be quiet by printing less informational output  to  stderr.  (use  -noquiet  to  undo  an  earlier
              -quiet.)

              The  -quiet option does not eliminate all informational output, it only reduces it.  It is ignored
              in most auxiliary usage modes, e.g. -storepasswd.  To eliminate all output use: 2>/dev/null  1>&2,
              etc.

       -v, -verbose

              Print out more information to stderr.

       -bg

              Go into the background after screen setup.  Messages to stderr are lost unless -o logfile is used.
              Something like this could be useful in a script:

              port=`ssh -t $host "x11vnc -display :0 -bg" | grep PORT`

              port=`echo "$port" | sed -e 's/PORT=//'`

              port=`expr $port - 5900`

              vncviewer $host:$port

       -modtweak, -nomodtweak

              Option  -modtweak  automatically  tries  to  adjust  the  AltGr  and Shift modifiers for differing
              language keyboards between client and host.  Otherwise, only  a  single  key  press/release  of  a
              Keycode  is  simulated (i.e. ignoring the state of the modifiers: this usually works for identical
              keyboards).  Also useful in resolving cases where a Keysym is bound to multiple keys (e.g.  "<"  +
              ">" and "," + "<" keys).  Default: -modtweak

              If  you  are  having trouble with with keys and -xkb or -noxkb, and similar things don't help, try
              -nomodtweak.

              On some HP-UX systems it is been noted that they have an odd keymapping  where  a  single  keycode
              will  have  a  keysym,  e.g.  "#",  up to three times.  You can check via "xmodmap -pk" or the -dk
              option.  The failure is when you try to type "#" it yields "3".   If  you  see  this  problem  try
              setting the environment variable MODTWEAK_LOWEST=1 to see if it helps.

       -xkb, -noxkb

              When  in  modtweak  mode,  use  the  XKEYBOARD  extension (if the X display supports it) to do the
              modifier tweaking.  This is powerful and should be tried if there are  still  keymapping  problems
              when  using  -modtweak by itself.  The default is to check whether some common keysyms, e.g. !, @,
              [, are only accessible via -xkb mode and if so then automatically enable  the  mode.   To  disable
              this automatic detection use -noxkb.

              When  -xkb mode is active you can set these env. vars.  They apply only when there is ambiguity as
              to which key to choose (i.e the mapping is not one-to-one).  NOKEYHINTS=1: for up ascii keystrokes
              do not use score hints saved when the key was pressed down. NOANYDOWN=1: for up keystrokes do  not
              resort to searching through keys that are currently pressed down.  KEYSDOWN=N: remember the last N
              keys press down for tie-breaking when an up keystroke comes in.

       -capslock

              When  in  -modtweak  (the default) or -xkb mode, if a keysym in the range A-Z comes in check the X
              server to see if the Caps_Lock is set.  If it is do not artificially press Shift to  generate  the
              keysym.   This  will  enable  the  CapsLock  key to behave correctly in some circumstances: namely
              *both* the VNC viewer machine and the x11vnc X server are in the CapsLock on state.  If  one  side
              has  CapsLock  on  and  the  other off and the keyboard is not behaving as you think it should you
              should correct the CapsLock states (hint: pressing CapsLock inside and outside of the  viewer  can
              help  toggle  them  both to the correct state).  However, for best results do not use this option,
              but rather *only* enable CapsLock on the VNC viewer side (i.e. by pressing CapsLock outside of the
              viewer window, also -skip_lockkeys below).  Also try -nomodtweak for a possible workaround.

       -skip_lockkeys, -noskip_lockkeys

              Have x11vnc ignore all Caps_Lock, Shift_Lock, Num_Lock, Scroll_Lock keysyms received from viewers.
              The idea is you press Caps_Lock on the VNC Viewer side but that does not change the lock state  in
              the  x11vnc-side  X  server.   Nevertheless your capitalized letters come in over the wire and are
              applied correctly to the x11vnc-side X server.  Note this mode probably won't do what you want  in
              -nomodtweak  mode.  Also, a kludge for KP_n digits is always done in this mode: they are mapped to
              regular digit keysyms.  See also -capslock above.  The default is -noskip_lockkeys.

       -skip_keycodes string

              Ignore the comma separated list of decimal keycodes.  Perhaps  these  are  keycodes  not  on  your
              keyboard but your X server thinks exist.  Currently only applies to -xkb mode.  Use this option to
              help  x11vnc in the reverse problem it tries to solve: Keysym -> Keycode(s) when ambiguities exist
              (more than one Keycode  per  Keysym).   Run  'xmodmap  -pk'  to  see  your  keymapping.   Example:
              "-skip_keycodes 94,114"

       -sloppy_keys

              Experimental  option  that tries to correct some "sloppy" key behavior.  E.g. if at the viewer you
              press Shift+Key but then release the Shift before Key that  could  give  rise  to  extra  unwanted
              characters  (usually  only between keyboards of different languages).  Only use this option if you
              observe problems with some keystrokes.

       -skip_dups, -noskip_dups

              Some VNC viewers send impossible repeated key events, e.g. key-down, key-down, key-up, key-up  all
              for  the  same  key,  or 20 downs in a row for the same modifier key!  Setting -skip_dups means to
              skip these duplicates and just process the first event. Note: some VNC  viewers  assume  they  can
              send down's without the corresponding up's and so you should not set this option for these viewers
              (symptom: some keys do not autorepeat) Default: -noskip_dups

       -add_keysyms, -noadd_keysyms

              If a Keysym is received from a VNC viewer and that Keysym does not exist in the X server, then add
              the  Keysym  to  the  X server's keyboard mapping on an unused key.  Added Keysyms will be removed
              periodically and also when x11vnc exits.  Default: -add_keysyms

       -clear_mods

              At startup and exit clear the modifier keys by sending KeyRelease for each one. The Lock modifiers
              are skipped.  Used to clear the state if the display was accidentally left with any pressed down.

       -clear_keys

              As -clear_mods, except try to release ANY pressed key.  Note that this option and -clear_mods  can
              interfere with a person typing at the physical keyboard.

       -clear_all

              As -clear_keys, except try to release any CapsLock, NumLock, etc. locks as well.

       -remap string

              Read  Keysym  remappings  from  file named string.  Format is one pair of Keysyms per line (can be
              name or hex value) separated by  a  space.   If  no  file  named  string  exists,  it  is  instead
              interpreted as this form: key1-key2,key3-key4,...  See <X11/keysymdef.h> header file for a list of
              Keysym names, or use xev(1).

              To  map  a  key to a button click, use the fake Keysyms "Button1", ..., etc. E.g: "-remap Super_R-
              Button2" (useful for pasting on a laptop)

              I use these if the machine I am viewing from does not have a scrollwheel or I don't like using the
              one it has:

              -remap Super_R-Button4,Menu-Button5 -remap KP_Add-Button4,KP_Enter-Button5

              the former would be used on a PC, the latter on a MacBook.  This way those little used keys can be
              used to generate bigger hops than the Up and Down arrows provide.  One can scroll through text  or
              web pages more quickly this way (especially if x11vnc scroll detection is active.)

              Use Button44, Button12, etc. for multiple clicks.

              To disable a keysym (i.e. make it so it will not be injected), remap it to "NoSymbol" or "None".

              Dead  keys:  "dead"  (or  silent,  mute) keys are keys that do not produce a character but must be
              followed by a 2nd keystroke.  This is often used for accenting characters, e.g. to put "`" on  top
              of  "a"  by pressing the dead key and then "a".  Note that this interpretation is not part of core
              X11, it is up to the toolkit or application to decide how to react to the sequence.  The X11 names
              for these keysyms are "dead_grave", "dead_acute", etc.  However some VNC viewers send the  keysyms
              "grave", "acute" instead thereby disabling the accenting.  To work around this -remap can be used.
              For example "-remap grave-dead_grave,acute-dead_acute"

              As a convenience, "-remap DEAD" applies these remaps:

                    g     grave-dead_grave
                    a     acute-dead_acute
                    c     asciicircum-dead_circumflex
                    t     asciitilde-dead_tilde
                    m     macron-dead_macron
                    b     breve-dead_breve
                    D     abovedot-dead_abovedot
                    d     diaeresis-dead_diaeresis
                    o     degree-dead_abovering
                    A     doubleacute-dead_doubleacute
                    r     caron-dead_caron
                    e     cedilla-dead_cedilla

              If  you just want a subset use the first letter label, e.g. "-remap DEAD=ga" to get the first two.
              Additional remaps may  also  be  supplied  via  commas,  e.g.   "-remap  DEAD=ga,Super_R-Button2".
              Finally,  "DEAD=missing"  means  to  apply all of the above as long as the left hand member is not
              already in the X11 keymap.

       -norepeat, -repeat

              Option -norepeat disables X server key auto repeat when VNC clients are connected and VNC keyboard
              input is not idle for more  than  5  minutes.   This  works  around  a  repeating  keystrokes  bug
              (triggered  by long processing delays between key down and key up client events: either from large
              screen changes or high latency).  Default: -norepeat

              You can set the env. var. X11VNC_IDLE_TIMEOUT to the number of  idle  seconds  you  want  (5min  =
              300secs).

              Note:  your  VNC  viewer  side  will likely do autorepeating, so this is no loss unless someone is
              simultaneously at the real X display.

              Use "-norepeat N" to set how many times norepeat will be reset if something else (e.g.  X  session
              manager) undoes it.  The default is 2.  Use a negative value for unlimited resets.

       -nofb

              Ignore  video  framebuffer:  only process keyboard and pointer.  Intended for use with Win2VNC and
              x2vnc dual-monitor setups.

       -nobell

              Do not watch for XBell events. (no beeps will  be  heard)  Note:  XBell  monitoring  requires  the
              XKEYBOARD extension.

       -nosel

              Do not manage exchange of X selection/cutbuffer between VNC viewers and the X server at all.

       -noprimary

              Do  not  poll the PRIMARY selection for changes to send back to clients.  (PRIMARY is still set on
              received changes, however).

       -nosetprimary

              Do not set the PRIMARY selection for changes received from VNC clients.

       -noclipboard

              Do not poll the CLIPBOARD selection for changes to send back to clients.  (CLIPBOARD is still  set
              on received changes, however).

       -nosetclipboard

              Do not set the CLIPBOARD selection for changes received from VNC clients.

       -seldir string

              If  direction  string  is  "send",  only  send  the selection to viewers, and if it is "recv" only
              receive it from viewers.  To work around apps setting the selection too frequently and messing  up
              the other end.  You can actually supply a comma separated list of directions, including "debug" to
              turn on debugging output.

       -cursor [mode], -nocursor

              Sets  how  the  pointer  cursor  shape  (little icon at the mouse pointer) should be handled.  The
              "mode" string is optional and is described below.  The default is to  show  some  sort  of  cursor
              shape(s).   How this is done depends on the VNC viewer and the X server.  Use -nocursor to disable
              cursor shapes completely.

              Some VNC viewers support the TightVNC CursorPosUpdates  and  CursorShapeUpdates  extensions  (cuts
              down  on  network traffic by not having to send the cursor image every time the pointer is moved),
              in which case these extensions are used (see -nocursorshape and -nocursorpos  below  to  disable).
              For  other  viewers the cursor shape is written directly to the framebuffer every time the pointer
              is moved or changed and gets sent along with the other framebuffer updates.  In this  case,  there
              will be some lag between the vnc viewer pointer and the remote cursor position.

              If  the  X  display  supports  retrieving the cursor shape information from the X server, then the
              default is to use that mode.  On Solaris this  can  be  done  with  the  SUN_OVL  extension  using
              -overlay (see also the -overlay_nocursor option).  A similar overlay scheme is used on IRIX.  Xorg
              (e.g.  Linux)  and  recent Solaris Xsun servers support the XFIXES extension to retrieve the exact
              cursor shape from the X server.  If XFIXES is present it is preferred over Overlay and is used  by
              default  (see  -noxfixes below).  This can be disabled with -nocursor, and also some values of the
              "mode" option below.

              Note that under XFIXES cursors with transparency (alpha  channel)  will  usually  not  be  exactly
              represented  and  one  may find Overlay preferable.  See also the -alphacut and -alphafrac options
              below as fudge factors to try to improve the situation for cursors with transparency for  a  given
              theme.

              The  "mode"  string  can be used to fine-tune the displaying of cursor shapes.  It can be used the
              following ways:

              "-cursor arrow" - just show the standard arrow nothing more or nothing less.

              "-cursor none" - same as "-nocursor"

              "-cursor X" - when the cursor appears to be on the root window, draw the familiar X  shape.   Some
              desktops  such  as GNOME cover up the root window completely, and so this will not work, try "X1",
              etc, to try to shift the tree depth.  On high latency links or slow machines there will be a  time
              lag between expected and the actual cursor shape.

              "-cursor  some" - like "X" but use additional heuristics to try to guess if the window should have
              a windowmanager-like resizer cursor or a text input I-beam cursor.  This is a complete  hack,  but
              may  be  useful  in  some  situations  because it provides a little more feedback about the cursor
              shape.

              "-cursor most" - try to show as many cursors as possible.  Often this will only  be  the  same  as
              "some" unless the display has overlay visuals or XFIXES extensions available.  On Solaris and IRIX
              if XFIXES is not available, -overlay mode will be attempted.

       -cursor_drag

              Show  cursor shape changes even when the mouse is being dragged with a mouse button down.  This is
              useful if you want to be able to see Drag-and-Drop cursor icons, etc.

       -arrow n

              Choose an alternate "arrow" cursor from a set of some common ones.  n can be 1 to 6.  Default  is:
              1 Ignored when in XFIXES cursor-grabbing mode.

       -noxfixes

              Do not use the XFIXES extension to draw the exact cursor shape even if it is available.

              Note:  To work around a crash in Xorg 1.5 and later some people needed to use -noxfixes.  The Xorg
              crash occurred right after a Display Manager (e.g. GDM) login.   Starting  with  x11vnc  0.9.9  it
              tries  to  automatically avoid using XFIXES until it is sure a window manager is running.  See the
              -reopen option for more info and how to use X11VNC_AVOID_WINDOWS=never to disable it.

       -alphacut n

              When using the XFIXES extension for the cursor shape, cursors with transparency will  not  usually
              be displayed exactly (but opaque ones will).  This option sets n as a cutoff for cursors that have
              transparency ("alpha channel" with values ranging from 0 to 255) Any cursor pixel with alpha value
              less  than  n  becomes completely transparent.  Otherwise the pixel is completely opaque.  Default
              240

       -alphafrac fraction

              With the threshold in -alphacut some cursors will become  almost  completely  transparent  because
              their  alpha  values  are  not  high  enough.   For those cursors adjust the alpha threshold until
              fraction of the non-zero alpha channel pixels become opaque.  Default 0.33

       -alpharemove

              By default, XFIXES cursors pixels with transparency have the alpha factor multiplied into the  RGB
              color  values  (i.e.  that corresponding to blending the cursor with a black background).  Specify
              this option to remove the alpha factor. (useful for light colored semi-transparent cursors).

       -noalphablend

              In XFIXES mode do not send cursor alpha channel data to LibVNCServer.  The default is to send  it.
              The  alphablend  effect  will  only  be  visible  in  -nocursorshape  mode  or  for  clients  with
              cursorshapeupdates turned off. (However there is a hack for 32bpp with depth 24, it uses the extra
              8 bits to store cursor transparency for use with a hacked vncviewer that applies the  transparency
              locally.  See the FAQ for more info).

