Installation instructions for synergy. Prerequisites for building -------------------------- To build synergy from the sources you'll need the following: Windows: * VC++ 6.0 or up Linux: * gcc 2.95 (or up?) * X11R4 or up headers and libraries If building from CVS on Linux you'll also need: * autoconf 2.52 (older versions may work) * automake 1.5 (older versions may work) Configuring the build --------------------- This step is only necessary when building on Linux. If you're building synergy from CVS you need to create the configure script and the Makefile.in files. To do that: % aclocal % autoheader % autoconf % automake To configure the build for your platform use the configure script: % ./configure For a list of options to configure use: % ./configure --help Building -------- Windows: Start VC++ and open `synergy.dsw'. Set the active configuration (Build | Set Active Configuration) to `All - Debug' or `All - Release'. Then build. VC++ 6.0 cannot handle project files that lack \r\n newlines. If you retrieved synergy via CVS then the files should be fine. But if the workspace appears to be empty then close VC++ and add \r to each line. A convenient way to do that is to get `fixcrlf.exe' from the Internet, search the synergy files for `*.dsp' and drag-and-drop all the project files onto fixcrlf.exe. Binaries are built into ./Debug or ./Release. Linux: Simply enter: % make This will build the client and server and leave them in their respective source directories. Installing ---------- Windows: There is no support for creating an installer for synergy or installing the files in a particular location. The only requirement for installed files is that synrgyhk.dll is in the same directory as synergyd.exe or in one of the system directories. Linux: % make install will install the client and server into /usr/local/bin unless you specified a different directory when you ran configure. See `Starting Automatically' for details on how to have synergy start up automatically when the computer starts. Configuring the Server ---------------------- The synergy server requires configuration. The configuration file is a plain text file broken into sections. Each section has the form: section: end Comments are introduced by `#' and continue to the end of the line. The file can have the following sections. * screens is a list of screen names, one name per line, each followed by a colon. Names are arbitrary strings but they must be unique. The hostname of each computer is recommended. There must be a screen name for the server and each client. Example: section: screens moe: larry: curly: end This declares three screens named: moe, larry, and curly. * links is a list of screen names just like in the `screens' section except each screen is followed by a list of links. Each link has the form ` = '. A link indicates which screen is adjacent in the given direction. Example: section: links moe: right = larry up = curly larry: left = moe up = curly curly: down = larry end This indicates that screen `larry' is to the right of screen `moe' (so moving the cursor off the right edge of moe would make it appear at the left edge of larry), `curly' is above 'moe', `moe' is to the left of `larry', `curly' is above `larry', and `larry' is below `curly'. Note that links do not have to be symmetrical; moving up from moe then down from curly lands the cursor on larry. * aliases is a list of screen names just like in the `screens' section except each screen is followed by a list of aliases, one per line *not* followed by a colon. An alias is a screen name and must be unique. During screen name lookup each alias is equivalent to the screen name it aliases. So a client can connect using its canonical screen name or any of its aliases. Example: section: aliases larry: larry.stooges.com curly: shemp end Screen `larry' is also known as `larry.stooges.com' and can connect as either name. Screen `curly' is also known as `shemp'. (Hey, it's just an example.) The synergy server will try certain pathnames to load the configuration file if the user doesn't specify a path using the `--config' command line option. `synergyd --help' reports those pathnames. Running the Server ------------------ Run the server on the computer that has the keyboard and mouse to be shared. You must have prepared a configuration file before starting the server. The server should be started before the clients but that's not required. Run the synergy server on the server system using the following command line: synergyd -f --config Replace with the path to the configuration file. The `-f' option causes synergyd to run in the foreground. This is recommended until you've verified that the configuration works. If you didn't include the system's hostname in the configuration file (either as a screen name or an alias) then you'll have to add `--name ' to the command line, where is a name in the configuration file. You can use `synergyd --help' for a list of command line options. Running the Client ------------------ Run the client on all computers that aren't the server using the following command line: synergy -f --no-camp Replace with the hostname or address of the server system. The `-f' option causes synergy to run in the foreground. The `--no-camp' prevents synergy from retrying to connect to the server until it succeeds. Both are recommended until you've verified that the configuration works. If you didn't