Quoting Itamar Heim <ih...@redhat.com>:

On 07/26/2012 05:36 PM, snmis...@linux.vnet.ibm.com wrote:

Hi,

   I am looking at adding VNC support in ovirt. What does the community
think? Ideas, suggestions, comments?

so to sum this up:
1. there is the new dialog to open vnc manually.
http://gerrit.ovirt.org/#/c/4790/

good


2. Alon suggested it should be allowed to open this dialog for spice as well, not only for vnc.

+1


3. Alon also suggested to have a launch button on that window (or parallel to it) which will try to launch vnc or spice by returning a specific mime type response, allowing client to choose the vnc/spice client to run for this mime type, and passing command line parameters to it in the mime type reply.

+1

I like the idea of being able to launch vnc and spice from the same place.


4. provide a vnc xpi/activex wrappers to allow launching it via web browsers like spice main limitation of this compared to novnc is you need to do this for every browser/platform.

I like the noVNC option better since most modern web browsers support the canvas element of HTML 5. With noVNC we don't have to port to other platforms/browsers.


5. novnc
5.1 novnc client - i'd start with the one recently pushed to fedora.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=822187

+1
that is an added advantage.


5.2 novnc websocket server - i see three options

5.2.1 extend qemu to do this, so novnc can connect to it directly like we do today for vnc/spice

5.2.2 use the python based one from:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=822187

5.2.3 look at a java based websocket solution, assuming easier to deploy it as part of webadmin/user portal war than another service (requires a bit of research) looking forward user portal and webadmin would be deployed on multiple hosts, so a websockets would need to be deployed next to them.

I can see myself going either way with java or python based websockets.

-Sharad Mishra


from the little i looked at, the various websocket implementations are mostly nascent and are not scaleable/robust/etc. I'd love to be proven wrong, and worth playing with them a bit to measure that.

6. spice.html5
while very nascent - worth mentioning on this thread and trying to take a look:
http://www.spice-space.org/page/Html5



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