nick created GUACAMOLE-1935:
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             Summary: Solidify compatibility with UltraVNC's MSLogonII
                 Key: GUACAMOLE-1935
                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GUACAMOLE-1935
             Project: Guacamole
          Issue Type: Improvement
          Components: VNC
    Affects Versions: 1.5.4
            Reporter: nick


UltraVNC's MSLogonII uses Microsoft domain authentication as the security 
protocol for opening a VNC connection. [Support for this protocol was only 
added to libvncserver in 
v0.9.14|https://github.com/LibVNC/libvncserver/commit/f8333e3] (the latest 
version as of writing this), however, as far as I can tell, all of the Red 
Hat-based distros recommended for running Guacamole (Fedora, CentOS, Enterprise 
Linux) [only have packages with v0.9.13 of 
libvncserver|https://pkgs.org/search/?q=libvncserver]. I am running Guacamole 
1.5.4 on RockyLinux 9.

 

What would be the best way to overcome this?

Updating the packages for those distros to v0.9.14 is probably the best plan, 
but I imagine this would take a fair while to ensure the update doesn’t cause 
problems for other applications that use libvncserver.

Building libvncserver v0.9.14 from source would probably be the 
simplest/fastest workaround but unfortunately this didn’t work for me. Even 
after trying to move all the necessary library and shared object files to the 
same locations as they are when libvncserver is installed via the package 
manager (DNF), I was getting still getting an error in journalctl: – “VNC 
connection failed: authentication rejected”. I’m not sure why this didn’t work 
but I suspect there is something about the way the package manager installs the 
library that I missed when doing it from source.

The way I solved it was to rebuild the [libvncserver source RPM for my 
distro|https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/9/Everything/source/tree/Packages/l/].
 Inside the libvncserver .tar.gz file I added in JUST the extra lines of code 
from that libvncserver commit (changes to rfbproto .c and .h files) to avoid 
causing any problems with Guacamole, or interfering with any of the 
patches/specfile inside that RPM. This worked! But it seems like a bit of a 
dirty way to do it, so I thought I’d share this and see if anyone has a better 
idea/method.



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