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author | Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@gmail.com> | 2014-03-19 12:34:47 +0100 |
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committer | Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@gmail.com> | 2014-03-19 17:14:44 +0100 |
commit | 2e730453bfe45636b611b86c2c619920f246977f (patch) | |
tree | 499adb142e6a40471e12ced7ce1da715585bd63c /docs/manual/SpiceUserManual-Introduction.xml | |
parent | 25f6745202d204c25df5f9527128ec8fa95dafeb (diff) | |
download | spice-2e730453bfe45636b611b86c2c619920f246977f.tar.gz spice-2e730453bfe45636b611b86c2c619920f246977f.tar.xz spice-2e730453bfe45636b611b86c2c619920f246977f.zip |
Translate docbook -> asciidoc
It's much much easier to read and edit, and the end results looks better
as well, see http://elmarco.fedorapeople.org/manual.html
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/manual/SpiceUserManual-Introduction.xml')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/manual/SpiceUserManual-Introduction.xml | 264 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 264 deletions
diff --git a/docs/manual/SpiceUserManual-Introduction.xml b/docs/manual/SpiceUserManual-Introduction.xml deleted file mode 100644 index f5618bd0..00000000 --- a/docs/manual/SpiceUserManual-Introduction.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,264 +0,0 @@ -<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> -<?oxygen RNGSchema="http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/5.0/rng/docbookxi.rng" type="xml"?> - - <chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" - xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" - xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" version="5.0"> - <title>Introduction</title> - <para> - Spice is an open remote computing solution, providing client access to remote displays and devices (e.g. keyboard, mouse, audio). - At the moment, it's mainly used to get remote access to virtual machines. Spice provides a desktop-like user experience, while trying to - offload most of the intensive CPU and GPU tasks to the client. - - The basic building blocks of Spice are: - </para> - - <orderedlist> - <listitem><para><link linkend="spice_server">Spice Server</link></para></listitem> - <listitem><para><link linkend="spice_client">Spice Client</link></para></listitem> - <listitem><para>Spice Protocol</para></listitem> - </orderedlist> - - <para> - The following sections provide basic information on Spice components and features, obtaining, building installing and using Spice. - </para> - - <section> - <title>Spice and Spice-related Components</title> - <section xml:id="spice_server"> - <title>Spice Server</title> - <para> - Spice server is implemented in libspice, a VDI pluggable library. - Currently, the main user of this library is QEMU. QEMU uses spice-server - to provide remote access to virtual machines through the Spice protocol. - Virtual Device Interface (VDI) defines a set of interfaces that provide - a standard way to publish virtual devices (e.g. display device, keyboard, - mouse) and enables different Spice components to interact with those - devices. On one side, the server communicates with the remote client - using the Spice protocol and on the other side, it interacts with the - VDI host application (e.g QEMU). - </para> - </section> - - <section xml:id="spice_client"> - <title>Spice Client</title> - <para> - The Spice client is a cross-platform (Linux and Windows) - which is used by the end user to access remote systems through Spice. - The recommended client is <link xlink:href="https://fedorahosted.org/released/virt-viewer/">remote-viewer</link> - (which is shipped with virt-viewer). - <link xlink:href="https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Boxes">GNOME Boxes</link> - can also be used as a Spice client. spicec is an obsolete - legacy client, and spicy is only a test application. - </para> - </section> - - <section> - <title>QXL Device and Drivers</title> - <para> - Spice server supports the QXL VDI interface. When libspice is used with - QEMU, a specific video PCI device can be used for improving - remote display performance and enhancing the graphic capabilities of the - guest graphic system. This video device is called a QXL - device and requires guest QXL drivers for full functionality. However, - standard VGA is supported when no driver exists. - </para> - </section> - - <section xml:id="vdagent"> - <title>Spice Agent</title> - <para> - The Spice agent is an optional component for enhancing user - experience and performing guest-oriented management tasks. - For example, the agent injects mouse position and state to - the guest when using client mouse mode. It also enables you to - move cursor freely between guest and client. Other features - of agent are shared clipboard (copy and paste between guest and host) - and aligning guest resolution with client when entering fullscreen mode. - </para> - </section> - - <section> - <title>VDI Port Device</title> - <para> - Spice protocol supports a communication channel between the - client and the agent on the server side. When using QEMU, Spice agent - resides on the guest. VDI port is a QEMU PCI device used - for communication with the agent. - </para> - </section> - - </section> - - <section xml:id="features"> - <title>Features</title> - <para> - The server and client communicate via channels. Each channel is dedicated to - a specific type of data. The available channels are following. - </para> - <section xml:id="multiple_channels"> - <title>Multiple Channels</title> - - <orderedlist