[go: up one dir, main page]

Skip to content

A VNC remote desktop server for vintage Macintosh computers, including the Mac Plus.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

marciot/mac-minivnc

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

62 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

MiniVNC for Macintosh MiniVNC for Macintosh

MiniVNC Remote Desktop Server for Vintage Macintosh Computers

MiniVNC is a remote desktop server that has been written from the ground up for best performance on 68k Macintosh computers.

It was originally an experiment to see whether a Macintosh Plus could be controlled remotely, but has since been expanded to support the Apple Lisa and also all vintage color Macs! 🌈

MiniVNC on a Macintosh LC II

  • Video 1 - Running on a Macintosh Plus in B&W
  • Video 2 - Running on a Macintosh LC II in Color
  • Video 3 - Apple Lisa Chat and Remote Desktop Demo

Compatibility

MiniVNC v0.9 used TRLE encoding (Tiled Run-Length Encoding) and paletted colors. While this encoding provides the best performance on B&W compact Macs, client support is very limited. After v1.1, MiniVNC was overhauled to supports ZRLE and Hextile encodings for maximum client compatibility, but these encodings are limited to color-capable Macs.

Here are the server capabilities:

Server OS TRLE ZRLE Hextile Uploads Notes
MiniVNC v1.4 macOS 7 Yes Yes Yes Yes Compatible with all tested clients
MiniVNC v1.3 macOS 7 Yes Yes Yes No Compatible with all tested clients
MiniVNC v1.2 macOS 7 Yes Yes Yes No Crashes TurboVNC
MiniVNC v0.9 macOS 7 Yes No No No Only works with RealVNC Viewer

Here are the client capabilities:

Client OS TRLE ZRLE Hextile Palette Uploads Notes
RealVNC Viewer Windows Yes Yes Yes Yes No Only viewer for B&W Macs
TightVNC Windows No Yes Yes No Yes Requires MiniVNC 1.2+
TurboVNC Windows No Yes Yes No No Requires MiniVNC 1.3+
TigerVNC Windows No Yes Yes No No Tested w/ MiniVNC 1.3+
MacVNC macOS 7 No No Yes No No Requires MiniVNC 1.2+
VNCThing 2.2 macOS 8 No No Yes No No Requires MiniVNC 1.2+
Screen Sharing macOS X No Yes No No No Requires MiniVNC 1.2+

MiniVNC is built on MacTCP and requires System 7, but it will operate on later Macs using Open Transport. MiniVNC has been developed and tested using a RaSCSI device operating as an Ethernet bridge, but should also work using a Mac with a built-in Ethernet port.

Sponsorship Perks

As a special reward to GitHub sponsor at the "Sustaining Supporter" tier or above, I am providing a 🎁 bonus archive in the releases page with additional perks. These perks are:

  • RaSCSI System 7.0.1 Boot Image: This pre-made disk image includes a complete installation of System 7.0.1 pre-configured with MacTCP, DaynaPort SCSI/Link drivers and MiniVNC running in headless mode, which allows RaSCSI users to boot and remotely control a Macintosh with zero configuration and even without an ADB mouse and keyboard. This disk image can also be mounted and changed in Basillisk II.
  • Headless Server Mode: When placed in the "Startup Items", the Sponsors Edition of MiniVNC automatically starts listening for connections at system boot, allowing it to be used on Macs without a keyboard, mouse, or monitor.
  • Different Compression Levels: These custom builds allow experimentation with different compression modes.

Please refer to your sponsorship welcome letter or GitHub sponsor dashboard for the archive password.

How can you help?

You can help this project in one of the following ways:

  • ✨ Star this project on GitHub to show your support!
  • 📢 Subscribe to my YouTube channel!
  • 🙋 Download the binaries from the releases page and participate in the beta test discussion!
  • ❤️ Become a GitHub sponsor to help fund my open-source projects!

Project Goal

The goal of MiniVNC is to provide better performance and compatibility with older Macs than ChromiVNC

It accomplishes these goals by:

  • Using Classic Networking (i.e. MacTCP) rather than Open Transport
  • Implementing a limited subset of the Remote Framebuffer Protocol, which favor of performance over full compatibility with all clients.
  • Implement modern extensions, such as file uploads, where possible.
  • Implements fast but inexact screen change detection, favoring performance and low memory utilization while allowing for the occasional missed update and visual artifacts.
  • Written in C++, with optimized 68x assembly code where necessary for best performance.

More Software for Vintage Macs

Technical Notes

Development of MiniVNC required months of experimentation and hacking. The following write-up provides details for developers who have an interest.