       -nocursorshape

              Do  not  use  the  TightVNC  CursorShapeUpdates extension even if clients support it.  See -cursor
              above.

       -cursorpos, -nocursorpos

              Option -cursorpos enables sending the X cursor position back to all vnc clients that  support  the
              TightVNC  CursorPosUpdates  extension.   Other  clients  will  be able to see the pointer motions.
              Default: -cursorpos

       -xwarppointer, -noxwarppointer

              Move the pointer with XWarpPointer(3X) instead of the XTEST extension.  Use this as  a  workaround
              if the pointer motion behaves incorrectly, e.g.  on touchscreens or other non-standard setups.

              It is also sometimes needed on XINERAMA displays and is enabled by default if XINERAMA is found to
              be active.  To prevent this, use -noxwarppointer.

       -always_inject

              Even  if  there  is  no  displacement (dx = dy = 0) for a VNC mouse event force the pointer to the
              indicated x,y position anyway.  Recent (2009) gui toolkits (gnome)  have  problems  with  x11vnc's
              original  mouse  input  injection  method.   So  x11vnc's  mouse  input  injection method has been
              modified.  To regain the OLD behavior use this option: -always_inject.  Then  x11vnc  will  always
              force  positioning  the  mouse to the x,y position even if that position has not changed since the
              previous VNC input event.

              The first place this problem was noticed was in gnome terminal: if you pressed and released  mouse
              button  3, a menu was posted and then its first element 'New Terminal Window' was activated.  This
              was because  x11vnc  injected  the  mouse  position  twice:  once  on  ButtonPress  and  again  on
              ButtonRelease.   The  toolkit interpreted the 2nd one as mouse motion even though the mouse hadn't
              moved.  So now by default x11vnc tries to avoid injecting the 2nd one.

              Note that with the new default x11vnc  will  be  oblivious  to  applications  moving  the  pointer
              (warping)  or the user at the physical display moving it.  So it might, e.g., inject ButtonRelease
              at the wrong position.  If this (or  similar  scenarios)  causes  problems  in  your  environment,
              specify -always_inject for the old method.

       -buttonmap string

              String  to remap mouse buttons.  Format: IJK-LMN, this maps buttons I -> L, etc., e.g.  -buttonmap
              13-31

              Button presses can also be mapped to keystrokes: replace a button digit on the right of  the  dash
              with  :<sym>: or :<sym1>+<sym2>: etc. for multiple keys. For example, if the viewing machine has a
              mouse-wheel (buttons 4 5) but the x11vnc side does not, these will do scrolls:

              -buttonmap 12345-123:Prior::Next:

              -buttonmap 12345-123:Up+Up+Up::Down+Down+Down:

              See <X11/keysymdef.h> header file for a list of Keysyms, or use the xev(1) program.  Note: mapping
              of button clicks to Keysyms may not work if -modtweak or -xkb is needed for the Keysym.

              If you include a modifier like "Shift_L" the modifier's up/down state is  toggled,  e.g.  to  send
              "The"  use :Shift_L+t+Shift_L+h+e: (the 1st one is shift down and the 2nd one is shift up). (note:
              the initial state of the modifier  is  ignored  and  not  reset)  To  include  button  events  use
              "Button1", ... etc.

              -buttonmap currently does not work on MacOSX console or in -rawfb mode.

              Workaround:  use  -buttonmap  IJ...-LM...=n  to  limit  the  number  of  mouse  buttons to n, e.g.
              123-123=3.  This will prevent x11vnc from crashing if the X server reports  there  are  5  buttons
              (4/5 scroll wheel), but there are only really 3.

       -nodragging

              Do not update the display during mouse dragging events (mouse button held down).  Greatly improves
              response on slow setups, but you lose all visual feedback for drags, text selection, and some menu
              traversals.  It overrides any -pointer_mode setting.

       -ncache n

              Client-side  caching  scheme.  Framebuffer memory n (an integer) times that of the full display is
              allocated below the actual framebuffer to cache screen contents for rapid retrieval.  So a W  x  H
              frambuffer is expanded to a W x (n+1)*H one.  Use 0 to disable.

              The n is actually optional, the default is 10.

              For  this  and  the  other  -ncache* options below you can abbreviate "-ncache" with "-nc".  Also,
              "-nonc" is the same as "-ncache 0"

              This is an experimental option, currently implemented in an awkward way in that in the VNC  Viewer
              you  can  see the pixel cache contents if you scroll down, etc.  So you will have to set things up
              so you can't see that region.  If this method is successful, the changes required for  clients  to
              do this less awkwardly will be investigated.

              The  SSVNC  viewer does a good job at automatically hiding the pixel cache region.  Or use SSVNC's
              -ycrop option to explicitly hide the region.

              Note that this mode consumes a huge amount of memory, both on the x11vnc server side  and  on  the
              VNC  Viewer  side.   If n=2 then the amount of RAM used is roughly tripled for both x11vnc and the
              VNC Viewer.  As a rule of thumb, note that 1280x1024 at depth 24 is about 5MB of pixel data.

              For reasonable response when cycling through 4 to 6 large (e.g. web browser) windows a value n  of
              6 to 12 is recommended. (that's right: ~10X more memory...)

              Because of the way window backingstore and saveunders are implemented, n must be even.  It will be
              incremented by 1 if it is not.

              This  mode  also  works for native MacOS X, but may not be as effective as the X version.  This is
              due to a number of things, one is the drop-shadow compositing that leaves extra areas that need to
              be repaired (see -ncache_pad).  Another is the window iconification animations need to be  avoided
              (see  -macicontime).  It appears the that the 'Scale' animation mode gives better results than the
              'Genie' one.  Also, window event detection not as accurate as the X version.

       -ncache_cr

              In -ncache mode, try to do copyrect opaque window moves/drags  instead  of  wireframes  (this  can
              induce  painting errors).  The wireframe will still be used when moving a window whose save-unders
              has not yet been set or has been invalidated.

              Some VNC Viewers provide better response than others with this option.  On  Unix,  realvnc  viewer
              gives smoother drags than tightvnc viewer.  Response may also be choppy if the server side machine
              is too slow.

              Sometimes on very slow modem connections, this actually gives an improvement because no pixel data
              at all (not even the box animation) is sent during the drag.

       -ncache_no_moveraise

              In  -ncache  mode, do not assume that moving a window will cause the window manager to raise it to
              the top of the stack.  The default is to assume it does, and so at the beginning of any wireframe,
              etc, window moves the window will be pushed to top in the VNC viewer.

       -ncache_no_dtchange

              In -ncache mode, do not try to guess when the desktop (viewport)  changes  to  another  one  (i.e.
              another  workarea).   The  default is to try to guess and when detected try to make the transition
              more smoothly.

       -ncache_no_rootpixmap

              In -ncache  mode,  do  not  try  to  snapshot  the  desktop  background  to  use  in  guessing  or
              reconstructing window save-unders.

       -ncache_keep_anims

              In  -ncache  mode, do not try to disable window manager animations and other effects (that usually
              degrade ncache performance or cause painting errors).  The default is to try to  disable  them  on
              KDE (but not GNOME) when VNC clients are connected.

              For other window managers or desktops that provide animations, effects, compositing, translucency,
              etc. that interfere with the -ncache method you will have to disable them manually.

       -ncache_old_wm

              In -ncache mode, enable some heuristics for old style window managers such as fvwm and twm.

       -ncache_pad n

              In  -ncache  mode,  pad each window with n pixels for the caching rectangles.  This can be used to
              try to improve the situation with dropshadows or other compositing (e.g. MacOS X window  manager),
              although it could make things worse.  The default is 0 on Unix and 24 on MacOS X.

       -debug_ncache

              Turn on debugging and profiling output under -ncache.

       -wireframe [str], -nowireframe

              Try  to  detect  window  moves  or  resizes  when a mouse button is held down and show a wireframe
              instead of the full opaque window.  This is based completely on  heuristics  and  may  not  always
              work:  it  depends  on your window manager and even how you move things around.  See -pointer_mode
              below for discussion of the "bogging down" problem this tries to avoid.  Default: -wireframe

              Shorter aliases:  -wf [str]  and -nowf

              The value "str" is optional and, of course, is  packed  with  many  tunable  parameters  for  this
              scheme:

              Format:                  shade,linewidth,percent,T+B+L+R,mod,t1+t2+t3+t4                  Default:
              0xff,2,0,32+8+8+8,all,0.15+0.30+5.0+0.125

              If you leave nothing between commas: ",," the default value is used.  If you don't specify  enough
              commas, the trailing parameters are set to their defaults.

              "shade"  indicate  the  "color"  for the wireframe, usually a greyscale: 0-255, however for 16 and
              32bpp you can specify an rgb.txt X color (e.g. "dodgerblue") or a value > 255 is  treated  as  RGB
              (e.g.  red  is  0xff0000).   "linewidth"  sets  the  width  of the wireframe in pixels.  "percent"
              indicates to not apply the wireframe scheme to windows with area less than  this  percent  of  the
              full screen.

              "T+B+L+R"  indicates  four  integers  for  how close in pixels the pointer has to be from the Top,
              Bottom, Left, or Right edges of the window to consider wireframing.  This is a speedup to  quickly
              exclude a window from being wireframed: set them all to zero to not try the speedup (scrolling and
              selecting text will likely be slower).

              "mod"  specifies  if  a  button down event in the interior of the window with a modifier key (Alt,
              Shift, etc.) down should indicate a wireframe opportunity.  It can be "0" or "none"  to  skip  it,
              "1"  or  "all"  to  apply  it  to  any modifier, or "Shift", "Alt", "Control", "Meta", "Super", or
              "Hyper" to only apply for that type of modifier key.

              "t1+t2+t3+t4" specify four floating point times in seconds: t1 is how long to wait for the pointer
              to move, t2 is how long to wait for the window to start moving or being resized (for  some  window
              managers this can be rather long), t3 is how long to keep a wireframe moving before repainting the
              window.  t4  is  the  minimum  time  between  sending  wireframe  "animations".  If a slow link is
              detected, these values may be automatically changed to something better for a slow link.

       -nowireframelocal

              By default, mouse motion and button presses of a user sitting at the LOCAL display  are  monitored
              for  wireframing  opportunities (so that the changes will be sent efficiently to the VNC clients).
              Use this option to disable this behavior.

       -wirecopyrect mode, -nowirecopyrect

              Since the -wireframe mechanism evidently tracks  moving  windows  accurately,  a  speedup  can  be
              obtained by telling the VNC viewers to locally copy the translated window region.  This is the VNC
              CopyRect encoding: the framebuffer update doesn't need to send the actual new image data.

              Shorter aliases:  -wcr [mode]  and -nowcr

              "mode"  can be "never" (same as -nowirecopyrect) to never try the copyrect, "top" means only do it
              if the window was not covered by any other windows, and "always" means to translate the originally
              unobscured region (this may look odd as the remaining pieces come in, but helps on a  slow  link).
              Default: "always"

              Note:  there  can be painting errors or slow response when using -scale so you may want to disable
              CopyRect in this case "-wirecopyrect never" on the command line or by remote-control.  Or you  can
              also use the "-scale xxx:nocr" scale option.

       -debug_wireframe

              Turn  on  debugging  info  printout  for  the  wireframe heuristics.  "-dwf" is an alias.  Specify
              multiple times for more output.

       -scrollcopyrect mode, -noscrollcopyrect

              Like -wirecopyrect, but use heuristics to try to guess if  a  window  has  scrolled  its  contents
              (either  vertically  or  horizontally).   This  requires  the  RECORD  X extension to "snoop" on X
              applications  (currently  for  certain  XCopyArea  and  XConfigureWindow  X  protocol   requests).
              Examples:  Hitting  <Return>  in  a  terminal  window  when the cursor was at the bottom, the text
              scrolls up one line.  Hitting <Down> arrow in a web browser window, the  web  page  scrolls  up  a
              small amount.  Or scrolling with a scrollbar or mouse wheel.

              Shorter aliases:  -scr [mode]  and -noscr

              This  scheme  will  not always detect scrolls, but when it does there is a nice speedup from using
              the VNC CopyRect encoding (see -wirecopyrect).  The speedup is both in reduced network traffic and
              reduced X framebuffer polling/copying.  On the other hand,  it  may  induce  undesired  transients
              (e.g.  a terminal cursor being scrolled up when it should not be) or other painting errors (window
              tearing, bunching-up, etc).  These are automatically repaired in a short period of time.  If  this
              is unacceptable disable the feature with -noscrollcopyrect.

              Screen clearing kludges:  for testing at least, there are some "magic key sequences" (must be done
              in less than 1 second) to aid repairing painting errors that may be seen when using this mode:

              3 Alt_L's   in a row: resend whole screen, 4 Alt_L's   in a row: reread and resend whole screen, 3
              Super_L's  in  a row: mark whole screen for polling, 4 Super_L's in a row: reset RECORD context, 5
              Super_L's in a row: try to push a black screen

              note: Alt_L is the Left "Alt" key (a single key) Super_L is the Left "Super" key  (Windows  flag).
              Both of these are modifier keys, and so should not generate characters when pressed by themselves.
              Also, your VNC viewer may have its own refresh hot-key or button.

              "mode"  can  be "never" (same as -noscrollcopyrect) to never try the copyrect, "keys" means to try
              it in response to keystrokes only, "mouse" means to try it  in  response  to  mouse  events  only,
              "always" means to do both. Default: "always"

              Note:  there  can be painting errors or slow response when using -scale so you may want to disable
              CopyRect in this case "-scrollcopyrect never" on the command line or by  remote-control.   Or  you
              can also use the "-scale xxx:nocr" scale option.

       -scr_area n

              Set  the minimum area in pixels for a rectangle to be considered for the -scrollcopyrect detection
              scheme.  This is to avoid wasting the effort on small rectangles that would be quickly updated the
              normal way.  E.g. suppose an app updated the position of  its  skinny  scrollbar  first  and  then
              shifted the large panel it controlled.  We want to be sure to skip the small scrollbar and get the
              large panel. Default: 60000

       -scr_skip list

              Skip scroll detection for applications matching the comma separated list of strings in list.  Some
              applications  implement  their scrolling in strange ways where the XCopyArea, etc, also applies to
              invisible portions of the window: if we CopyRect those areas it looks awful during the scroll  and
              there may be painting errors left after the scroll.  Soffice.bin is the worst known offender.

              Use  "##"  to  denote  the  start of the application class (e.g. "##XTerm") and "++" to denote the
              start of the application instance name (e.g. "++xterm").  The string your list is matched  against
              is  of the form "^^WM_NAME##Class++Instance<same-for-any-subwindows>" The "xlsclients -la" command
              will provide this info.

              If a pattern is prefixed with "KEY:" it only applies  to  Keystroke  generated  scrolls  (e.g.  Up
              arrow).   If  it is prefixed with "MOUSE:" it only applies to Mouse induced scrolls (e.g. dragging
              on a scrollbar).  Default: ##Soffice.bin,##StarOffice,##OpenOffice

       -scr_inc list

              Opposite of -scr_skip: this list is consulted first and if there is a match  the  window  will  be
              monitored  via  RECORD  for scrolls irrespective of -scr_skip.  Use -scr_skip '*' to skip anything
              that does not match your -scr_inc.  Use -scr_inc '*' to include everything.

