SPICE-CLIENT(1) Spice-GTK Documentation SPICE-CLIENT(1)NAME
Spice-GTK - a client-side library to access remote SPICE displays
DESCRIPTION
Spice-GTK is a library allowing access to remote displays over the
SPICE protocol. At the moment It's mainly used to access remote virtual
machines.
The Spice-GTK library provides a set of command line options which can
be used to tweak some SPICE-specific option.
URI
The most basic SPICE URI which can be used is in the form
spice://hostname.example.com:5900
This will try to initiate a SPICE connection to hostname.example.com to
port 5900. This connection will be unencrypted. This URI is equivalent
to
spice://hostname.example.com?port=5900
In order to start a TLS connection, one would use
spice://hostname.example.com?tls-port=5900
Other valid URI parameters are 'username' and 'password'. Be careful
that passing a password through a SPICE URI might cause the password to
be visible by any local user through 'ps'.
Several parameters can be specified at once if they are separated by &
or ;
spice://hostname.example.com?port=5900;tls-port=5901
When using 'tls-port', it's recommended to not specify any non-TLS
port. If you give both 'port' and 'tls-port', make sure you use the
--spice-secure-channels options to indicate which channels must be
secure. Otherwise, Spice-GTK first attempts a connection to the non-
TLS port, and then try to use the TLS port. This means a man-in-the-
middle could force the whole SPICE session to go in clear text
regardless of the TLS settings of the SPICE server.
OPTIONS
The following options are accepted when running a SPICE client which
makes use of the default Spice-GTK options:
--spice-secure-channels=<main,display,inputs,...,all>
Force the specified channels to be secured
This instructs the SPICE client that it must use a TLS connection
for these channels. If the server only offers non-TLS connections
for these channels, the client will not use these. If the special
value "all" is used, this indicates that all SPICE channels must be
encrypted.
The current SPICE channels are: main, display, inputs, cursor,
playback, record, smartcard, usbredir.
--spice-disable-effects=<wallpaper,font-smooth,animation,all>
Disable guest display effects
This tells the SPICE client that it should attempt to disable some
guest features in order to lower bandwidth usage. This requires
guest support, usually through a SPICE agent. This is currently
only supported on Windows guests.
"wallpaper" will disable the guest wallpaper, "font-smooth" will
disable font antialiasing, "animation" will try to disable some of
the desktop environment animations. "all" will attempt to disable
everything which can be disabled.
--spice-color-depth=<16,32>
Guest display color depth
This tells the SPICE client that it should attempt to force the
guest OS color depth. A lower color depth should lower bandwith
usage. This requires guest support, usually through a SPICE agent.
This is currently only supported on Windows guests.
--spice-ca-file=<file>
Truststore file for secure connections
This option is used to specify a .crt file containing the CA
certificate with which the SPICE server TLS certificates are
signed. This is useful when using self-signed TLS certificates
rather than certificates signed by an official CA.
--spice-host-subject=<host-subject>
Subject of the host certificate (field=value pairs separated by
commas)
When using self-signed certificates, or when the guest is migrated
between different hosts, the subject/altSubject of the TLS
certificate the SPICE server will provide will not necessarily
match the hostname we are connecting to. This option makes it
possible to override the expected subject of the TLS certificate.
The subject must correspond to the "Subject:" line returned by:
openssl x509 -noout -text -in server-cert.pem
--spice-debug
Enable Spice-GTK debugging. This can also be toggled on with the
SPICE_DEBUG environment variable, or using G_MESSAGES_DEBUG=all
--spice-disable-audio
Disable audio support
--spice-disable-usbredir
Disable USB redirection support
--spice-usbredir-auto-redirect-filter=<filter-string>
Filter selecting USB devices to be auto-redirected when plugged in
This filter specifies which USB devices should be automatically
redirected when they are plugged in during the lifetime of a SPICE
session.
A rule has the form of: "class,vendor,product,version,allow"
-1 can be used instead of class, vendor, product or version in
order to accept any value. Several rules can be concatenated with
'|': "rule1|rule2|rule3"
--spice-usbredir-redirect-on-connect=<filter-string>
Filter selecting USB devices to redirect on connect
This filter specifies which USB devices should be automatically
redirected when a SPICE connection to a remote display has been
established.
--spice-gtk-version
Display Spice-GTK version information
--spice-smartcard
Enable smartcard support
--spice-smartcard-db=<certificate-db>
Path to the local certificate database to use for software
smartcard certificates
This option is only useful for testing purpose. Instead of having a
hardware smartcard reader, and a physical smartcard, you can
specify a file containing 3 certificates which will be used to
emulate a smartcard in software. See
"http://www.spice-space.org/page/SmartcardUsage#Using_a_software_smartcard"
for more details about how to generate these certificates.
--spice-smartcard-certificates=<certificates>
Certificates to use for software smartcards (field=values separated
by commas)
This option is only useful for testing purpose. This allows to
specify which certificates from the certificate database specified
with --spice-smartcard-db should be used for smartcard emulation.
--spice-cache-size=<bytes>
Image cache size
This option should only be used for testing/debugging.
--spice-glz-window-size=<bytes>
Glz compression history size
This option should only be used for testing/debugging.
BUGS
Report bugs to the mailing list
"http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/spice-devel"
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2011, 2014 Red Hat, Inc., and various contributors. This
is free software. You may redistribute copies of it under the terms of
the GNU Lesser General Public License
"https://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html". There is NO
WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
SEE ALSO
"virt-viewer(1)", the project website "http://spice-space.org"
perl v5.18.4 2015-01-06 SPICE-CLIENT(1)