Click here to read this section

MacTCP Programming is Hard; Doing it Efficiently is Harder

MacTCP is Apple's first TCP/IP networking stack and is the only networking API available on the Macintosh Plus. The MacTCP Programmer's Guide is a good resource, but lacks code samples and makes no mention of high-level languages. The MacTCP Cookbook article by Steve Falkenburg provides more meat to chew on but actual source code is worth a thousand words. I finally it on the Apple Developer Group CD Volume VII in the form of a "finger" protocol example in the directory Dev.CD Vol. VII:develop:develop 6 code:TCP:finger

This is a good starting point as the "TCPRoutines.c" file provides an example of using MacTCP parameter blocks from a high-level language. Steve's helper routines, while easy-to-use for simple tasks, are very slow. As I later learned, the most efficient way to do MacTCP programming is via asynchronous callback routines.

Since these callback routines execute in interrupt time, writing them in a high-level language is challenging. I used the technique from the article "Asynchronous Routines on the Macintosh" in Develop magazine, March 1993 which involves an assembly language glue routine. Later on, I used a similar routine for making a Vertical Retrace task for gathering screen updates.

Today we take for granted threads which make it easy to implement network applications. The use of callback routines is a huge step backwards.

For one, it precludes using temporary stack-based storage and instead all state must be stored in global variables. Doing things like loops are trivial in a thread but very difficult using callback routines.

The VNC protocol is fairly simple, but the code is far more complicated than it would have been had I modern techniques at my disposal.

As an aside, Ari Halberstadt wrote a very promissing thread library for the Macintosh. Getting it to work with MacTCP might have simplified the programing model, but at the time it was too much of a heavy lift for me to get it to work while I was also learning MacTCP. I ended up using some of his basic OS utilities code in MiniVNC, but not the thread library itself.

Mouse Control

On the Macintosh, the mouse can be progmattically changed by writing the new position to the low-memory globals MouseTemp and RawMouseLocation and then copying the value of CrsrCouple to CursorNew to signal the change. This technique is borrowed from ChromiVNC.

Mouse button control presented a challenge. The technique used by ChromiVNC is to write the new mouse button state to the low-memory global MBState while simultaneously posting a mouseUp or mouseDown event to the System event queue. This works on modern Macs, but on the Macintosh Plus it only works for clicking. Mouse dragging — and crucially, menu selection — does not work. On that machine the VIA interrupt in ROM constantly overwrites MBState with the button state from the physical mouse, so the trick of writing a value to MBState does not work.

I attempted patching the Button trap and implemented a journaling driver, but the former was ineffective while the latter was found to be broken and unusable under System 7's multi-tasking model.

At last, an analysis of the disassembled code for the VIA interrupt revealed it deglitched the mouse button by waiting three ticks prior to updating MBState. The low-memory variable MBTicks indicates the start of the wait period and by periodically setting it to the future &emdash; in advance of TickCount — I found I could keep the VIA routine waiting indefinitely so that I could alter MBState at will. This allowed me control of the mouse button on all Macs, including the Macintosh Plus.

Screen Change Detection via Checksums

On the vintage Macintosh, the address of the framebuffer is stored in the low-memory global ScrnBase. A crucial part of a VNC server is detecting changes to the screen. While this could be done by maintaining a separate copy of the framebuffer and comparing every pixel, this requires a lot of memory and a lot of memory accesses.

In MiniVNC, I decided to compute a 32-bit sum across each row of pixels and a 32-bit sum up and down the screen. For both the horizontal and vertical sums, the new and old sums are compared to detect screen changes. It turns out this is also an quick way to determine the bounds of the change rectangle as the location of the first and last changed sum along an axis can be taken as the rectangle bounds along the axis.

This is an inexact approach which makes the server blind to many types of screen changes. Using a [position-dependent checksum] like a Fletcher's checksum would improve accuracy, at the expense of more computation and storage.

Byte Alignment and Reduction of Horizontal Resolution of Change Rectangles

An ordinary VNC server would attempt to minimize transmission by sending the smallest possible change rectangle. MiniVNC keeps the horizonal bounds of change rectangles aligned to byte boundaries. On the Macintosh Plus, which uses one bit per pixel, this is crucial as it allows screen data to be sent without any bit-shift or bit masking operations, which are particularly slow on the 68000.

When using a 32-bit column sum (as opposed to the XOR operation used in my first implementation), a change in one pixel column can cause a carry to the next, meaning that the horizontal bounds of change rectangles are further aligned to 32-bit boundaries.