       -scr_keys list

              For keystroke scroll detection, only apply the RECORD heuristics to the comma  separated  list  of
              keysyms  in  list.   You  may  find  the RECORD overhead for every one of your keystrokes disrupts
              typing too much, but you don't want to turn it off completely with  "-scr  mouse"  and  -scr_parms
              does not work or is too confusing.

              The listed keysyms can be numeric or the keysym names in the <X11/keysymdef.h> header file or from
              the  xev(1) program.  Example: "-scr_keys Up,Down,Return".  One probably wants to have application
              specific lists (e.g. for terminals, etc) but that is too icky to think about for now...

              If list begins with the "-" character the list is taken as an exclude  list:  all  keysyms  except
              those  list  will  be  considered.   The  special  string "builtin" expands to an internal list of
              keysyms that are likely to cause scrolls.  BTW, by default modifier keys, Shift_L, Control_R, etc,
              are skipped since they almost never induce scrolling by themselves.

       -scr_term list

              Yet another cosmetic kludge.  Apply  shell/terminal  heuristics  to  applications  matching  comma
              separated  list  (same as for -scr_skip/-scr_inc).  For example an annoying transient under scroll
              detection is if you hit Enter in a terminal shell with full text window,  the  solid  text  cursor
              block  will  be  scrolled  up.   So  for a short time there are two (or more) block cursors on the
              screen.  There are similar scenarios, (e.g. an output line is duplicated).

              These transients are induced by the approximation of scroll detection (e.g. it detects the scroll,
              but not the fact that the block cursor was cleared just before the scroll).  In nearly  all  cases
              these  transient  errors  are  repaired  when  the  true  X framebuffer is consulted by the normal
              polling.  But they are distracting, so what this option  provides  is  extra  "padding"  near  the
              bottom  of the terminal window: a few extra lines near the bottom will not be scrolled, but rather
              updated from the actual X framebuffer.  This usually reduces the annoying artifacts.   Use  "none"
              to disable.  Default: "term"

       -scr_keyrepeat lo-hi

              If  a key is held down (or otherwise repeats rapidly) and this induces a rapid sequence of scrolls
              (e.g. holding down an Arrow key) the "scrollcopyrect" detection and overhead may not  be  able  to
              keep  up.   A  time  per  single  scroll  estimate  is  performed  and if that estimate predicts a
              sustainable scrollrate of keys per second between  "lo"  and  "hi"  then  repeated  keys  will  be
              DISCARDED  to maintain the scrollrate. For example your key autorepeat may be 25 keys/sec, but for
              a large window or slow link only 8 scrolls per second can be sustained,  then  roughly  2  out  of
              every 3 repeated keys will be discarded during this period. Default: "4-20"

       -scr_parms string

              Set  various parameters for the scrollcopyrect mode.  The format is similar to that for -wireframe
              and packed with lots of parameters:

              Format: T+B+L+R,t1+t2+t3,s1+s2+s3+s4+s5 Default: 0+64+32+32,0.02+0.10+0.9,0.03+0.06+0.5+0.1+5.0

              If you leave nothing between commas: ",," the default value is used.  If you don't specify  enough
              commas, the trailing parameters are set to their defaults.

              "T+B+L+R"  indicates  four  integers  for  how close in pixels the pointer has to be from the Top,
              Bottom, Left, or Right edges of the window to consider scrollcopyrect.  If -wireframe overlaps  it
              takes  precedence.   This  is  a  speedup  to  quickly  exclude  a  window  from being watched for
              scrollcopyrect: set them all to zero to not try the  speedup  (things  like  selecting  text  will
              likely be slower).

              "t1+t2+t3"  specify  three  floating point times in seconds that apply to scrollcopyrect detection
              with *Keystroke* input: t1 is how long to wait after a key is pressed for the first scroll, t2  is
              how  long  to keep looking after a Keystroke scroll for more scrolls.  t3 is how frequently to try
              to update surrounding scrollbars outside of the scrolling area (0.0 to disable)

              "s1+s2+s3+s4+s5" specify five floating  point  times  in  seconds  that  apply  to  scrollcopyrect
              detection with *Mouse* input: s1 is how long to wait after a mouse button is pressed for the first
              scroll,  s2  is  how  long to keep waiting for additional scrolls after the first Mouse scroll was
              detected.  s3 is how frequently to try to update surrounding scrollbars outside of  the  scrolling
              area (0.0 to disable).  s4 is how long to buffer pointer motion (to try to get fewer, bigger mouse
              scrolls).  s5  is  the  maximum time to spend just updating the scroll window without updating the
              rest of the screen.

       -fixscreen string

              Periodically "repair" the screen based on settings in  string.   Hopefully  you  won't  need  this
              option, it is intended for cases when the -scrollcopyrect or -wirecopyrect features leave too many
              painting  errors,  but  it can be used for any scenario.  This option periodically performs costly
              operations and so interactive response may be reduced when it is on.  You can use 3  Alt_L's  (the
              Left  "Alt"  key) taps in a row (as described under -scrollcopyrect) instead to manually request a
              screen repaint when it is needed.

              string is a comma separated list of one or more of the following: "V=t", "C=t", "X=t", and  "8=t".
              In  these  "t" stands for a time in seconds (it is a floating point even though one should usually
              use values > 2 to avoid wasting resources).  V sets how frequently the  entire  screen  should  be
              sent  to  viewers (it is like the 3 Alt_L's).  C sets how long to wait after a CopyRect to repaint
              the full screen.  X sets how frequently to reread the full X11 framebuffer from the X  server  and
              push  it  out  to connected viewers.  Use of X should be rare, please report a bug if you find you
              need it. 8= applies only for -8to24 mode: it sets how often the non-default visual regions of  the
              screen (e.g. 8bpp windows) are refreshed.  Examples: -fixscreen V=10 -fixscreen C=10

       -debug_scroll

              Turn  on  debugging  info  printout  for  the  scroll  heuristics.  "-ds" is an alias.  Specify it
              multiple times for more output.

       -noxrecord

              Disable any use of the RECORD extension.  This is currently used by the -scrollcopyrect scheme and
              to monitor X server grabs.

       -grab_buster, -nograb_buster

              Some of the use of the RECORD extension can leave a tiny window for XGrabServer deadlock.  This is
              only if the whole-server grabbing application expects mouse or keyboard input before releasing the
              grab.  It is usually a window manager that does this.  x11vnc takes care to avoid the problem, but
              if caught x11vnc will freeze.  Without -grab_buster, the only  solution  is  to  go  the  physical
              display  and  give  it  some  input to satisfy the grabbing app.  Or manually kill and restart the
              window manager if that is feasible.  With -grab_buster, x11vnc will fork a helper  thread  and  if
              x11vnc  appears  to be stuck in a grab after a period of time (20-30 sec) then it will inject some
              user input: button clicks, Escape, mouse motion, etc to try to break the grab.  If you  experience
              a lot of grab deadlock, please report a bug.

       -debug_grabs

              Turn on debugging info printout with respect to XGrabServer() deadlock for -scrollcopyrect__mode_.

       -debug_sel

              Turn on debugging info printout with respect to PRIMARY, CLIPBOARD, and CUTBUFFER0 selections.

       -pointer_mode n

              Various pointer motion update schemes. "-pm" is an alias.  The problem is pointer motion can cause
              rapid  changes  on  the  screen:  consider  the  rapid changes when you drag a large window around
              opaquely.  Neither x11vnc's screen polling and vnc compression routines nor the bandwidth  to  the
              vncviewers  can  keep  up  these  rapid  screen changes: everything will bog down when dragging or
              scrolling.  So a scheme has to be used to "eat" much of that pointer input before  re-polling  the
              screen and sending out framebuffer updates. The mode number n can be 0 to 4 and selects one of the
              schemes described below.

              Note  that  the  -wireframe and -scrollcopyrect__mode_s complement -pointer_mode by detecting (and
              improving) certain periods of "rapid screen change".

              n=0: does the same as -nodragging. (all screen polling is suspended if a mouse button is pressed.)

              n=1: was the original scheme used to about Jan 2004: it basically just skips -input_skip  keyboard
              or pointer events before repolling the screen.

              n=2  is  an improved scheme: by watching the current rate of input events it tries to detect if it
              should try to "eat" additional pointer events before continuing.

              n=3 is basically a dynamic -nodragging mode: it detects when the mouse motion has paused and  then
              refreshes the display.

              n=4  attempts  to measures network rates and latency, the video card read rate, and how many tiles
              have been changed on the screen.  From this, it aggressively tries to push screen "frames" when it
              decides it has enough resources to do so.  NOT FINISHED.

              The default n is 2. Note that modes 2, 3, 4 will skip -input_skip keyboard events (but it will not
              count pointer events).  Also note that these modes are not available in -threads  mode  which  has
              its own pointer event handling mechanism.

              To try out the different pointer modes to see which one gives the best response for your usage, it
              is  convenient  to use the remote control function, for example "x11vnc -R pm:4" or the tcl/tk gui
              (Tuning -> pointer_mode -> n).

       -input_skip n

              For the pointer handling when non-threaded: try to  read  n  user  input  events  before  scanning
              display. n < 0 means to act as though there is always user input.  Default: 10

       -allinput

              Have x11vnc read and process all available client input before proceeding.

       -input_eagerly

              Similar to -allinput but use the handleEventsEagerly mechanism built into LibVNCServer.

       -multiptr

              Enable  support  for  per-client  input  devices. Each client will get its own cursor and keyboard
              focus.

       -speeds rd,bw,lat

              x11vnc tries to estimate some  speed  parameters  that  are  used  to  optimize  scheduling  (e.g.
              -pointer_mode  4,  -wireframe,  -scrollcopyrect)  and other things.  Use the -speeds option to set
              these manually.  The triple rd,bw,lat corresponds to  video  h/w  read  rate  in  MB/sec,  network
              bandwidth  to clients in KB/sec, and network latency to clients in milliseconds, respectively.  If
              a value is left blank, e.g. "-speeds ,100,15", then the internal scheme is used  to  estimate  the
              empty value(s).

              Typical  PC  video  cards  have  read  rates of 5-10 MB/sec.  If the framebuffer is in main memory
              instead of video h/w (e.g. SunRay, shadowfb, dummy driver,  Xvfb),  the  read  rate  may  be  much
              faster.   "x11perf -getimage500" can be used to get a lower bound (remember to factor in the bytes
              per pixel).  It is up to you to estimate the network bandwidth and latency to  clients.   For  the
              latency the ping(1) command can be used.

              For  convenience  there are some aliases provided, e.g. "-speeds modem".  The aliases are: "modem"
              for 6,4,200; "dsl" for 6,100,50; and "lan" for 6,5000,1

       -wmdt string

              For some features, e.g. -wireframe and -scrollcopyrect, x11vnc  has  to  work  around  issues  for
              certain  window managers or desktops (currently kde and xfce).  By default it tries to guess which
              one, but it can guess incorrectly.  Use this option  to  indicate  which  wm/dt.   string  can  be
              "gnome", "kde", "cde", "xfce", or "root" (classic X wm).  Anything else is interpreted as "root".

       -debug_pointer

              Print debugging output for every pointer event.

       -debug_keyboard

              Print debugging output for every keyboard event.

       Same as -dp and -dk, respectively.  Use multiple times for more output.

       -defer time

              Time in ms to delay sending updates to connected clients (deferUpdateTime)  Default: 20

       -wait time

              Time in ms to pause between screen polls.  Used to cut down on load.  Default: 20

       -extra_fbur n

              Perform  extra  FrameBufferUpdateRequests  checks  to  try  to be in better sync with the client's
              requests.  What this does is perform extra polls of the client socket at  critical  times  (before
              '-defer' and '-wait' calls.)  The default is n=1.  Set to a larger number to insert more checks or
              set  to n=0 to disable.  A downside of these extra calls is that more mouse input may be processed
              than desired.

       -wait_ui factor

              Factor by which to cut the -wait time if there has been recent user input (pointer  or  keyboard).
              Improves  response,  but increases the load whenever you are moving the mouse or typing.  Default:
              2.00

       -setdefer n

              When the -wait_ui mechanism cuts down the wait time ms, set the defer time to the same  ms  value.
              n=1  to  enable,  0 to disable, and -1 to set defer to 0 (no delay).  Similarly, 2 and -2 indicate
              'urgent_update' mode should be used to push the updates even sooner.  Default: 1

       -nowait_bog

              Do not detect if the screen polling is "bogging down" and sleep more.   Some  activities  with  no
              user  input can slow things down a lot: consider a large terminal window with a long build running
              in it continuously streaming text output.  By default x11vnc will try to  detect  this  (3  screen
              polls  in  a  row  each  longer than 0.25 sec with no user input), and sleep up to 1.5 secs to let
              things "catch up".  Use this option to disable that detection.

       -slow_fb time

              Floating point time in seconds to delay all screen polling.  For special purpose usage where a low
              frame rate is acceptable and desirable, but you want the user input processed at the  normal  rate
              so you cannot use -wait.

       -xrefresh time

              Floating  point time in seconds to indicate how often to do the equivalent of xrefresh(1) to force
              all windows (in the viewable area if -id, -sid, or -clip is used) to repaint themselves.  Use this
              only if applications misbehave by not repainting themselves properly.  See also -noxdamage.

       -nap, -nonap

              Monitor activity and if it is low take longer naps between screen polls to really  cut  down  load
              when idle.  Default: take naps

       -sb time

              Time  in  seconds  after  NO activity (e.g. screen blank) to really throttle down the screen polls
              (i.e. sleep for about 1.5 secs). Use 0 to disable.  Default: 60 Set the env. var. X11VNC_SB_FACTOR
              to scale it.

       -readtimeout n

              Set LibVNCServer rfbMaxClientWait to n seconds. On slow links that take a long time to  paint  the
              first screen LibVNCServer may hit the timeout and drop the connection.  Default: 20 seconds.

       -ping n

              Send  a  1x1  framebuffer  update  to  all  clients every n seconds (e.g. to try to keep a network
              connection alive)

       -nofbpm, -fbpm

              If the system supports the FBPM (Frame Buffer Power Management) extension (i.e. some Sun systems),
              then prevent the video h/w from going into a reduced power state when VNC clients are connected.

              FBPM capable video h/w save energy when the workstation is idle by going  into  low  power  states
              (similar to DPMS for monitors).  This interferes with x11vnc's polling of the framebuffer data.

              "-nofbpm"  means  prevent  FBPM low power states whenever VNC clients are connected, while "-fbpm"
              means to not monitor the FBPM state at all.  See the xset(1)  manpage  for  details.   -nofbpm  is
              basically the same as running "xset fbpm force on" periodically.  Default: -fbpm

       -nodpms, -dpms

              If  the  system supports the DPMS (Display Power Management Signaling) extension, then prevent the
              monitor from going into a reduced power state when VNC clients are connected.

              DPMS reduced power monitor states are a good thing and you normally want the power  down  to  take
              place (usually x11vnc has no problem exporting the display in this state).  You probably only want
              to  use  "-nodpms" to work around problems with Screen Savers kicking on in DPMS low power states.
              There is known problem with kdesktop_lock on KDE where the screen saver  keeps  kicking  in  every
              time user input stops for a second or two.  Specifying "-nodpms" works around it.