numeration="arabic"> - <listitem> - <para><emphasis role="bold">Main</emphasis> - control and configuration</para> - </listitem> - <listitem> - <para><emphasis role="bold">Display</emphasis> - graphics commands images and video streams</para> - </listitem> - <listitem> - <para><emphasis role="bold">Inputs</emphasis> - keyboard and mouse inputs</para> - </listitem> - <listitem> - <para><emphasis role="bold">Cursor</emphasis> - pointer device position and cursor shape</para> - </listitem> - <listitem> - <para><emphasis role="bold">Playback</emphasis> - audio received from the server to be played by the client</para> - </listitem> - <listitem> - <para><emphasis role="bold">Record</emphasis> - audio captured on the client side</para> - </listitem> - <listitem> - <para><emphasis role="bold">Smartcard</emphasis> - passthrough of smartcard data from the client machine to the guest OS</para> - </listitem> - <listitem> - <para><emphasis role="bold">USB</emphasis> - redirection of USB devices plugged into the client to the guest OS</para> - </listitem> - </orderedlist> - </section> - - <section xml:id="image_compression"> - <title>Image Compression</title> - - <para> - Spice offers several image compression algorithms, which - can be chosen on server initiation and dynamically at run-time. Quic is a - Spice proprietary image compression technology based on the SFALIC - algorithm. The Lempel-Ziv (LZ) algorithm is another option. Both Quic and - LZ are local algorithms encoding each image separately. Global LZ (GLZ) is - another proprietary Spice technology that uses LZ with history-based global - dictionary. GLZ takes advantage of repeating patterns among images to - shrink the traffic and save bandwidth, which is critical in a WAN - environment. Spice also offers an automatic mode for compression selection - per image, where the choice between LZ/GLZ and Quic is heuristically based - on image properties. Conceptually, synthetic images are better compressed - with LZ/GLZ and real images are better with Quic. - </para> - </section> - - <section xml:id="video_compression"> - <title>Video Compression</title> - - <para> - Spice uses loss-less compression for images sent to the - client. However, video streams are handled differently. Spice server - heuristically identifies video areas and sends them as a video stream coded - using M-JPEG. This handling saves a lot of traffic, improving Spice - performance, especially in a WAN environment. However, in some - circumstances the heuristic behavior might cause low quality images (e.g. - identifying updated text area as a video stream). Video streaming can be - chosen on server initiation and dynamically at run-time. - </para> - </section> - - <section xml:id="mouse_modes"> - <title>Mouse modes</title> - - <para> - Spice supports two mouse modes: server and client. The mode - can be changed dynamically and is negotiated between the client and the - server. - </para> - <orderedlist> - <listitem> - <para> - <emphasis role="bold">Server mouse</emphasis> - When a user - clicks inside the Spice client window, the client mouse is - captured and set invisible. In this mode, the server controls - the mouse position on display. However, it might be problematic - on WAN or on a loaded server, where mouse cursor might have some - latency or non-responsiveness. - </para> - </listitem> - - <listitem> - <para> - <emphasis role="bold">Client mouse</emphasis> - Not - captured and is used as the effective pointing device. To enable - client mouse, the VDI host application must register an absolute - pointing device (e.g. USB tablet in QEMU). This mode is - appropriate for WAN or or for a loaded server, since cursor has - smooth motion and responsiveness. However, the cursor might - lose synchronization (position and shape) for a while. - </para> - </listitem> - - </orderedlist> - </section> - - <section xml:id="other_features"> - <title>Other Features</title> - <orderedlist> - - <listitem> - <para> - <emphasis role="bold">Multiple Monitors</emphasis> - any number of monitors is supported - </para> - </listitem> - - <listitem> - <para> - <emphasis role="bold">Arbitrary Resolution</emphasis> - when - using the QXL driver, the resolution of the guest OS will be - automatically adjusted to the size of the client window. - </para> - </listitem> - - <listitem> - <para> - <emphasis role="bold">USB Redirection</emphasis> - Spice - can be used to redirect USB devices that are plugged in the - client to the guest OS. This redirection can either be - automatic (all newly plugged devices are redirected), or manual - (the user selects which devices (s)he wants to redirect). - </para> - </listitem> - - <listitem> - <para> - <emphasis role="bold">Smartcard Redirection</emphasis> - - data from smartcard that are inserted into the client machine - can be passed through to the guest OS. The smartcard can be - used by both the client OS and the guest OS. - </para> - </listitem> - - <listitem> - <para> - <emphasis role="bold">Bidirectional Audio</emphasis> - Spice supports audio playback and recording. Playback is compressed using the CELT algorithm - </para> - </listitem> - - <listitem> - <para> - <emphasis role="bold">Lip-sync</emphasis> - between video and audio. Available only when video streaming is enabled. - </para> - </listitem> - - <listitem> - <para> - <emphasis role="bold">Migration</emphasis> - switching channel connectivity for supporting server migration - </para> - </listitem> - - <listitem> - <para> - <emphasis role="bold">Pixmap and Palette caching</emphasis> - </para> - </listitem> - - </orderedlist> - </section> - </section> - -</chapter> |