On a B&W display, this causes change rectangle bounds to fall on 32 pixel increments, which might cause quite a lot of extra data to be transmitted.

The effect is minimized on color displays, which pack fewer pixels per byte. For example, on a 256 color display, the change rectangles can fall on 4 pixel boundaries, mimimizing the size of change rectangles.

Use of TRLE Encoding to Avoid Bit Unpacking and Packing

The VNC protocol is meant for color computers and most encodings assume a color depth of at least eight bits. However, the TRLE encoding is unique in that it supports a paletted tile type that allows for a 1-bit, 2-bit and 4-bit encodings.

The ability to transmit 1-bit data is what caused me to require MiniVNC to use TRLE encoding exclusively. This does not meet the VNC specifications, but is compatible with modern clients. To support raw encoding, as required by the specifications, would necessitate expanding each 1-bit pixel in a byte into a full color byte, an operation which would be prohibitive on older Macs.

On the Macintosh Plus, I transmit all tiles using the 1-bit paletted tile type. This, together with byte alignment, allows the encoding process to be a straight copy full bytes without any bit shifting or masking.

As an optimization, during the copy I will detect if a tile consists of all zeros (i.e. white). If this is the case, I emit a solid white tile. There is no corresponding case for black pixels, so a white region will compress better than a black region.

On color Macintosh computers, where I have the luxury of a 68020 with an instruction and data cache, I perform additional computation in order to choose from among the following TRLE tile types:

  • Solid tiles
  • Paletted 1-bit tiles
  • Paletted 2-bit tiles
  • Raw 8-bit tiles
  • RLE encoded tiles

On a color Mac, the full encoding process would work like this:

  1. The tile is encoded as a plain RLE tile. During this stage, up to five unique colors from the tile are recorded.
  2. If the number of unique colors is equal to one, a solid tile is emitted
  3. If the number of unique colors is equal to two and the size of the RLE encoded tile exceeds that of a paletted 1-bit tile, then a 1-bit paletted tile is emitted
  4. If the number of unique colors is equal to three or four and the size of the RLE encoded tile exceeds that of a paletted 2-bit tile, then a 2-bit paletted tile is emitted
  5. If the number of unique colors exceeds fours and the size of the RLE encoded tile exceeds that of a raw 8-bit tile, a raw 8-bit tile is emitted.

In practice, I found that doing this whole process actually hurt performance on an Macintosh LC II, so MiniVNC supports different packing levels which omit many of the steps listed above.

For example, packing level 2 looks like this:

  1. The tile is encoded as a plain RLE tile.
  2. A solid tile is emitted if only one run is found.
  3. If the RLE encoded tile exceeds the size of a paletted tile of the same color depth as the screen, emit that tile instead.

The key different between packing 2 and the full process is that I do not emit a tile with fewer colors than the color depth of the screen itself. Doing so requires finding the unique colors in a tile and mapping those to a smaller palette, which is expensive. Emitting a tile with the same number of colors as the screen, however, is trivial as it only involves a straight copy with no changes to the color values themselves.

CodeWarrior or Symantec C++

There is not, unfortunately, a perfect development environment for the Macintosh when it comes to writing code that mixes C++ and assembly language. My go to language used to be Symantec C++ 7 because it allows you to write C++ routines and add assembly language bits and pieces just where you need it, minimizing the learning curve. It is also very good for things like code resources or device drivers.

CodeWarrior 8, on the other hand, works great on Basillisk II and has a better IDE. I've lately begun using it over Symantec C++ 7 for these reasons, but one frustrating aspect is that it does not allow you to mix C and assembly language in one function. Instead, you must chose one or the other. This meant that in MiniVNC I had to write whole functions in assembly language, which meant doing things like pulling arguments off the stack myself, something Symantec C++ 7 would do for me.

Assembly Language Tricks for Performance

The TRLE encoder was written in 68x assembly for best performance. For the color encoders, a 68020 is assumed and the code makes special use of 68020 instructions such as bfextu. Most functions take advantage of as many of the available eight data and eight address registers as possible, as to minimize memory accesses.

One example is the color palette gathering code. In the RLE encoding routine, use two register halves of two registers to keep track of colors I have seen before, which allows me to generate a palette of up to four colors without having to write to memory. I implemented another routine which uses eight 32-bit registers as bitfields to tally up to 256 unique colors—again, with no memory access. This routine would be needed for generating 16 bit color tiles when the screen is in 256 color mode, although I have not actually implemented this at this point (and probably never will, as it appears that even generating 2 or 4 color tiles is too slow to be worth the effort).