              "-nodpms"  means  prevent  DPMS low power states whenever VNC clients are connected, while "-dpms"
              means to not monitor the DPMS state at all.  See the xset(1)  manpage  for  details.   -nodpms  is
              basically the same as running "xset dpms force on" periodically.  Default: -dpms

       -forcedpms

              If  the  system supports the DPMS (Display Power Management Signaling) extension, then try to keep
              the monitor in a powered off state.  This is to prevent nosey people at the physical display  from
              viewing what is on the screen.  Be sure to lock the screen before disconnecting.

              This  method  is far from bullet proof, e.g. suppose someone attaches a non-DPMS monitor, or loads
              the machine so that there is a gap of time before x11vnc restores the powered off state?  On  many
              machines if he floods it with keyboard and mouse input he can see flashes of what is on the screen
              before  the  DPMS  off  state  is reestablished.  For this to work securely there would need to be
              support in the X server to do this exactly rather than approximately with DPMS.

       -clientdpms

              As -forcedpms but only when VNC clients are connected.

       -noserverdpms

              The UltraVNC ServerInput extension is supported.  This allows the VNC viewer  to  click  a  button
              that  will  cause  the  server (x11vnc) to try to disable keyboard and mouse input at the physical
              display and put the monitor in dpms powered off state.  Use this option to skip powering  off  the
              monitor.

       -noultraext

              Disable  the  following  UltraVNC extensions: SingleWindow and ServerInput.  The others managed by
              LibVNCServer (textchat, 1/n scaling, rfbEncodingUltra) are not.

       -chatwindow

              Place a local UltraVNC chat window on the X11 display that x11vnc is polling.  That way the person
              on the VNC viewer-side can chat with the person at the physical X11 console.  (e.g.  helpdesk  w/o
              telephone)

              For this to work the SSVNC package (version 1.0.21 or later) MUST BE installed on the system where
              x11vnc runs and the 'ssvnc' command must be available in $PATH.  The ssvncviewer is used as a chat
              window helper.  See http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/ssvnc.html

              This  option implies '-rfbversion 3.6' so as to trick UltraVNC viewers, otherwise they assume chat
              is not available.  To specify a different rfbversion, place it after the -chatwindow option on the
              cmdline.

              See also the remote control 'chaton' and 'chatoff' actions.   These  can  also  be  set  from  the
              tkx11vnc GUI.

       -noxdamage

              Do  not  use  the  X  DAMAGE extension to detect framebuffer changes even if it is available.  Use
              -xdamage if your default is to have it off.

              x11vnc's use of the DAMAGE extension: 1) significantly reduces the load when  the  screen  is  not
              changing much, and 2) detects changed areas (small ones by default) more quickly.

              Currently  the DAMAGE extension is overly conservative and often reports large areas (e.g. a whole
              terminal or browser window) as damaged even though the  actual  changed  region  is  much  smaller
              (sometimes  just  a  few  pixels).   So heuristics were introduced to skip large areas and use the
              damage rectangles only as "hints" for the traditional  scanline  polling.   The  following  tuning
              parameters are introduced to adjust this behavior:

       -xd_area A

              Set the largest DAMAGE rectangle area A (in pixels: width * height) to trust as truly damaged: the
              rectangle  will  be copied from the framebuffer (slow) no matter what.  Set to zero to trust *all*
              rectangles. Default: 20000

       -xd_mem f

              Set how long DAMAGE rectangles should be "remembered", f is a floating  point  number  and  is  in
              units  of  the  scanline  repeat  cycle  time  (32  iterations).  The default (1.0) should give no
              painting problems. Increase it if there are problems or decrease it to live on the  edge  (perhaps
              useful on a slow machine).

       -sigpipe string

              Broken pipe (SIGPIPE) handling.  string can be "ignore" or "exit".  For "ignore" LibVNCServer will
              handle  the  abrupt  loss of a client and continue, for "exit" x11vnc will cleanup and exit at the
              1st broken connection.

              This option is not really needed since LibVNCServer is doing the correct thing now for quite  some
              time.   However,  for  convenience  you  can  use  it  to  ignore  other  signals,  e.g. "-sigpipe
              ignore:HUP,INT,TERM" in case that would be useful for some sort of application.  You can also  put
              "exit:.."  in  the  list to have x11vnc cleanup on the listed signals. "-sig" is an alias for this
              option if you don't like the 'pipe'. Example: -sig ignore:INT,TERM,exit:USR1

       -threads, -nothreads

              Whether or not to use the threaded  LibVNCServer  algorithm  [rfbRunEventLoop]  if  libpthread  is
              available.  In this mode new threads (one for input and one for output) are created to handle each
              new client.  Default: -nothreads.

              Thread stability is much improved in version 0.9.8.

              Multiple  clients  in  threaded mode should be stable for the ZRLE encoding on all platforms.  The
              Tight and Zlib encodings are currently only stable on Linux for multiple  clients.   Compile  with
              -DTLS=__thread if your OS and compiler and linker support it.

              For  resizes  (randr,  etc.)  set  this  env.  var.  to  the  number  of  milliseconds  to  sleep:
              X11VNC_THREADS_NEW_FB_SLEEP at various places in the do_new_fb() action.  This is to  let  various
              activities settle.  Default is about 500ms.

              Multiple  clients  in  threaded  mode could yield better performance for 'class-room' broadcasting
              usage; also in -appshare broadcast mode.  See also the -reflect option.

       -fs f

              If the fraction of changed tiles in a poll is  greater  than  f,  the  whole  screen  is  updated.
              Default: 0.75

       -gaps n

              Heuristic  to  fill  in  gaps  in  rows  or cols of n or less tiles.  Used to improve text paging.
              Default: 4

       -grow n

              Heuristic to grow islands of changed tiles n or wider by checking  the  tile  near  the  boundary.
              Default: 3

       -fuzz n

              Tolerance in pixels to mark a tiles edges as changed.  Default: 2

       -debug_tiles

              Print debugging output for tiles, fb updates, etc.

       -snapfb

              Instead  of polling the X display framebuffer (fb) for changes, periodically copy all of X display
              fb into main memory and examine that copy for changes.   (This  setting  also  applies  for  non-X
              -rawfb  modes).  Under some circumstances this will improve interactive response, or at least make
              things look smoother, but in others (most!) it will make the response worse.  If the video h/w  fb
              is  such  that  reading small tiles is very slow this mode could help.  To keep the "framerate" up
              the screen size x bpp cannot be too large.  Note that this mode is very  wasteful  of  memory  I/O
              resources  (it  makes  full  screen  copies  even  if nothing changes).  It may be of use in video
              capture-like applications, webcams, or where window tearing is a problem.

       -rawfb string

              Instead of polling X, poll the memory object specified in string.

              For file polling, to memory map mmap(2) a file use: "map:/path/to/a/file@WxHxB", with  framebuffer
              Width, Height, and Bits per pixel.  "mmap:..." is the same.

              If there is trouble with mmap, use "file:/..."  for slower lseek(2) based reading.

              Use  "snap:..."  to imply -snapfb mode and the "file:" access (this is for unseekable devices that
              only provide the fb all at once, e.g. a video camera provides the whole frame).

              For shared memory segments string is of the form: "shm:N@WxHxB" which specifies a shmid N and with
              WxHxB as above.  See shmat(1) and ipcs(1)

              If you do not supply a type "map" is assumed if the file exists (see the next paragraphs for  some
              exceptions to this.)

              If  string  is  "setup:cmd",  then the command "cmd" is run and the first line from it is read and
              used as string.  This allows initializing the device, determining WxHxB, etc. These are often done
              as root so take care.

              If the string begins with "video", see the VIDEO4LINUX discussion below where the  device  may  be
              queried for (and possibly set) the framebuffer parameters.

              If  the  string  begins with "console", "/dev/fb", "fb", or "vt", see the LINUX CONSOLE discussion
              below where the framebuffer device is opened  and  keystrokes  (and  possibly  mouse  events)  are
              inserted into the console.

              If  the string begins with "vnc", see the VNC HOST discussion below where the framebuffer is taken
              as that of another remote VNC server.

              Optional suffixes are ":R/G/B" and "+O" to specify red, green, and blue  masks  (in  hex)  and  an
              offset into the memory object.  If the masks are not provided x11vnc guesses them based on the bpp
              (if the colors look wrong, you need to provide the masks.)

              Another  optional  suffix  is  the Bytes Per Line which in some cases is not WxB/8.  Specify it as
              WxHxB-BPL e.g. 800x600x16-2048.  This could be a normal width 1024 at 16bpp fb, but only width 800
              shows up.

              So the full format is: mode:file@WxHxB:R/G/B+O-BPL

              Examples:

              -rawfb shm:210337933@800x600x32:ff/ff00/ff0000

              -rawfb map:/dev/fb0@1024x768x32

              -rawfb map:/tmp/Xvfb_screen0@640x480x8+3232

              -rawfb file:/tmp/my.pnm@250x200x24+37

              -rawfb file:/dev/urandom@128x128x8 -rawfb snap:/dev/video0@320x240x24 -24to32 -rawfb video0 -rawfb
              video -pipeinput VID -rawfb console -rawfb vt2 -rawfb vnc:somehost:0

              (see ipcs(1) and fbset(1) for the first two examples)

              In general all user input is discarded by default (see the -pipeinput option  for  how  to  use  a
              helper  program  to  insert).  Most of the X11 (screen, keyboard, mouse) options do not make sense
              and many will cause this mode to crash, so please think twice before setting or changing them in a
              running x11vnc.

              If you  DO  NOT  want  x11vnc  to  close  the  X  DISPLAY  in  rawfb  mode,  prepend  a  "+"  e.g.
              +file:/dev/fb0...   Keeping  the  display  open  enables the default remote-control channel, which
              could be useful.  Alternatively, if you specify -noviewonly, then the mouse and keyboard input are
              STILL sent to the X display, this usage should be very rare, i.e.  doing  something  strange  with
              /dev/fb0.

              If  the  device  is  not "seekable" (e.g. webcam) try reading it all at once in full snaps via the
              "snap:" mode (note: this is a resource hog).  If you are using file: or map: AND the device  needs
              to  be reopened for *every* snapfb snapshot, set the environment variable: SNAPFB_RAWFB_RESET=1 as
              well.

              If you want x11vnc to dynamically transform a 24bpp rawfb to 32bpp (note that this will be slower)
              also supply the -24to32 option.  This would be useful for, say, a video camera that  delivers  the
              pixel data as 24bpp packed RGB.  This is the default under "video" mode if the bpp is 24.

              Normally the bits per pixel, B, is 8, 16, or 32 (or rarely 24), however there is also some support
              for B < 8 (e.g. old graphics displays 4 bpp or 1 bpp).  In this case you certainly must supply the
              masks  as well: WxHxB:R/G/B.  The pixels will be padded out to 8 bpp using depth 8 truecolor.  The
              scheme currently does not  work  with  snap  fb  (ask  if  interested.)  B=1  monochrome  example:
              file:/dev/urandom@128x128x1:1/1/1 Some other like this are 128x128x2:3/3/3 128x128x4:7/7/7

              For  B  <  8  framebuffers  you can also set the env. var RAWFB_CGA=1 to try a CGA mapping for B=4
              (e.g. linux vga16fb driver.)  Note with low bpp and/or resolution VGA and VGA16 modes on the Linux
              console one's attempt to export them via x11vnc  can  often  be  thwarted  due  to  special  color
              palettes,  pixel  packings, and even video painting buffering.  OTOH, often experimenting with the
              RGB masks can yield something recognizable.

              VIDEO4LINUX: on Linux some attempt is  made  to  handle  video  devices  (webcams  or  TV  tuners)
              automatically.   The idea is the WxHxB will be extracted from the device itself.  So if you do not
              supply "@WxHxB...  parameters x11vnc will try to determine them.  It first tries the  v4l  API  if
              that  support has been compiled in.  Otherwise it will run the v4l- info(1) external program if it
              is available.

              The simplest examples are  "-rawfb  video"  and  "-rawfb  video1"  which  imply  the  device  file
              /dev/video  and /dev/video1, respectively.  You can also supply the /dev if you like, e.g. "-rawfb
              /dev/video0"

              Since  the  video  capture  device  framebuffer  usually  changes  continuously  (e.g.  brightness
              fluctuations), you may want to use the -wait, -slow_fb, or -defer options to lower the "framerate"
              to cut down on network VNC traffic.

              A more sophisticated video device scheme allows initializing the device's settings using:

              -rawfb video:<settings>

              The  prefix  could also be, as above, e.g. "video1:" to specify the device file.  The v4l API must
              be available for this to work.  Otherwise, you will need to try to initialize the device  with  an
              external program, e.g. xawtv, spcaview, and hope they persist when x11vnc re-opens the device.

              <settings>  is  a  comma  separated  list  of  key=value  pairs.   The device's brightness, color,
              contrast, and hue can be set to percentages, e.g. br=80,co=50,cn=44,hu=60.

              The device filename can be  set  too  if  needed  (if  it  does  not  start  with  "video"),  e.g.
              fn=/dev/qcam.

              The width, height and bpp of the framebuffer can be set via, e.g., w=160,h=120,bpp=16.

              Related  to  the  bpp above, the pixel format can be set via the fmt=XXX, where XXX can be one of:
              GREY, HI240, RGB555, RGB565, RGB24, and RGB32 (with bpp 8, 8, 16, 16, 24,  and  32  respectively).
              See http://www.linuxtv.org for more info (V4L api).

              For  TV/rf  tuner cards one can set the tuning mode via tun=XXX where XXX can be one of PAL, NTSC,
              SECAM, or AUTO.

              One can switch the input channel by the inp=XXX setting, where  XXX  is  the  name  of  the  input
              channel (Television, Composite1, S-Video, etc).  Use the name that is in the information about the
              device that is printed at startup.

              For  input  channels with tuners (e.g. Television) one can change which station is selected by the
              sta=XXX setting.  XXX is the station number.  Currently only the ntsc-cable-us (US cable) channels
              are built into x11vnc.  See the -freqtab option below to supply one from xawtv. If XXX is  greater
              than 500, then it is interpreted as a raw frequency in KHz.

              Example:

              -rawfb video:br=80,w=320,h=240,fmt=RGB32,tun=NTSC,sta=47

              one  might  need to add inp=Television too for the input channel to be TV if the card doesn't come
              up by default in that one.

              Note that not all video capture devices will support all of the above settings.

              See the -pipeinput VID option below for a way to control the settings through the VNC  Viewer  via
              keystrokes.   As  a  shortcut, if the string begins "Video.." instead of "video.." then -pipeinput
              VID is implied.

              As above, if you specify a "@WxHxB..." after the <settings> string they  are  used  verbatim:  the
              device is not queried for the current values.  Otherwise the device will be queried.

              LINUX  CONSOLE:   The  following  describes some ways to view and possibly interact with the Linux
              text/graphics console (i.e. not X11 XFree86/Xorg)

              Note: If the LibVNCServer LinuxVNC program is on your system you may want to use that  instead  of
              the  following  method  because it will be faster and more accurate for the Linux text console and
              includes mouse support.  There is, however, the basic LinuxVNC  functionality  in  x11vnc  if  you
              replace "console" with "vt" in the examples below.

