In that case, the problem may be the opposite of what I
thought. If you're using the dev branch, then the RENDER
extension may be too new for CentOS 7.4. Can you try the 2.2.5
version instead? I'm just curious as to whether it experiences
the same issue. It would be odd for an application to demand an
X11 extension that is older than a particular version, but I've
seen stranger things.
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I'm officially flummoxed. I ran rendercheck against both TurboVNC 2.2.5 and TigerVNC 1.8.0 (the system-supplied version in CentOS 7), and the results are basically identical. The only differences had to do with the fact that TurboVNC has depth-15 Pixmaps and TigerVNC doesn't. Both VNC servers use X Render v0.11.
Possible paths forward:
1. Contact the commercial software vendor and ask them how their software tests for X Render support. That may give me a clue how to reproduce the issue locally.
2. Provide me with access to the commercial software so that I can install and test it locally.
3. Provide me with remote access via SSH so I can test the application remotely.
For Option 3, your organization would need to pay for my
labor.
DRC
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TurboVNC uses depth=24 by default, so it wouldn't have been
using depth=16 unless you explicitly configured it as such.
Don't do that. TurboVNC supports color depths < 24 only for
backward compatibility with ancient applications, but those
modes do not perform optimally. 8-bit doesn't support JPEG at
all, and in 16-bit mode, the pixels have to be up-converted to
24-bit prior to compressing as JPEG. Thus, you don't save a
significant amount of bandwidth by reducing the color depth (you
save a lot more by increasing the chrominance subsampling or
reducing the JPEG quality or increasing the compression level),
and reducing the color depth creates visual artifacts and uses
more CPU time than using depth=24.
In the future, if you encounter an issue with TurboVNC or any
other free software package, please disclose any non-default
settings you are using and try reverting those settings before
you ask for support. Our project is in a negative funding
situation, and I cannot afford to spend hours of unpaid labor
going on wild goose chases.
DRC
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