# HCRA Server This is the server for HamClock Remote Access. It is a Python web app written using Tornado. On its own, the server is useless; it requires HamClock, available at http://clearskyinstitute.com/ham/HamClock/ (installed on the same machine as the HCRA server), and the HCRA client (see `../client`). ## Installation The server itself does not need to be installed; it is simply run with `python3 wss.py` in this directory. However, it does have some dependencies (both Python packages and binaries). ### Python packages pip3 install -r requirements.txt ### Binaries #### Ubuntu, Mint, possibly Debian, etc. sudo apt install $(cat ubuntu-pkgs.txt) #### Other distros Unfortunately, I only have Mint computers, so I can't help with other distros. You will need the following: * ImageMagick 6 * X11 development headers * `Xvfb` * `xdotool` * `xwd` ## Backends The server can connect to HamClock in one of two ways; it can either use HamClock's built-in port 8080 service, or it can use X11. The X11 method is highly recommended when it can be used, because it does not occasionally freeze when HamClock is on certain screens like the port 8080 backend does. A variant on the X11 backend, called the SaaS backend, is also available. It works the same way, except it starts HamClock on its own and stops it when the user disconnects. This is intended for cloud/SaaS environments that may run multiple HamClocks for different users. ### Port 8080 The Port 8080 backend just requires a running instance of 800x480 HamClock. ### X11 The X11 backend requires 800x480 HamClock to be running on Xvfb at a resolution of `800x480x24`. For example: Xvfb :1 -screen 0 800x480x24 DISPLAY=:1 path-to-hamclock Replace :1 with the desired display number. ### SaaS The SaaS backend ### Custom If you write your own backend, just put it in the `backends` folder and specify its file name (without `.py`) in `conf.txt`. Make sure you don't accidentally commit it if you don't want to! ## `conf.txt` The server will not work without a `conf.txt` file. This file is a space-separated table of configuration data. See the included file for a reference. (That file will work for testing, but should not be used on an Internet-accessible server. The password is `Testing123`. It uses the X11 backend, `DISPLAY=:1`.) ### `backend` Use `x11` for the X11 backend, or `port8080` for the port 8080 backend. ### `display` X11 display to use, such as `:1`. Must be the same as the one used for Xvfb and HamClock. Has no effect with the `port8080` backend. ### `password_argon2` Argon2-hashed password. Use `pwhash.py` to generate a hashed password.