              If  the rawfb string begins with "console" the framebuffer device /dev/fb0 is opened and /dev/tty0
              is opened too.  The latter is used to inject keystrokes (not all are supported, but the basic ones
              are).  You will need to be root to inject  keystrokes,  but  not  necessarily  to  open  /dev/fb0.
              /dev/tty0  refers  to  the  active  VT,  to  indicate  one  explicitly,  use, e.g., "console2" for
              /dev/tty2, etc. by indicating the specific VT number.

              For the Linux framebuffer device, /dev/fb0, (fb1,  etc)  to  be  enabled  the  appropriate  kernel
              drivers  must  be loaded.  E.g. vesafb or vga16fb and also by setting the boot parameter vga=0x301
              (or 0x314, 0x317, etc.)  (The vga=... method is the preferred way; set your machines up that way.)
              Otherwise there will be a 'No such device' error.  You can also load a  Linux  framebuffer  driver
              specific  to  your  make of video card for more functionality.  Once the machine is booted one can
              often 'modprobe' the fb driver as root to obtain a framebuffer device.

              If you cannot get /dev/fb0 working on Linux, try using the LinuxVNC emulation mode by "-rawfb vtN"
              where N = 1, ... 6 is the Linux Virtual Terminal (aka virtual console)  you  wish  to  view,  e.g.
              "-rawfb  vt2".   Unlike  /dev/fb mode, it need not be the active Virtual Terminal.  Note that this
              mode can only show text and not graphics.  x11vnc polls the text in /dev/vcsaN

              Set the env. var. RAWFB_VCSA_BW=1 to disable colors in the "vtN" mode (i.e. black and white only.)
              If you do not prefer the default 16bpp set RAWFB_VCSA_BPP to 8 or 32.  If you need  to  tweak  the
              rawfb  parameters  by using the 'console_guess' string printed at startup, be sure to indicate the
              snap: method.

              uinput: If the Linux version appears to be 2.6 or later and the  "uinput"  module  appears  to  be
              present  (modprobe  uinput),  then  the  uinput  method will be used instead of /dev/ttyN.  uinput
              allows insertion of BOTH keystrokes and mouse input and so it preferred when  accessing  graphical
              (e.g.  QT-embedded)  linux console apps.  It also provides more accurate keystroke insertion.  See
              -pipeinput UINPUT below for more information on this mode; you will have to use -pipeinput if  you
              want  to  tweak  any UINPUT parameters.  You may also want to also use the -nodragging and -cursor
              none options.  Use "console0", etc  or -pipeinput CONSOLE to force the /dev/ttyN method.

              Note you can change the Linux VT remotely using the chvt(1) command to make the one  you  want  be
              the  active  one  (e.g.  'chvt  3').   Sometimes switching out and back corrects the framebuffer's
              graphics state.  For the "-rawfb vtN" mode there is no need to switch the VT's.

              To skip input injecting entirely use "consolex" or "vtx".

              The string "/dev/fb0" (1, etc.) can be used instead of "console".  This can be used to  specify  a
              different  framebuffer  device,  e.g. /dev/fb1.  As a shortcut the "/dev/" can be dropped.  If the
              name is something nonstandard, use "console:/dev/foofb"

              If you do not want x11vnc to guess the framebuffer's WxHxB and masks automatically (sometimes  the
              kernel gives incorrect information), specify them with a @WxHxB (and optional :R/G/B masks) at the
              end of the string.

              Examples:  -rawfb  console  -rawfb  /dev/fb0            (same)  -rawfb  console3            (force
              /dev/tty3) -rawfb consolex           (no keystrokes or mouse)  -rawfb  console:/dev/nonstd  -rawfb
              console -pipeinput UINPUT:accel=4.0 -rawfb vt3                (/dev/tty3 w/o /dev/fb0)

              VNC  HOST: if the -rawfb string is of the form "vnc:host:N" then the VNC display "N" on the remote
              VNC server "host" is connected to (i.e. x11vnc acts as a VNC client itself) and  that  framebuffer
              is exported.

              This mode is really only of use if you are trying to improve performance in the case of many (e.g.
              >  10)  simultaneous  VNC viewers, and you try a divide and conquer scheme to reduce bandwidth and
              improve responsiveness.  (However, another user found this mode useful to export  a  demo  display
              through  a  slow  link:  then multiple demo viewers connected to the reflecting x11vnc on the fast
              side of the link, and so avoided all of the demo viewers going through the slow link.)

              For example, if there will be 64 simultaneous VNC viewers this can lead to a lot of redundant  VNC
              traffic to and from the server host:N, extra CPU usage, and all viewers response can be reduced by
              having  to  wait  for  writes  to  the  slowest  client  to  finish.   However,  if  you  set up 8
              reflectors/repeaters started with option -rawfb vnc:host:N, then there are only 8  connections  to
              host:N.   Each  repeater  then handles 8 vnc viewer connections thereby spreading the load around.
              In classroom broadcast usage, try to put the repeaters on different switches.  This  mode  is  the
              same as -reflect host:N.  Replace "host:N" by "listen" or "listen:port" for a reverse connection.

              Overall performance will not be as good as a single direct connection because, among other things,
              there  is  an  additional  level  of  framebuffer polling and pointer motion can still induce many
              changes per second that must be propagated.  Tip: if the remote VNC is x11vnc  doing  wireframing,
              or an X display that does wireframing that gives much better response than opaque window dragging.
              Consider the -nodragging option if the problem is severe.

              The  env.  var. X11VNC_REFLECT_PASSWORD can be set to the password needed to log into the vnc host
              server, or to "file:path_to_file" to indicate a file containing the password as its first line.

              To  set  the  pixel  format  that  x11vnc  requests  as  a  VNC  CLIENT   set   the   env.   vars:
              X11VNC_REFLECT_bitsPerSample X11VNC_REFLECT_samplesPerPixel, and X11VNC_REFLECT_bytesPerPixel; the
              defaults  are  8,  3, 4.  2, 3, 1 would give a low color mode.  See the function rfbGetClient() in
              libvncclient for more info.

              The VNC HOST mode implies -shared.  Use -noshared  as  a  subsequent  cmdline  option  to  disable
              sharing.

       -freqtab file

              For use with "-rawfb video" for TV tuner devices to specify station frequencies.  Instead of using
              the  built  in  ntsc-cable-us  mapping  of station number to frequency, use the data in file.  For
              stations that are not numeric, e.g. SE20, they are placed above the highest  numbered  station  in
              the  order  they  are  found.  Example: "-freqtab /usr/X11R6/share/xawtv/europe-west.list" You can
              make your own freqtab by copying the xawtv format.

       -pipeinput cmd

              This option lets you supply an external command in cmd that x11vnc will pipe all of the user input
              events to in a simple format.  In -pipeinput mode by default x11vnc will not process  any  of  the
              user  input  events.  If you prefix cmd with "tee:" it will both send them to the pipe command and
              process them.  For a description of the format run "-pipeinput tee:/bin/cat".  Another  prefix  is
              "reopen" which means to reopen pipe if it exits.  Separate multiple prefixes with commas.

              In  combination  with  -rawfb one might be able to do amusing things (e.g. control non-X devices).
              To facilitate this, if -rawfb is in effect then the value is stored in  X11VNC_RAWFB_STR  for  the
              pipe command to use if it wants. Do 'env | grep X11VNC' for more.

              Built-in pipeinput modes (no external program required):

              If  cmd is "VID" and you are using the -rawfb for a video capture device, then an internal list of
              keyboard mappings is used to set parameters of the video.  The mappings are:

              "B" and "b" adjust the brightness up and down.  "H" and "h" adjust the hue.  "C"  and  "c"  adjust
              the  colour.  "N" and "n" adjust the contrast.  "S" and "s" adjust the size of the capture screen.
              "I" and "i" cycle through input channels.  Up and Down arrows adjust the station (if a tuner)  F1,
              F2, ..., F6 will switch the video capture pixel format to HI240, RGB565, RGB24, RGB32, RGB555, and
              GREY respectively.  See -rawfb video for details.

              If  cmd  is  "CONSOLE"  or  "CONSOLEn"  where  n is a Linux console number, then the linux console
              keystroke insertion to /dev/ttyN (see -rawfb console) is performed.

              If cmd begins with "UINPUT" then the Linux uinput module is used  to  insert  both  keystroke  and
              mouse  events  to  the  Linux  console  (see -rawfb above).  This usually is the /dev/input/uinput
              device file (you may need to create it with "mknod /dev/input/uinput c  10  223"  and  insert  the
              module with "modprobe uinput".

              The  UINPUT  mode  currently only does US keyboards (a scan code option may be added), and not all
              keysyms are supported.  But it is probably more accurate than the "CONSOLE" method.

              You may want to use the options -cursor none and -nodragging in this mode.

              Additional tuning options may be supplied via: UINPUT:opt1,opt2,... (a comma separated  list).  If
              an option begins with "/" it is taken as the uinput device file.

              Which  uinput  is  injected can be controlled by an option string made of the characters "K", "M",
              and "B" (see the -input option), e.g. "KM" allows keystroke and motion but not button clicks.

              A UINPUT option of the form: accel=f, or accel=fx+fy sets the mouse motion  "acceleration".   This
              is  used  to  correct raw mouse relative motion into how much the application cursor moves (x11vnc
              has no control over, or knowledge of how  the  windowing  application  interprets  the  raw  mouse
              motions).   Typically  the  acceleration  for  an  X display is 2 (see xset "m" option).  "f" is a
              floating point number, e.g. 3.0.  Use "fx+fy" if you need to supply different  corrections  for  x
              and y.

              Note: the default acceleration is 2.0 since it seems both X and qt-embedded often (but not always)
              use this value.

              Even with a correct accel setting the mouse position will get out of sync (probably due to a mouse
              "threshold"  setting where the acceleration doe not apply, set xset(1) ).  The option reset=N sets
              the number of ms (default 150) after which the cursor is attempted to be  reset  (by  forcing  the
              mouse to (0, 0) via small increments and then back out to (x, y) in 1 jump), This correction seems
              to  be  needed  but  can  cause  jerkiness or unexpected behavior with menus, etc.  Use reset=0 to
              disable.

              If you set the env. var X11VNC_UINPUT_THRESHOLDS then the thresh=n mode will be  enabled.   It  is
              currently  not working well.  If |dx| <= thresh and |dy| < thresh no acceleration is applied.  Use
              "thresh=+n" |dx| + |dy| < thresh to be used instead (X11?)

              Example: -pipeinput UINPUT:accel=4.0 -cursor none

              If the uinput device has an absolute pointer (as opposed to a normal  mouse  that  is  a  relative
              pointer) you can specify the option "abs".  Note that a touchpad on a laptop is an absolute device
              to  some  degree.   This (usually) avoids all the problems with mouse acceleration.  If x11vnc has
              trouble deducing the size of  the  device,  use  "abs=WxH".   Furthermore,  if  the  device  is  a
              touchscreen  (assumed  to have an absolute pointer) use "touch" or "touch=WxH".  For touchscreens,
              when a mouse button is pressed, a pressure increase is injected, and when the button is released a
              pressure of zero is injected.

              If touch has been set, use "touch_always=1" to indicate whenever the mouse moves  with  no  button
              pressed, a touch event of zero pressure should be sent anyway.  Also use "btn_touch=1" to indicate
              a  BTN_TOUCH  keystroke  press  or  release  should  be  sent  instead  of a pressure change.  Set
              "dragskip=n" to skip n dragged mouse touches (with pressure applied)  before  injecting  one.   To
              indicate  the  pressure that should be sent when there is a button click for a touchscreen device,
              specify pressure=n, e.g. n=5. The default is n=1.

              If a touch screen is being used ("touch" above) and it is having its input processed by tslib, you
              can   specify   the   tslib    calibration    file    via    tslib_cal=<file>.     For    example,
              tslib_cal=/etc/pointercal.  To get accurate or even usable positioning this is required when tslib
              is in use.

              The  Linux uinput mechanism can be bypassed and one can write input events DIRECTLY to the devices
              instead.   To  do  this,  specify  one  or  more  of  the  following  for   the   input   classes:
              direct_rel=<device>  direct_abs=<device> direct_btn=<device> or direct_key=<device>.  The <device>
              file is usually something like /dev/input/event1 but you can specify any device file or pipe.  You
              must specify each one of the above classes even  if  they  correspond  to  the  same  device  file
              (rel/abs  and  btn  are  often the same.)  Look at the file /proc/bus/input/devices to get an idea
              what is available and the device filenames.  Note: The /dev/input/mouse* devices do  not  seem  to
              work,  use  the  corresponding  /dev/input/event*  file  instead.   Any  input  class not directly
              specified as above will be handled via the uinput mechanism.  To disable creating a uinput  device
              (and thereby discarding unhandled input), specify "nouinput".

              Examples:

              -pipeinput UINPUT:direct_abs=/dev/input/event1

              this was used on a qtmoko Neo freerunner (armel):

              -pipeinput                                                 UINPUT:touch,tslib_cal=/etc/pointercal,
              direct_abs=/dev/input/event1,nouinput,dragskip=4

              (where the long line has been split into two.)

              You can set the env. var X11VNC_UINPUT_DEBUG=1 or higher to get debugging output for UINPUT mode.

       -macnodim

              For the native MacOSX server, disable dimming.

       -macnosleep

              For the native MacOSX server, disable display sleep.

       -macnosaver

              For the native MacOSX server, disable screensaver.

       -macnowait

              For the native MacOSX server, do not wait for the user to switch back to his display.

       -macwheel n

              For the native MacOSX server, set the mouse wheel speed to n (default 5).

       -macnoswap

              For the native MacOSX server, do not swap mouse buttons 2 and 3.

       -macnoresize

              For the native MacOSX server, do not resize or reset the framebuffer even if it is  detected  that
              the screen resolution or depth has changed.

       -maciconanim n

              For   the   native   MacOSX  server,  set  n  to  the  number  of  milliseconds  that  the  window
              iconify/deiconify animation takes.  In -ncache mode this value will be used to skip the  animation
              if possible. (default 400)

       -macmenu

              For  the  native  MacOSX server, in -ncache client-side caching mode, try to cache pull down menus
              (not perfect because they have animated fades, etc.)

       -macuskbd

              For the native MacOSX server, use the original keystroke insertion code based on a US keyboard.

       -macnoopengl

              For the native MacOSX server, do not use OpenGL for screen capture, but rather use  the  original,
              deprecated raw memory access method: addr = CGDisplayBaseAddress().

       -macnorawfb

              For the native MacOSX server, disable the raw memory address screen capture method.

              MACOSX  NOTE:  There are some deprecated MacOSX interfaces to inject keyboard and mouse events and
              the raw memory access method is deprecated as well (however, OpenGL will be preferred if available
              because it is faster.)  One can force not using any  deprecated  interfaces  at  compile  time  by
              setting   -DX11VNC_MACOSX_NO_DEPRECATED=1   in  CPPFLAGS.   Or  to  turn  them  off  one  by  one:
              -DX11VNC_MACOSX_NO_DEPRECATED_LOCALEVENTS=1,     -DX11VNC_MACOSX_NO_DEPRECATED_POSTEVENTS=1     or
              -DX11VNC_MACOSX_NO_DEPRECATED_FRAMEBUFFER=1  At  run  time,  for  testing and workarounds, one can
              disable       them       by       using:       -env       X11VNC_MACOSX_NO_DEPRECATED=1       -env
              X11VNC_MACOSX_NO_DEPRECATED_LOCALEVENTS=1  -env  X11VNC_MACOSX_NO_DEPRECATED_POSTEVENTS=1  or -env
              X11VNC_MACOSX_NO_DEPRECATED_FRAMEBUFFER=1 Note: When doing either of these for the mouse input not
              everything works currently, e.g. double clicks and wireframing.  Also, screen resolution and pixel
              depth changes will not be automatically detected unless the deprecated framebuffer interfaces  are
              allowed.

