weston/man/weston-rdp.man
Hideyuki Nagase cf5ddd05cb rdp: Allow configuring the refresh rate
We currently hardcode a 60Hz update rate for the rdp backend.

In some cases it may be useful to override this to increase the rate
for a faster monitor, or to decrease it to reduce network traffic.

Co-authored-by: Steve Pronovost <spronovo@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: Brenton DeGeer <brdegeer@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Hideyuki Nagase <hideyukn@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Steve Pronovost <spronovo@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Brenton DeGeer <brdegeer@microsoft.com>
2022-04-28 07:35:57 -05:00

116 lines
4.1 KiB
Groff

.TH WESTON-RDP 7 "2017-12-14" "Weston @version@"
.SH NAME
weston-rdp \- the RDP backend for Weston
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B weston --backend=rdp-backend.so
.
.\" ***************************************************************
.SH DESCRIPTION
The RDP backend allows to run a
.B weston
environment without the need of specific graphic hardware, or input devices. Users can interact with
.B weston
only by connecting using the RDP protocol.
The RDP backend uses FreeRDP to implement the RDP part, it acts as a RDP server
listening for incoming connections. It supports different codecs for encoding the
graphical content. Depending on what is supported by the RDP client, the backend will
encode images using remoteFx codec, NS codec or will fallback to raw bitmapUpdate.
On the security part, the backend supports RDP security or TLS, keys and certificates
must be provided to the backend depending on which kind of security is requested. The RDP
backend will announce security options based on which files have been given.
The RDP backend is multi-seat aware, so if two clients connect on the backend,
they will get their own seat.
.\" ***************************************************************
.SH CONFIGURATION
.
The RDP backend uses the following entries from
.BR weston.ini .
.SS Section rdp
.TP
\fBrefresh-rate\fR=\fIrate\fR
Specifies the desktop redraw rate in Hz. If unspecified, the default is 60Hz. Changing
this may be useful if you have a faster than 60Hz display, or if you want to reduce updates to
reduce network traffic.
.\" ***************************************************************
.SH OPTIONS
.
When the RDP backend is loaded,
.B weston
will understand the following additional command line options.
.TP
.B \-\-address\fR=\fIaddress\fR
The IP address on which the RDP backend will listen for RDP connections. By
default it listens on 0.0.0.0.
.TP
\fB\-\-port\fR=\fIport\fR
The TCP port to listen on for connections, it defaults to 3389.
.TP
\fB\-\-no-clients-resize
By default when a client connects on the RDP backend, it will instruct weston to
resize to the dimensions of the client's announced resolution. When this option is
set, weston will force the client to resize to its own resolution.
.TP
\fB\-\-no-remotefx-codec
The RemoteFX compression codec is enabled by default, but it may be necessary
to disable it to work around incompatabilities between implementations. This
option may be removed in the future when all known issues are resolved.
.TP
\fB\-\-rdp4\-key\fR=\fIfile\fR
The file containing the RSA key for doing RDP security. As RDP security is known
to be insecure, this option should be avoided in production.
.TP
\fB\-\-rdp\-tls\-key\fR=\fIfile\fR
The file containing the key for doing TLS security. To have TLS security you also need
to ship a file containing a certificate.
.TP
\fB\-\-rdp\-tls\-cert\fR=\fIfile\fR
The file containing the certificate for doing TLS security. To have TLS security you also need
to ship a key file.
.TP
\fB\-\-external\-listener\-fd\fR=\fIfd\fR
Specifies a file descriptor inherited from the process that launched weston
to be listened on for client connections. Only local (such as AF_VSOCK)
sockets should be used, as this will be considered to be a local connection
by the RDP backend, and TLS and RDP security will be bypassed.
.\" ***************************************************************
.SH Generating cryptographic material for the RDP backend
.
To generate a key file to use for RDP security, you need the
.BR winpr-makecert
utility shipped with FreeRDP:
.nf
$ winpr-makecert -rdp -silent -n rdp-security
.fi
This will create a rdp-security.key file.
You can generate a key and certificate file to use with TLS security using a typical
.B openssl
invocations:
.nf
$ openssl genrsa -out tls.key 2048
Generating RSA private key, 2048 bit long modulus
[...]
$ openssl req -new -key tls.key -out tls.csr
[...]
$ openssl x509 -req -days 365 -signkey tls.key -in tls.csr -out tls.crt
[...]
.fi
You will get the tls.key and tls.crt files to use with the RDP backend.
.
.\" ***************************************************************
.SH "SEE ALSO"
.BR weston (1)
.\".BR weston.ini (5)