To remove the need for ":xxxx" at the end, you need to have the java viewer being served on the standard http port, which is port 80.

There are two basic ways of doing this

Either:

1) Forward port 80 on your router to port 5800 on your computer,

Or (e.g. if your router does not support changing the port, or you want to omit :5800 while _inside_ your LAN).

2) Forward port 80 on your router to port 80 on your computer, and change the VNC java port to 80.

Port forwarding is needed because your ip address to the outside world, is actually your IP address of your router. It then needs to know what to do with connections on each port - whether to ignore them (probably the default).

In either case, you will also need to forward port 5900 on your router to your PC.

NOTE: IF YOU ARE USING REALVNC FREE EDITION, THE ABOVE IS NOT SECURE. IT IS HIGHLY RECOMMENDED TO TUNNEL VNC THROUGH SOME OTHER SECURE CHANNEL, SUCH AS SSH OR VPN. (The Personal and Enterprise editions are more secure, or take a look at VeNCrypt - http://sourceforge.net/projects/vencrypt/ ).

You don't need Apache - Apache is for actual web-sites servers, not other services that also use the http protocol. Indeed if you have Apache on your system and try to change the java port to 80, one or other will fail, because you can only have one thing listening to port 80. If you do have Apache (or any other web-server), you can configure it to work in harmony with VNC, by setting up a page in it just like the one VNC serves, but from your e-mail I'm assuming that you don't have Apache, and so don't need to do this.

HTH,

Stewart

Astan Chee wrote:
I dont understand how port forwarding (due to my lack of knowledge in it) can solve it. Even if i forward port 5900 and 5800 in my router does that mean i can access the vnc server simply by typing http://<ip address> instead of http://<ip address>:5800 ? Sorry but im not all that familiar with port forwarding and had several accidents with it in the past.
Thanks for you for your help!
Cheers
Israel A. Martmnez Ibarra wrote:
you don't need apache; the only thing to do is to forwar the port 5900 and
5800 in your router/modem to see your vnc server from the WAN side.
for more help to do forwarding go to http://www.portforward.com
cheers.

----- Original Message ----- From: "Astan Chee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <vnc-list@realvnc.com>
Sent: Tuesday, November 14, 2006 11:47 PM
Subject: Simple question of making VNC accessible in web browser


Hi,
I have a winXP machnine running with a VNC server on it.
What Im trying to do is access said machine from the outside  world via
a web browser. I can do it fine if I type http://<ip address>:5800 in
the URL where <ip address> is the ip of my computer.
Now what Im trying to do is get access when I dont have access to port
5800. This means that when I type http://<ip address> in the URL the
same should happen. I searched and read in a few places saying that I
needed apache installed on my machine and that I needed to change
settings in both VNC and apache. What Im asking is how do I do this? Are
there any tutorials that shows how I can do this?
Similar to IBM's BladeCenter management module (the remote control
section) for those who have used/seen it before.
Thanks
_______________________________________________
VNC-List mailing list
VNC-List@realvnc.com
To remove yourself from the list visit:
http://www.realvnc.com/mailman/listinfo/vnc-list
_______________________________________________
VNC-List mailing list
VNC-List@realvnc.com
To remove yourself from the list visit:
http://www.realvnc.com/mailman/listinfo/vnc-list
_______________________________________________
VNC-List mailing list
VNC-List@realvnc.com
To remove yourself from the list visit:
http://www.realvnc.com/mailman/listinfo/vnc-list

Reply via email to