include the system's hostname in the configuration file (either as a screen name or an alias) then you'll have to add `--name ' to the command line, where is a name in the configuration file. The client should quickly report `connected to server'. If it does not but doesn't print an error and exit immediately then it's trying to connect to the server but cannot. It will time out in 30 seconds and exit (use ctrl+c to exit earlier). You should check that the server is running and is reachable over the network and try again. If the client fails and exits it should print an error describing the problem. Here are typical problems and possible solutions: * failed to open screen: check permission to open the X display; check that the DISPLAY environment variable is set. * already connected: check that synergy isn't already running. * refused client: add client to the server's configuration file. * connection failed: check ; the server cannot open the desired port, stop the program using that port (24800) and restart the server. Once all the clients are running, try moving the mouse to each screen. Be sure to check all the configured links. Starting Automatically ---------------------- You can setup synergy to start automatically when your computer does. Windows: Start the client or server normally except add `--install' as the first option on the command line, followed by the usual options except do not include `-f' or `--no-daemon'. This will install synergy as a service that will be started at system boot. On the Windows NT family you can start and stop the service at any time using the Services control panel (under Administrative Tools on Windows 2000 and XP). On the Windows 95 family you cannot start or stop the service. To uninstall the service, run the client or server with just the `--uninstall' command line option. Linux: Synergy requires an X server. That means a server must be running and synergy must be authorized to connect to that server. It's best to have the display manager start synergy. You'll need the necessary (probably root) permission to modify the display manager configuration files. If you don't have that permission you can start synergy after logging in via the .xsession file. To have the display manager start synergy, edit the Xsetup script. The location of this file depends on your installation. It might be /etc/X11/xdm/Xsetup. Near the end of the file but before anyplace the script calls exit, start the client with something like: /usr/bin/killall synergy /usr/local/bin/synergy [] must not include `-f' or `--no-daemon'. Change the paths as necessary. It's important to make sure no old copies of synergy are running so they can't interfere with the new one. To start the server use something like: /usr/bin/killall synergyd /usr/local/bin/synergyd [] --config Again, must not include `-f' or `--no-daemon'. If the configuration pathname is one of the default locations then you don't need the `--config' option. Note that some display managers (xdm and kdm, but not gdm) grab the keyboard and do not release it until the user logs in, for security reasons. This prevents a synergy server from sharing the mouse and keyboard until the user logs in. It doesn't prevent a synergy client from synthesizing mouse and keyboard input, though. Common Command Line Options --------------------------- -d, --debug use debugging level --daemon run as a daemon (Linux) or background (Windows) -f, --no-daemon run in the foreground -n, --name use instead of the hostname --restart automatically restart on failures -1, --no-restart do not restart on failure -h, --help print help and exit --version print version information and exit --install install as a service (Windows only) --uninstall uninstall service (Windows only) Debug levels are from highest to lowest: FATAL, ERROR, WARNING, NOTE, INFO, DEBUG, DEBUG1, and DEBUG2. Only messages at or above the given level are logged. Messages are logged to a terminal window when running in the foreground. Unix logs messages to syslog when running as a daemon. The Windows NT family logs messages to the event log when running as a service. The Windows 95 family shows FATAL log messages in a message box and others in a terminal window when running as a service. The `--name' option lets the client or server use a name other than its hostname for its screen. This name is used when checking the configuration. Neither the client nor server will automatically restart if an error occurs that is sure to happen every time. For example, the server will exit immediately if it can't find itself in the configuration. On X11 both the client and server will also terminate if the connection to the X server is lost. Since xdm will normally restart the server and synergy, this is the correct behavior. Server Command Line Options --------------------------- -a, --address
listen for connections on the given address -c, --config read configuration from
has one of the following forms: : : is a hostname or address of a network interface on the server system. is a port number from 1 to 65535. defaults to the system's hostname and defaults to 24800. Client Command Line Options --------------------------- --camp retry connection to server until successful --no-camp try connection to server only once
address of server see the "server command line options" for a description of
but note that there is no default though there is a default .