              Conversely,  if  you  are  compiling  on  an  older  machine  that does not have some of the newer
              interfaces,   you   may   need   to    specify    -DX11VNC_MACOSX_NO_CGEVENTCREATESCROLLWHEELEVENT
              -DX11VNC_MACOSX_NO_CGEVENTCREATEMOUSEEVENT  or -DX11VNC_MACOSX_NO_CGEVENTCREATEKEYBOARDEVENT.  Use
              -DX11VNC_MACOSX_USE_GETMAINDEVICE to regain  the  very  old  QuickDraw  GetMainDevice()  interface
              (rare...)

       -gui [gui-opts]

              Start  up  a simple tcl/tk gui based on the remote control options -remote/-query described below.
              Requires the "wish" program to be installed on the  machine.   "gui-opts"  is  not  required:  the
              default  is  to  start up both the full gui and x11vnc with the gui showing up on the X display in
              the environment variable DISPLAY.

              "gui-opts" can be a comma separated list of items.  Currently there are these types of items: 1) a
              gui mode, a 2) gui "simplicity", 3) the X display the gui should display on, 4) a "tray" or "icon"
              mode, and 5) a gui geometry.

              1) The gui mode can be "start", "conn", or "wait" "start" is the default mode  above  and  is  not
              required.   "conn"  means do not automatically start up x11vnc, but instead just try to connect to
              an existing x11vnc process.  "wait" means just start the gui and  nothing  else  (you  will  later
              instruct the gui to start x11vnc or connect to an existing one.)

              2)  The gui simplicity is off by default (a power-user gui with all options is presented) To start
              with something less daunting supply the string "simple" ("ez" is an alias for this).  Once the gui
              is started you can toggle between the two with "Misc -> simple_gui".

              3) Note the possible confusion regarding the potentially two different X  displays:  x11vnc  polls
              one,  but you may want the gui to appear on another.  For example, if you ssh in and x11vnc is not
              running yet you may want the gui to come back to you via  your  ssh  redirected  X  display  (e.g.
              localhost:10).

              If  you  do  not  specify  a gui X display in "gui-opts" then the DISPLAY environment variable and
              -display option are tried (in that order).  Regarding the x11vnc X display the  gui  will  try  to
              communication  with,  it  first tries -display and then DISPLAY.  For example, "x11vnc -display :0
              -gui otherhost:0", will remote control an x11vnc polling :0 and display the gui on otherhost:0 The
              "tray/icon" mode below reverses this preference, preferring to display on the x11vnc display.

              4) When "tray" or "icon" is specified, the gui presents itself  as  a  small  icon  with  behavior
              typical  of  a  "system tray" or "dock applet".  The color of the icon indicates status (connected
              clients) and there is also a balloon status.  Clicking  on  the  icon  gives  a  menu  from  which
              properties,  etc,  can  be  set  and  the  full  gui  is  available under "Advanced".  To be fully
              functional, the gui mode should be "start" (the default).

              Note that tray or icon mode will imply the -forever x11vnc option (if the x11vnc server is started
              along with the gui) unless -connect or -connect_or_exit has been specified.  So  x11vnc  (and  the
              tray/icon  gui)  will  wait  for more connections after the first client disconnects.  If you want
              only one viewer connection include the -once option.

              For "icon" the gui just a small standalone window.  For "tray" it will attempt to embed itself  in
              the  "system  tray"  if  possible.  If "=setpass" is appended then at startup the X11 user will be
              prompted to set the VNC session password.  If =<hexnumber> is appended that icon will  attempt  to
              embed  itself  in  the  window  given  by hexnumber.  Use =noadvanced to disable the full gui. (To
              supply more than one, use "+" sign).  E.g. -gui tray=setpass and -gui icon=0x3600028

              Other modes: "full", the default and need not be specified.  "-gui  none",  do  not  show  a  gui,
              useful to override a ~/.x11vncrc setting, etc.

              5)  When  "geom=+X+Y" is specified, that geometry is passed to the gui toplevel.  This is the icon
              in icon/tray mode, or the full gui otherwise.   You  can  also  specify  width  and  height,  i.e.
              WxH+X+Y, but it is not recommended.  In "tray" mode the geometry is ignored unless the system tray
              manager   does   not   seem  to  be  running.   One  could  imagine  using  something  like  "-gui
              tray,geom=+4000+4000" with a display manager to keep the gui invisible until someone logs in...

              More icon tricks, "icon=minimal" gives an icon just with the VNC display number.  You can also set
              the    font    with    "iconfont=...".     The    following     could     be     useful:     "-gui
              icon=minimal,iconfont=5x8,geom=24x10+0-0"

              General  examples  of the -gui option: "x11vnc -gui", "x11vnc -gui ez" "x11vnc -gui localhost:10",
              "x11vnc -gui conn,host:0", "x11vnc -gui tray,ez" "x11vnc -gui tray=setpass"

              If you do not intend to start x11vnc from the gui (i.e. just remote control an existing one), then
              the gui process can run on a different machine from the x11vnc server as long  as  X  permissions,
              etc. permit communication between the two.

              FONTS:  On some systems the tk fonts can be too small, jagged, or otherwise unreadable.  There are
              4 env vars you can set to be the tk font you prefer:

              X11VNC_FONT_BOLD   main font for menus and buttons.  X11VNC_FONT_FIXED  font for fixed width text.

              X11VNC_FONT_BOLD_SMALL  tray icon font.  X11VNC_FONT_REG_SMALL   tray icon menu font.

              The last two only apply for the tray icon mode.

              Here are some examples:

              -env   X11VNC_FONT_BOLD='Helvetica   -16   bold'   -env   X11VNC_FONT_FIXED='Courier   -14'   -env
              X11VNC_FONT_REG_SMALL='Helvetica -12'

              You can put the lines like the above (without the quotes) in your ~/.x11vncrc file to avoid having
              to specify them on the x11vnc command line.

       -remote command

              Remotely  control some aspects of an already running x11vnc server.  "-R" and "-r" are aliases for
              "-remote".  After the remote control command is sent to the running  server  the  'x11vnc  -remote
              ...'  x11vnc command exits.  You can often use the -query command (see below) to see if the x11vnc
              server processed your -remote command.

              The  default  communication  channel  is that of X properties (specifically X11VNC_REMOTE), and so
              this command must be run with correct settings for DISPLAY and possibly XAUTHORITY to  connect  to
              the  X server and set the property.  Alternatively, use the -display and -auth options to set them
              to the correct values.  The running server  cannot  use  the  -novncconnect  option  because  that
              disables the communication channel.  See below for alternate channels.

              For  example:  'x11vnc  -remote  stop' (which is the same as 'x11vnc -R stop') will close down the
              x11vnc server.  'x11vnc -R shared' will enable shared connections, and 'x11vnc -R scale:3/4'  will
              rescale the desktop.

              To  use  a  different  name for the X11 property (e.g. to have separate communication channels for
              multiple x11vnc's on the same display) set the X11VNC_REMOTE environment variable  to  the  string
              you  want,  for example: -env X11VNC_REMOTE=X11VNC_REMOTE_12345 Both sides of the channel must use
              the same unique name.

              To   run   a   bunch   of   commands   in   a   sequence   use   something   like:    x11vnc    -R
              'script:firstcmd;secondcmd;...'

              Use  x11vnc  -R  script:file=/path/to/file to read commands from a file (can be multi-line and use
              the comment '#' character in the normal way.  The ';' separator must still  be  used  to  separate
              each command.)

              To not try to contact another x11vnc process and instead just run the command (or query) directly,
              prefix the command with the string "DIRECT:"

              The following -remote/-R commands are supported:

              stop            terminate the server, same as "quit" "exit" or "shutdown".

              ping            see if the x11vnc server responds.  return is: ans=ping:<display>

              ping:mystring   as above, but use your own unique string.  return is: ans=ping:mystring:<xdisplay>

              blacken          try  to push a black fb update to all clients (due to timings a client could miss
              it). Same as "zero", also "zero:x1,y1,x2,y2" for a rectangle.

              refresh         send the entire fb to all clients.

              reset           recreate the fb, polling memory, etc.

              id:windowid     set -id window to "windowid". empty or "root" to go back to root window

              sid:windowid    set -sid window to "windowid"

              id_cmd:cmd      cmds: raise, lower, map, unmap, iconify, move:dXdY, resize:dWdH, geom:WxH+X+Y.  dX
              dY,  dW,  and  dH  must have a leading "+" or "-" e.g.: move:-30+10 resize:+20+35 also: wm_delete,
              wm_name:string and icon_name:string. Also id_cmd:win=N:cmd

              waitmapped      wait until subwin is mapped.

              nowaitmapped    do not wait until subwin is mapped.

              clip:WxH+X+Y    set -clip mode to "WxH+X+Y"

              flashcmap       enable  -flashcmap mode.

              noflashcmap     disable -flashcmap mode.

              shiftcmap:n     set -shiftcmap to n.

              notruecolor     enable  -notruecolor mode.

              truecolor       disable -notruecolor mode.

              overlay         enable  -overlay mode (if applicable).

              nooverlay       disable -overlay mode.

              overlay_cursor  in -overlay mode, enable cursor drawing.

              overlay_nocursor disable cursor drawing. same as nooverlay_cursor.

              8to24           enable  -8to24 mode (if applicable).

              no8to24         disable -8to24 mode.

              8to24_opts:str  set the -8to24 opts to "str".

              24to32          enable  -24to32 mode (if applicable).

              no24to32        disable -24to32 mode.

              visual:vis      set -visual to "vis"

              scale:frac      set -scale to "frac"

              scale_cursor:f  set -scale_cursor to "f"

              viewonly        enable  -viewonly mode.

              noviewonly      disable -viewonly mode.

              shared          enable  -shared mode.

              noshared        disable -shared mode.

              forever         enable  -forever mode.

              noforever       disable -forever mode.

              timeout:n       reset -timeout to n, if there are currently no clients, exit unless  one  connects
              in the next n secs.

              tightfilexfer   enable  filetransfer for NEW clients.

              notightfilexfer disable filetransfer for NEW clients.

              ultrafilexfer   enable  filetransfer for clients.

              noultrafilexfer disable filetransfer for clients.

              rfbversion:n.m  set -rfbversion for new clients.

              http            enable  http client connections.

              nohttp          disable http client connections.

              deny            deny any new connections, same as "lock"

              nodeny          allow new connections, same as "unlock"

              avahi           enable  avahi service advertising.

              noavahi         disable avahi service advertising.

              mdns            enable  avahi service advertising.

              nomdns          disable avahi service advertising.

              zeroconf        enable  avahi service advertising.

              nozeroconf      disable avahi service advertising.

              connect:host     do  reverse  connection to host, "host" may be a comma separated list of hosts or
              host:ports.    See   -connect.    Passwords   required   as    with    fwd    connections.     See
              X11VNC_REVERSE_CONNECTION_NO_AUTH=1

              disconnect:host  disconnect any clients from "host" same as "close:host".  Use host "all" to close
              all current clients.  If you know the client internal  hex  ID,  e.g.  0x3  (returned  by  "-query
              clients" and RFB_CLIENT_ID) you can use that too.

              proxy:host:port set reverse connection proxy (empty to disable).

              allowonce:host   For  the  next  connection  only,  allow connection from "host". In -ssl mode two
              connections are allowed (i.e. Fetch Cert) unless X11VNC_NO_SSL_ALLOW_TWICE=1

              allow:hostlist  set -allow list to (comma separated) "hostlist". See -allow  and  -localhost.   Do
              not  use  with  -allow /path/to/file Use "+host" to add a single host, and use "-host" to delete a
              single host

              localhost       enable  -localhost mode

              nolocalhost     disable -localhost mode

              listen:str      set -listen to str, empty to disable.

              noipv6          enable  -noipv6 mode.

              ipv6            disable -noipv6 mode.

              noipv4          enable  -noipv4 mode.

              ipv4            disable -noipv4 mode.

              6               enable  -6 IPv6 listening mode.

              no6             disable -6 IPv6 listening mode.

              lookup          disable -nolookup mode.

              nolookup        enable  -nolookup mode.

              lookup          disable -nolookup mode.

              input:str       set -input to "str", empty to disable.

              grabkbd         enable  -grabkbd mode.

              nograbkbd       disable -grabkbd mode.

              grabptr         enable  -grabptr mode.

              nograbptr       disable -grabptr mode.

              grabalways      enable  -grabalways mode.

              nograbalways    disable -grabalways mode.

              grablocal:n     set -grablocal to n.

              client_input:str set the K, M, B -input on  a  per-client  basis.   select  which  client  as  for
              disconnect, e.g. client_input:host:MB or client_input:0x2:K

              accept:cmd      set -accept "cmd" (empty to disable).

              afteraccept:cmd set -afteraccept (empty to disable).

              gone:cmd        set -gone "cmd" (empty to disable).

              noshm           enable  -noshm mode.

              shm             disable -noshm mode (i.e. use shm).

              flipbyteorder   enable -flipbyteorder mode, you may need to set noshm for this to do something.

              noflipbyteorder disable -flipbyteorder mode.

              onetile         enable  -onetile mode. (you may need to set shm for this to do something)

              noonetile       disable -onetile mode.

              solid           enable  -solid mode

              nosolid         disable -solid mode.

              solid_color:color set -solid color (and apply it).

              blackout:str     set  -blackout  "str"  (empty  to  disable).  See -blackout for the form of "str"
              (basically: WxH+X+Y,...)  Use "+WxH+X+Y" to append a single rectangle use "-WxH+X+Y" to delete one

              xinerama        enable  -xinerama mode. (if applicable)

              noxinerama      disable -xinerama mode.

              xtrap           enable  -xtrap input mode(if applicable)

              noxtrap         disable -xtrap input mode.

              xrandr          enable  -xrandr mode. (if applicable)

              noxrandr        disable -xrandr mode.

              xrandr_mode:mode set the -xrandr mode to "mode".

              rotate:mode     set the -rotate mode to "mode".

              padgeom:WxH     set -padgeom to WxH (empty to disable) If  WxH  is  "force"  or  "do"  the  padded
              geometry fb is immediately applied.

              quiet           enable  -quiet mode.

              noquiet         disable -quiet mode.

              modtweak        enable  -modtweak mode.

              nomodtweak      enable  -nomodtweak mode.

              xkb             enable  -xkb modtweak mode.

              noxkb           disable -xkb modtweak mode.

              capslock        enable  -capslock mode.

              nocapslock      disable -capslock mode.

              skip_lockkeys   enable  -skip_lockkeys mode.

              noskip_lockkeys disable -skip_lockkeys mode.

              skip_keycodes:str enable -xkb -skip_keycodes "str".

              sloppy_keys     enable  -sloppy_keys mode.

              nosloppy_keys   disable -sloppy_keys mode.

              skip_dups       enable  -skip_dups mode.

              noskip_dups     disable -skip_dups mode.

              add_keysyms     enable -add_keysyms mode.

              noadd_keysyms   stop adding keysyms. those added will still be removed at exit.

