Spice agent for Linux ===================== The spice agent for Linux consists of 2 parts, a daemon spice-vdagentd and a per X-session process spice-vdagent. The daemon gets started in Spice guests through a Sys-V initscript or a systemd unit. The per X-session gets automatically started in desktop environments which honor /etc/xdg/autostart, and under gdm. The main daemon needs to know which X-session daemon is in the currently active X-session (think switch user functionality) for this console kit or systemd-logind (compile time option) is used. If no session info is available only one X-session agent is allowed. Features: * Client mouse mode (no need to grab mouse by client, no mouse lag) this is handled by the daemon by feeding mouse events into the kernel via uinput. This will only work if the active X-session is running a spice-vdagent process so that its resolution can be determined. * Automatic adjustment of the X-session resolution to the client resolution * Support of copy and paste (text and images) between the active X-session and the client. This supports both the primary selection and the clipboard. * Support for transfering files from the client to the agent * Full support for multiple displays using Xrandr, this requires a new enough xorg-x11-drv-qxl driver, as well as a new enough host. * Limited support for multiple displays using Xinerama, prerequisites: * A new enough Xorg-server. For Fedora atleast Fedora-17, for RHEL-6 atleast xorg-x11-server-1.10.4-6.el6_2.3 * A vm configured with multiple qxl devices * A guest running the latest spice-vdagent Then connect to the vm with the multiple monitor client which you want to use it with using: "spicec --full-screen=auto-config" (or the user portal equivalent). At this point the agent will write out a: /var/run/spice-vdagentd/xorg.conf.spice file. With all the necessary magic to get Xinerama working. Move this file to /etc/X11/xorg.conf, then kill Xorg so that it will get restarted and you should be good to go. * Limited support for setups with multiple Screens (multiple qxl devices each mapped to their own screen), limitations: -Max one monitor per Screen / qxl device -All monitors / Screens must have the same resolution -No client -> guest resolution syncing All vdagent communications on the guest side run over a single pipe which gets presented to the guest os as a virtio serial port. Under windows this virtio serial port has the following name: \\\\.\\Global\\com.redhat.spice.0 Under Linux this virtio serial port has the following name: /dev/virtio-ports/com.redhat.spice.0 To enable the virtio serial port you need to pass the following params on the qemu cmdline: For qemu < 0.14.0: -device spicevmc For qemu >= 0.14.0: -device virtio-serial-pci,id=virtio-serial0,max_ports=16,bus=pci.0,addr=0x5 \ -chardev spicevmc,name=vdagent,id=vdagent \ -device \ virtserialport,nr=1,bus=virtio-serial0.0,chardev=vdagent,name=com.redhat.spice.0 Enjoy, Gerd & Hans -- Gerd Hoffmann Hans de Goede