On 01/31/2015 01:05 AM, Pavel Grunt wrote:
Hi,

Spice-html5 does not support webdav. It is included in spice-gtk since v0.24.

OK thanks.  webdav is one way, but your new file transfer method seems even 
better to me.

I seem to have version 0.25 packages on my host:

ii  libspice-client-gtk-2.0-4:amd64         0.25-1+b1     amd64        GTK2 
widget for SPICE clients (runtime library)
ii  libspice-client-gtk-2.0-dev             0.25-1+b1     amd64       GTK2 
widget for SPICE clients (development files)
ii  libspice-client-gtk-3.0-4:amd64         0.25-1+b1     amd64     GTK3 widget 
for SPICE clients (runtime library)
ii  libspice-client-gtk-3.0-dev             0.25-1+b1     amd64      GTK3 
widget for SPICE clients (development files)
ii  gir1.2-spice-client-gtk-2.0             0.25-1+b1     amd64      GTK2 
widget for SPICE clients (GObject-Introspection)
ii  gir1.2-spice-client-gtk-3.0             0.25-1+b1     amd64      GTK3 
widget for SPICE clients (GObject-Introspection)

but the symptom I saw was the Windows program installer failed, so I was 
interested in going with your new way
of doing file transfers.

The failing step was this program:

http://elmarco.fedorapeople.org/spice-webdavd-x86-0.1.24.msi

Is that windows driver installer good for a x86_64 windows 7 guest?
Does it need a 32 bit guest?
Is there another source of it that works?

Should I be building that windows driver component -- the docs seemed to say to 
do
that on windows or cross compile and it's a difficult barrier for my setup, so 
I was
asking about your new method that requires no special windows driver, but uses 
HTML5 instead.

Building the host side seems simpler in my situation than building the windows 
components,
so if I compile host side programs, what tag or release should I build?

Thanks,

John Griessen
_______________________________________________
Spice-devel mailing list
Spice-devel@lists.freedesktop.org
http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/spice-devel

Reply via email to