On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 02:06:53PM -0700, John R. Hogerhuis wrote: > VmWare seems to let you do it any way you want. Full screen, scroll it > manually or auto scroll, etc. So clearly it can be done. Maybe the code > in something like VNC client would give some ideas. >
Scrolling manually works, just a few kinks to iron out. Fullscreen support is currently broken, but it is fixable. Just haven't gotten around to it yet. Autoscrolling is harder. VMware uses guest drivers, and using a custom guest mosue driver would certainly help. This is doable if the guest OS does not do mouse acceleration (because then the host and guest pointers dont get out of sync - if the host pointer is at the edge of the window, the guest must be as well). This option is a bit of work though... > Scaling an image *down* to fit in window of a given size seems totally > pointless other than to give a thumbnails of multiple vm's for > navigation between VMs. For that matter I can't imagine trying to work > with a machine w/in a machine at 800x600 for the host. Better to go to a > higher resolution and then you could consider scaling a vm display *up* > to some given size. Just increase your font size on the host. There's no > such thing as too high a resolution, just fonts that are too small > and/or broken applications or windowing systems that don't let you > adjust the font size. > Scaling an image up on the other hand, may be quite useful. I am not sure how to do either (up or down) but if scaling up is possible, it seems only natural to add the ability to scale down (even if its not recommended due to hard to see fonts and etc). -- Infinite complexity begets infinite beauty. Infinite precision begets infinite perfection. _______________________________________________ Qemu-devel mailing list Qemu-devel@nongnu.org http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/qemu-devel