              clear_mods      enable  -clear_mods mode and clear them.

              noclear_mods    disable -clear_mods mode.

              clear_keys      enable  -clear_keys mode and clear them.

              noclear_keys    disable -clear_keys mode.

              clear_locks     do the clear_locks action.

              clear_all       do the clear_all action.

              keystate        have x11vnc print current keystate.

              remap:str       set -remap "str" (empty to disable).  See -remap for the form of "str" (basically:
              key1-key2,key3-key4,...)   Use  "+key1-key2"  to  append  a single keymapping, use "-key1-key2" to
              delete.

              norepeat        enable  -norepeat mode.

              repeat          disable -norepeat mode.

              nofb            enable  -nofb mode.

              fb              disable -nofb mode.

              bell            enable  bell (if supported).

              nobell          disable bell.

              sendbell        ring the bell now.

              nosel           enable  -nosel mode.

              sel             disable -nosel mode.

              noprimary       enable  -noprimary mode.

              primary         disable -noprimary mode.

              nosetprimary    enable  -nosetprimary mode.

              setprimary      disable -nosetprimary mode.

              noclipboard     enable  -noclipboard mode.

              clipboard       disable -noclipboard mode.

              nosetclipboard  enable  -nosetclipboard mode.

              setclipboard    disable -nosetclipboard mode.

              seldir:str      set -seldir to "str"

              resend_cutbuffer resend the most recent CUTBUFFER0 copy

              resend_clipboard resend the most recent CLIPBOARD copy

              resend_primary   resend the most recent PRIMARY copy

              cursor:mode     enable  -cursor "mode".

              show_cursor     enable  showing a cursor.

              noshow_cursor   disable showing a cursor. (same as "nocursor")

              cursor_drag     enable  cursor changes during drag.

              nocursor_drag   disable cursor changes during drag.

              arrow:n         set -arrow to alternate n.

              xfixes          enable  xfixes cursor shape mode.

              noxfixes        disable xfixes cursor shape mode.

              alphacut:n      set -alphacut to n.

              alphafrac:f     set -alphafrac to f.

              alpharemove     enable  -alpharemove mode.

              noalpharemove   disable -alpharemove mode.

              alphablend      disable -noalphablend mode.

              noalphablend    enable  -noalphablend mode.

              cursorshape     disable -nocursorshape mode.

              nocursorshape   enable  -nocursorshape mode.

              cursorpos       disable -nocursorpos mode.

              nocursorpos     enable  -nocursorpos mode.

              xwarp           enable  -xwarppointer mode.

              noxwarp         disable -xwarppointer mode.

              always_inject   enable  -always_inject mode.

              noalways_inject disable -always_inject mode.

              buttonmap:str   set -buttonmap "str", empty to disable

              dragging        disable -nodragging mode.

              nodragging      enable  -nodragging mode.

              ncache          reenable -ncache mode.

              noncache        disable  -ncache mode.

              ncache_size:n   set -ncache size to n.

              ncache_cr       enable  -ncache_cr mode.

              noncache_cr     disable -ncache_cr mode.

              ncache_no_moveraise     enable  no_moveraise mode.

              noncache_no_moveraise   disable no_moveraise mode.

              ncache_no_dtchange      enable  ncache_no_dtchange mode.

              noncache_no_dtchange    disable ncache_no_dtchange mode.

              ncache_old_wm           enable  ncache_old_wm mode.

              noncache_old_wm         disable ncache_old_wm mode.

              ncache_no_rootpixmap    enable  ncache_no_rootpixmap.

              noncache_no_rootpixmap  disable ncache_no_rootpixmap.

              ncache_reset_rootpixmap recheck the root pixmap, ncrp

              ncache_keep_anims       enable  ncache_keep_anims.

              noncache_keep_anims     disable ncache_keep_anims.

              ncache_pad:n    set -ncache_pad to n.

              wireframe       enable  -wireframe mode. same as "wf"

              nowireframe     disable -wireframe mode. same as "nowf"

              wireframe:str   enable  -wireframe mode string.

              wireframe_mode:str enable  -wireframe mode string.

              wireframelocal  enable  wireframelocal. same as "wfl"

              nowireframe     disable wireframelocal. same as "nowfl"

              wirecopyrect:str set -wirecopyrect string. same as "wcr:"

              scrollcopyrect:str set -scrollcopyrect string. same "scr"

              noscrollcopyrect disable -scrollcopyrect__mode_. "noscr"

              scr_area:n      set -scr_area to n

              scr_skip:list   set -scr_skip to "list"

              scr_inc:list    set -scr_inc to "list"

              scr_keys:list   set -scr_keys to "list"

              scr_term:list   set -scr_term to "list"

              scr_keyrepeat:str set -scr_keyrepeat to "str"

              scr_parms:str   set -scr_parms parameters.

              fixscreen:str   set -fixscreen to "str".

              noxrecord       disable all use of RECORD extension.

              xrecord         enable  use of RECORD extension.

              reset_record    reset RECORD extension (if avail.)

              pointer_mode:n  set -pointer_mode to n. same as "pm"

              input_skip:n    set -input_skip to n.

              allinput        enable  use of -allinput mode.

              noallinput      disable use of -allinput mode.

              input_eagerly   enable  use of -input_eagerly mode.

              noinput_eagerly disable use of -input_eagerly mode.

              ssltimeout:n    set -ssltimeout to n.

              speeds:str      set -speeds to str.

              wmdt:str        set -wmdt to str.

              debug_pointer   enable  -debug_pointer, same as "dp"

              nodebug_pointer disable -debug_pointer, same as "nodp"

              debug_keyboard   enable  -debug_keyboard, same as "dk"

              nodebug_keyboard disable -debug_keyboard, same as "nodk"

              keycode:n       inject keystroke 'keycode' (xmodmap -pk)

              keycode:n,down  inject 'keycode' (down=0,1)

              keysym:str      inject keystroke 'keysym' (number/name)

              keysym:str,down inject 'keysym' (down=0,1)

              ptr:x,y,mask    inject pointer event x, y, button-mask

              fakebuttonevent:button,down direct XTestFakeButtonEvent.

              sleep:t         sleep floating point time t.

              get_xprop:p     get X property named 'p'.

              set_xprop:p:val set X property named 'p' to 'val'.  p -> id=NNN:p for hex/dec window id.

              wininfo:id      get info about X window id.  use 'root' for root window, use +id for children.

              grab_state      get state of pointer and keyboard grab.

              pointer_pos     print XQueryPointer x,y cursor position.

              pointer_x       print XQueryPointer x cursor position.

              pointer_y       print XQueryPointer y cursor position.

              pointer_same    print XQueryPointer ptr on same screen.

              pointer_root    print XQueryPointer curr ptr rootwin.

              pointer_mask    print XQueryPointer button and mods mask

              mouse_x         print x11vnc's idea of cursor position.

              mouse_y         print x11vnc's idea of cursor position.

              noop            do nothing.

              defer:n         set -defer to n ms,same as deferupdate:n

              wait:n          set -wait to n ms.

              extra_fbur:n    set -extra_fbur to n.

              wait_ui:f       set -wait_ui factor to f.

              setdefer:n      set -setdefer to -2,-1,0,1, or 2.

              wait_bog        disable -nowait_bog mode.

              nowait_bog      enable  -nowait_bog mode.

              slow_fb:f       set -slow_fb to f seconds.

              xrefresh:f      set -xrefresh to f seconds.

              readtimeout:n   set read timeout to n seconds.

              nap             enable  -nap mode.

              nonap           disable -nap mode.

              sb:n            set -sb to n s, same as screen_blank:n

              fbpm            disable -nofbpm mode.

              nofbpm          enable  -nofbpm mode.

              dpms            disable -nodpms mode.

              nodpms          enable  -nodpms mode.

              forcedpms       enable  -forcedpms mode.

              noforcedpms     disable -forcedpms mode.

              clientdpms      enable  -clientdpms mode.

              noclientdpms    disable -clientdpms mode.

              noserverdpms    enable  -noserverdpms mode.

              serverdpms      disable -noserverdpms mode.

              noultraext      enable  -noultraext mode.

              ultraext        disable -noultraext mode.

              chatwindow      enable  local chatwindow mode.

              nochatwindow    disable local chatwindow mode.

              chaton          begin chat using local window.

              chatoff         end   chat using local window.

              xdamage         enable  xdamage polling hints.

              noxdamage       disable xdamage polling hints.

              xd_area:A       set -xd_area max pixel area to "A"

              xd_mem:f        set -xd_mem remembrance to "f"

              fs:frac         set -fs fraction to "frac", e.g. 0.5

              gaps:n          set -gaps to n.

              grow:n          set -grow to n.

              fuzz:n          set -fuzz to n.

              snapfb          enable  -snapfb mode.

              nosnapfb        disable -snapfb mode.

              rawfb:str       set -rawfb mode to "str".

              uinput_accel:f  set uinput_accel to f.

              uinput_thresh:n set uinput_thresh to n.

              uinput_reset:n  set uinput_reset to n ms.

              uinput_always:n set uinput_always to 1/0.

              progressive:n   set LibVNCServer -progressive slice height parameter to n.

              desktop:str     set -desktop name to str for new clients.

              rfbport:n       set -rfbport to n.

              macnosaver      enable  -macnosaver mode.

              macsaver        disable -macnosaver mode.

              macnowait       enable  -macnowait  mode.

              macwait         disable -macnowait  mode.

              macwheel:n      set -macwheel to n.

              macnoswap       enable  -macnoswap mouse button mode.

              macswap         disable -macnoswap mouse button mode.

              macnoresize     enable  -macnoresize mode.

              macresize       disable -macnoresize mode.

              maciconanim:n   set -maciconanim to n.

              macmenu         enable  -macmenu  mode.

              macnomenu       disable -macmenu  mode.

              macuskbd        enable  -macuskbd mode.

              macnouskbd      disable -macuskbd mode.

              httpport:n      set -httpport to n.

              httpdir:dir     set -httpdir to dir (and enable http).

              enablehttpproxy   enable  -enablehttpproxy mode.

              noenablehttpproxy disable -enablehttpproxy mode.

              alwaysshared     enable  -alwaysshared mode.

              noalwaysshared   disable -alwaysshared mode.  (may interfere with other options)

              nevershared      enable  -nevershared mode.

              nonevershared    disable -nevershared mode.  (may interfere with other options)

              dontdisconnect   enable  -dontdisconnect mode.

              nodontdisconnect disable -dontdisconnect mode.  (may interfere with other options)

              debug_xevents   enable  debugging X events.

              nodebug_xevents disable debugging X events.

              debug_xdamage   enable  debugging X DAMAGE mechanism.

              nodebug_xdamage disable debugging X DAMAGE mechanism.

              debug_wireframe enable   debugging wireframe mechanism.

              nodebug_wireframe disable debugging wireframe mechanism.

              debug_scroll    enable  debugging scrollcopy mechanism.

              nodebug_scroll  disable debugging scrollcopy mechanism.

              debug_tiles     enable  -debug_tiles

              nodebug_tiles   disable -debug_tiles

              debug_grabs     enable  -debug_grabs

              nodebug_grabs   disable -debug_grabs

              debug_sel       enable  -debug_sel

              nodebug_sel     disable -debug_sel

              debug_ncache    enable  -debug_ncache

              nodebug_ncache  disable -debug_ncache

              dbg             enable  -dbg crash shell

              nodbg           disable -dbg crash shell

              noremote        disable the -remote command processing, it cannot be turned back on.

              bcx_xattach:str  This remote control command is for use with the BARCO xattach program or the  x2x
              program.   Both  of  these  programs  are  for  'pointer  and keyboard' sharing between separate X
              displays.  In general the two displays are usually nearby, e.g. on the same desk, and this  allows
              the user to share a single pointer and keyboard between them.  The user moves the mouse to an edge
              and then the mouse pointer appears to 'jump' to the other display screen.  Thus it emulates what a
              single  X  server  would  do for two screens (e.g. :0.0 and :0.1) The illusion of a single Xserver
              with multiple screens is achieved by forwarding events to the 2nd one via the XTEST extension.

              What the x11vnc bcx_xattach command does is to perform some pointer movements  to  try  to  INDUCE
              xattach/x2x  to  'jump'  to the other display.  In what follows the 'master' display refers to the
              one that when it has 'focus' it is basically doing nothing besides watching for the  mouse  to  go
              over an edge.  The 'slave' display refers to the one to which the mouse and keyboard is redirected
              to  once  an  edge in the master has been crossed.  Note that the x11vnc executing the bcx_xattach
              command MUST be the one connected to the *master* display.

              Also note that when input is being redirected (via XTEST) from the master  display  to  the  slave
              display,  the  master display's pointer and keyboard are *grabbed* by xattach/x2x.  x11vnc can use
              this info to verify that the master/slave mode change has taken place correctly.  If  you  specify
              the  "ifneeded"  option (see below) and the initial grab state is that of the desired final state,
              then no pointer movements are injected and "DONE,GRAB_OK" is returned.

              "str" must contain one of "up", "down", "left", or  "right"  to  indicate  the  direction  of  the
              'jump'.   "str"  must  also  contain one of "master_to_slave" or "slave_to_master" to indicate the
              type of mode change induced by the jump.  Use "M2S" and "S2M" as shorter aliases.

              "str" may be a "+" separated list of additional tuning options.  The "shift=n" option indicates an
              offset shift position away from (0,0) (default 20).  "final=x+y" specifies the final  position  of
              the  cursor  at  the end of the normal move sequence; default 30+30.  "extra_move=x+y" means to do
              one more pointer move after "final" to x+y.  "dt=n" sets the sleep time  in  milliseconds  between
              pointer  moves (default: 40ms) "retry=n" specifies the maximum number of retries if the grab state
              change fails. "ifneeded" means to not apply the pointer movements if the  initial  grab  state  is
              that  of  the  desired  final state. "nograbcheck" means to not check if the grab state changed as
              expected and only apply the pointer movements (default is to check the grab states.)

              If you do not specify "up", etc., to bcx_xattach nothing will be attempted and the command returns
              the string FAIL,NO_DIRECTION_SPECIFIED.  If you do not specify "master_to_slave" or  "M2S",  etc.,
              to    bcx_xattach   nothing   will   be   attempted   and   the   command   returns   the   string
              FAIL,NO_MODE_CHANGE_SPECIFIED.

              Otherwise, the returned string will contain "DONE".  It will be "DONE,GRAB_OK" if the  grab  state
              changed  as  expected  (or  if  "ifneeded" was supplied and the initial grab state was already the
              desired one.)  If the initial grab state was incorrect, but the final grab state was correct  then
              it  is "DONE,GRAB_FAIL_INIT".  If the initial grab state was correct, but the final grab state was
              incorrect then it is "DONE,GRAB_FAIL_FINAL".  If both are incorrect it will  be  "DONE,GRAB_FAIL".
              Under  grab  failure  the  string  will  be  followed by ":p1,k1-p2,k2" where  p1,k1 indicates the
              initial pointer and keyboard grab states and p2,k2 the final ones. If GRAB_FAIL or GRAB_FAIL_FINAL
              occurs, the action will be retried up to 3 times; trying to reset the state  and  sleeping  a  bit
              between each try.  Set retry=n to adjust the number of retries, zero to disable retries.

              Examples: -R bcx_xattach:down+M2S -R bcx_xattach:up+S2M -R bcx_xattach:up+S2M+nograbcheck+dt=30 -R
              bcx_xattach:down+M2S+extra_move=100+100

              or use -Q instead of -R to retrieve the result text.

              End of the bcx_xattach:str description.

              The  vncconnect(1)  command from standard VNC distributions may also be used if string is prefixed
              with "cmd=" E.g. 'vncconnect cmd=stop'.  Under some circumstances xprop(1) can used if it supports
              -set (see the FAQ).

              If "-connect /path/to/file" has been supplied to the running x11vnc server then that file  can  be
              used  as  a  communication  channel  (this  is the only way to remote control one of many x11vnc's
              polling the same X display) Simply run: 'x11vnc -connect /path/to/file -remote ...'   or  you  can
              directly write to the file via something like: "echo cmd=stop > /path/to/file", etc.

       -query variable

              Like  -remote,  except just query the value of variable.  "-Q" is an alias for "-query".  Multiple
              queries can be done by separating variables by commas, e.g. -query  var1,var2.  The  results  come
              back  in  the  form ans=var1:value1,ans=var2:value2,...  to the standard output.  If a variable is
              read-only, it comes back with prefix "aro=" instead of "ans=".

              Some -remote commands are pure actions that do  not  make  sense  as  variables,  e.g.  "stop"  or
              "disconnect",  in  these  cases  the  value  returned is "N/A".  To direct a query straight to the
              X11VNC_REMOTE property or connect file use "qry=..." instead of "cmd=..."

              ans= stop quit exit shutdown ping resend_cutbuffer resend_clipboard  resend_primary  blacken  zero
              refresh  reset  close  disconnect id_cmd id sid waitmapped nowaitmapped clip flashcmap noflashcmap
              shiftcmap   truecolor   notruecolor    overlay    nooverlay    overlay_cursor    overlay_yescursor
              nooverlay_nocursor  nooverlay_cursor nooverlay_yescursor overlay_nocursor 8to24 no8to24 8to24_opts
              24to32 no24to32 visual scale scale_cursor viewonly noviewonly shared  noshared  forever  noforever
              once  timeout  tightfilexfer  notightfilexfer  ultrafilexfer  noultrafilexfer rfbversion deny lock
              nodeny unlock avahi mdns zeroconf noavahi nomdns nozeroconf connect proxy allowonce  allow  noipv6
              ipv6  noipv4  ipv4  no6 6 localhost nolocalhost listen lookup nolookup accept afteraccept gone shm
              noshm flipbyteorder noflipbyteorder onetile noonetile solid_color solid nosolid blackout  xinerama
              noxinerama  xtrap  noxtrap  xrandr  noxrandr  xrandr_mode  rotate padgeom quiet q noquiet modtweak
              nomodtweak xkb noxkb capslock nocapslock skip_lockkeys noskip_lockkeys  skip_keycodes  sloppy_keys
              nosloppy_keys  skip_dups  noskip_dups add_keysyms noadd_keysyms clear_mods noclear_mods clear_keys
              noclear_keys clear_all clear_locks keystate remap repeat norepeat fb nofb bell nobell sendbell sel
              nosel primary noprimary setprimary nosetprimary clipboard noclipboard setclipboard  nosetclipboard
              seldir   cursorshape   nocursorshape   cursorpos   nocursorpos  cursor_drag  nocursor_drag  cursor
              show_cursor noshow_cursor nocursor arrow xfixes noxfixes xdamage noxdamage xd_area xd_mem alphacut
              alphafrac alpharemove noalpharemove  alphablend  noalphablend  xwarppointer  xwarp  noxwarppointer
              noxwarp   always_inject   noalways_inject  buttonmap  dragging  nodragging  ncache_cr  noncache_cr
              ncache_no_moveraise      noncache_no_moveraise       ncache_no_dtchange       noncache_no_dtchange
              ncache_no_rootpixmap   noncache_no_rootpixmap   ncache_reset_rootpixmap   ncrp   ncache_keep_anims
              noncache_keep_anims  ncache_old_wm  noncache_old_wm   ncache_pad   ncache   noncache   ncache_size
              debug_ncache  nodebug_ncache  wireframe_mode  wireframe  wf  nowireframe  nowf  wireframelocal wfl
              nowireframelocal nowfl wirecopyrect wcr nowirecopyrect nowcr scr_area  scr_skip  scr_inc  scr_keys
              scr_term  scr_keyrepeat  scr_parms  scrollcopyrect  scr noscrollcopyrect noscr fixscreen noxrecord
              xrecord reset_record pointer_mode pm input_skip allinput noallinput input_eagerly  noinput_eagerly
              input   grabkbd   nograbkbd  grabptr  nograbptr  grabalways  nograbalways  grablocal  client_input
              ssltimeout speeds wmdt debug_pointer dp nodebug_pointer nodp  debug_keyboard  dk  nodebug_keyboard
              nodk  keycode keysym ptr fakebuttonevent sleep get_xprop set_xprop wininfo bcx_xattach deferupdate
              defer setdefer extra_fbur wait_ui wait_bog nowait_bog slow_fb xrefresh wait readtimeout nap  nonap
              sb screen_blank fbpm nofbpm dpms nodpms clientdpms noclientdpms forcedpms noforcedpms noserverdpms
              serverdpms  noultraext  ultraext  chatwindow  nochatwindow chaton chatoff fs gaps grow fuzz snapfb
              nosnapfb rawfb uinput_accel uinput_thresh  uinput_reset  uinput_always  progressive  rfbport  http
              nohttp  httpport httpdir enablehttpproxy noenablehttpproxy alwaysshared noalwaysshared nevershared
              noalwaysshared dontdisconnect nodontdisconnect desktop debug_xevents nodebug_xevents debug_xevents
              debug_xdamage  nodebug_xdamage  debug_xdamage  debug_wireframe  nodebug_wireframe  debug_wireframe
              debug_scroll   nodebug_scroll   debug_scroll   debug_tiles  dbt  nodebug_tiles  nodbt  debug_tiles
              debug_grabs  nodebug_grabs  debug_sel  nodebug_sel  dbg  nodbg  macnosaver  macsaver  nomacnosaver
              macnowait  macwait  nomacnowait  macwheel  macnoswap  macswap  nomacnoswap  macnoresize  macresize
              nomacnoresize maciconanim macmenu macnomenu nomacmenu macuskbd nomacuskbd noremote

              aro=  noop display vncdisplay icon_mode autoport loop loopbg desktopname guess_desktop  guess_dbus
              http_url  auth xauth users rootshift clipshift scale_str scaled_x scaled_y scale_numer scale_denom
              scale_fac_x  scale_fac_y  scaling_blend  scaling_nomult4  scaling_pad  scaling_interpolate   inetd
              privremote  unsafe  safer  nocmds  passwdfile  unixpw unixpw_nis unixpw_list ssl ssl_pem sslverify
              stunnel stunnel_pem https httpsredir usepw using_shm logfile o  flag  rmflag  rc  norc  h  help  V
              version  lastmod bg sigpipe threads readrate netrate netlatency pipeinput clients client_count pid
              ext_xtest ext_xtrap ext_xrecord ext_xkb ext_xshm ext_xinerama ext_overlay  ext_xfixes  ext_xdamage
              ext_xrandr  rootwin  num_buttons  button_mask  mouse_x  mouse_y  grab_state  pointer_pos pointer_x
              pointer_y pointer_same pointer_root pointer_mask bpp depth indexed_color dpy_x dpy_y wdpy_x wdpy_y
              off_x off_y cdpy_x cdpy_y coff_x coff_y rfbauth passwd viewpasswd

       -QD variable

              Just like -query variable, but returns the default value for that  parameter  (no  running  x11vnc
              server is consulted)

       -sync

              By default -remote commands are run asynchronously, that is, the request is posted and the program
              immediately  exits.   Use  -sync  to  have the program wait for an acknowledgement from the x11vnc
              server that command was processed (somehow).   On  the  other  hand  -query  requests  are  always
              processed synchronously because they have to wait for the answer.

              Also  note  that if both -remote and -query requests are supplied on the command line, the -remote
              is processed first (synchronously: no need for -sync), and then the -query request is processed in
              the normal way.  This allows for a reliable way to see if the -remote  command  was  processed  by
              querying  for any new settings.  Note however that there is timeout of a few seconds (see the next
              paragraph) so if the x11vnc takes longer than that to process  the  requests  the  requester  will
              think that a failure has taken place.

              The  default  is  to wait 3.5 seconds.  Or if cmd=stop only 1.0 seconds.  If cmd matches 'script:'
              then it will wait up to 10.0 seconds.  Set X11VNC_SYNC_TIMEOUT to the number of seconds  you  want
              it to wait.

       -query_retries str

              If  a  query fails to get a response from an x11vnc server, retry up to n times.  str is specified
              as n[:t][/match]  Optionally the delay between tries may be specified by "t" a floating point time
              (default 0.5 seconds.)  Note: the response is not checked for validity or whether  it  corresponds
              to  the  query  sent.   The query "ping:mystring" may be used to help uniquely identify the query.
              Optionally, a matching string after a "/" will be used to check the result text.  Up to n  retries
              will  take  place  until  the matching string is found in the output text.  If the match string is
              never found the program's exit code is 1; if the match is found it exits with 0.  Note that  there
              may  be  stdout  printed  for  each  retry  (i.e. multiple lines printed out to stdout.)  Example:
              -query_retries 4:1.5/grab_state

       -remote_prefix str

              Enable a remote-control communication channel for connected  VNC  clients.   str  is  a  non-empty
              string. If a VNC client sends rfbCutText having the prefix str then the part after it is processed
              as though it were sent via 'x11vnc -remote ...'.  If it begins with neither 'cmd=' nor 'qry=' then
              'qry='  is assumed.  Any corresponding output text for that remote control command is sent back to
              all client as rfbCutText.  The returned output is also prefixed with str.  Example: -remote_prefix
              DO_THIS:

              Note that enabling -remote_prefix allows the remote VNC viewers to run  x11vnc  -remote  commands.
              Do not use this option if they are not to be trusted.

       -noremote, -yesremote

              Do  not  process  any  remote  control commands or queries.  Do process remote control commands or
              queries.  Default: -yesremote

              A note about security wrt remote control commands.  If someone can connect to the  X  display  and
              change  the property X11VNC_REMOTE, then they can remotely control x11vnc.  Normally access to the
              X display is protected.  Note that if they can modify X11VNC_REMOTE on the  X  server,  they  have
              enough permissions to also run their own x11vnc and thus have complete control of the desktop.  If
              the   "-connect  /path/to/file"  channel  is  being  used,  obviously  anyone  who  can  write  to
              /path/to/file can remotely control x11vnc.  So be sure to protect the X display  and  that  file's
              write permissions.  See -privremote below.

              If  you  are  paranoid and do not think -noremote is enough, to disable the X11VNC_REMOTE property
              channel completely use -novncconnect, or use the -safer option that shuts many things off.

       -unsafe

              A few remote commands are disabled by default (currently: id:pick, accept:<cmd>,  gone:<cmd>,  and
              rawfb:setup:<cmd>)  because  they  are  associated with running external programs.  If you specify
              -unsafe, then these remote-control commands are allowed.  Note that you can  still  specify  these
              parameters on the command line, they just cannot be invoked via remote-control.

       -safer

              Equivalent  to:  -novncconnect  -noremote  and  prohibiting  -gui and the -connect file. Shuts off
              communication channels.

       -privremote

              Perform some sanity checks and disable remote-control commands if it appears that  the  X  DISPLAY
              and/or  connectfile  can be accessed by other users.  Once remote-control is disabled it cannot be
              turned back on.

       -nocmds

              No external commands (e.g.  system(3) , popen(3) , exec(3) ) will be run at all.

       -allowedcmds list

              list contains a comma separated list of the only external commands that can be run.  The full list
              of associated options is:

              stunnel, ssl, unixpw, WAIT, zeroconf, id, accept, afteraccept, gone, pipeinput,  v4l-info,  rawfb-
              setup, dt, gui, ssh, storepasswd, passwdfile, custom_passwd, findauth, crash.

              See  each  option's  help  to learn the associated external command.  Note that the -nocmds option
              takes precedence and disables all external commands.

       -deny_all

              For use with -remote nodeny: start out denying all incoming clients until "-remote nodeny" is used
              to let them in.

       These options are passed to LibVNCServer:

       -rfbport port

              TCP port for RFB protocol

       -rfbwait time

              max time in ms to wait for RFB client

       -rfbauth passwd-file

              use authentication on RFB protocol (use 'x11vnc -storepasswd pass file' to create a password file)

       -rfbversion 3.x

              Set the version of the RFB we choose to advertise

       -permitfiletransfer

              permit file transfer support

       -passwd plain-password

              use authentication (use plain-password as password, USE AT YOUR RISK)

       -deferupdate time

              time in ms to defer updates (default 40)

       -deferptrupdate time

              time in ms to defer pointer updates (default none)

       -desktop name

              VNC desktop name (default "LibVNCServer")

       -alwaysshared

              always treat new clients as shared

       -nevershared

              never treat new clients as shared

       -dontdisconnect

              don't disconnect existing clients when a new non-shared connection comes in (refuse new connection
              instead)

       -httpdir dir-path

              enable http server using dir-path home

       -httpport portnum

              use portnum for http connection

       -enablehttpproxy

              enable http proxy support

       -progressive height

              enable progressive updating for slow links

       -listen ipaddr

              listen for connections only on  network  interface  with  addr  ipaddr.  '-listen  localhost'  and
              hostname work too.

       libvncserver-tight-extension options:

       -disablefiletransfer

              disable file transfer

       -ftproot string

              set ftp root

FILES

       $HOME/.x11vncrc, $HOME/.Xauthority

ENVIRONMENT

       DISPLAY, XAUTHORITY, HOME

       The following are set for the auxiliary commands run by -accept, -gone and other cases:

       RFB_CLIENT_IP,    RFB_CLIENT_PORT,   RFB_SERVER_IP,   RFB_SERVER_PORT,   RFB_X11VNC_PID,   RFB_CLIENT_ID,
       RFB_CLIENT_COUNT, RFB_MODE  RFB_STATE  RFB_LOGIN_VIEWONLY  RFB_LOGIN_TIME  RFB_CURRENT_TIME  RFB_USERNAME
       RFB_SSL_CLIENT_CERT

SEE ALSO

       vncviewer(1),  vncpasswd(1),  vncconnect(1),  vncserver(1),  Xvnc(1),  xev(1),  xdpyinfo(1), xwininfo(1),
       xprop(1),   xmodmap(1),   xrandr(1),   Xserver(1),   xauth(1),   xhost(1),   Xsecurity(7),   xmessage(1),
       XGetImage(3X11),    ipcrm(1),    inetd(1),   xdm(1),   gdm(1),   kdm(1),   ssh(1),   stunnel(8),   su(1),
       http://www.tightvnc.com,            http://www.realvnc.com,             http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/,
       http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/#faq, https://github.com/LibVNC/x11vnc

AUTHORS

       x11vnc  was  written  by  Karl  J.  Runge  <runge@karlrunge.com>,  it is part of the LibVNCServer project
       <https://github.com/LibVNC/libvncserver>.  This manual page is based  one  the  one  written  by  Ludovic
       Drolez <ldrolez@debian.org>, for the Debian project (both may be used by others).

x11vnc                                            February 2018                                        X11VNC(1)