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notepad0x90 2 days ago [-]
This is cool. If it adds session recording and SSO auth support, it can be used as an RDP jumphost.
I've used Azure bastion to do just this, you auth to the azure portal using whatever authentication regime is configured for your tenant, then you rdp into virtual machines from your browser using the local vm login. it handles things like files and clipboards great. But it also supports console sessions in the browser.
I haven't used it with windows/rdp (if it even is supported), but in GCP, their in-browser SSH is the best I've seen so far.
Even for Linux, I've found xrdp to be better than alternatives at times.
The main problem I see this solving (one of many) is the decoupling of the management interface for virtual machines and servers from their service interfaces. not having your web server's management services on the same IP/domain/interface as the http server is a big improvement. Lots of security screw-ups happen because of this entanglement.
hdgvhicv 2 days ago [-]
I use apache guacamole for this with our OIDC proxy for this purpose
notepad0x90 2 days ago [-]
I've used it before, setting it up wasn't pleasant with the whole java/tomcat thing, and it kept having severe vulnerabilities.
MaKey 2 days ago [-]self.__VINEXT_RSC_CHUNKS__=self.__VINEXT_RSC_CHUNKS__||[];self.__VINEXT_RSC_CHUNKS__.push("e:I[\"6ed23a8ff0cc\",[],\"default\",1]\n")pan>
FYI, Azure Bastion is based on Apache Guacamole. You're paying them for not having to manage your own instance.
notepad0x90 2 days ago [-]
That tracks, that's all Azure is there to do in the end. If it was easy to manage it myself, I'd do it, and I'd still need to pay them for a VM to host it on, along with traffic costs. But bastion isn't cheap, so something to consider for sure.
solarkraft 3 days ago [-]
Looks very interesting, but i’m a bit surprised the most important feature isn’t mentioned: How well does clipboard sharing work?
wcrossbow 3 days ago [-]
Im not a big fan of Windows but copy pasting a file across 3 nested RDP sessions feels magical every time
hypercube33 3 days ago [-]
It actually doesn't it feels horrible. you can't paste files from a samba share or large ones take so long to copy that they ultimately fail.
ktpsns 3 days ago [-]
To be honest, three nested RDPs sound like a terrible hack. In an ideal world, this would be two port forwardings and one RDP (thinking about ssh, which is still underrepresented in windows world). In an even more ideal world, this would be an IPv6 direct access ;-)
everforward 3 days ago [-]
There are legit reasons, at least for two nested sessions. A production network that’s airgapped except for a bastion host that acts as a gateway. It’s better than port forwarding because you have to auth to the bastion host before the RDP chaining, and it often takes separate credentials for the second RDP session.
It’s a semi-common setup for higher security environments, and when you have a network of stuff that has known vulnerabilities you can’t patch for whatever reason. Traffic in and out is super carefully firewalled. It’s not great, but it’s better than a 25 year old MySQL with a direct public IP.
embedding-shape 3 days ago [-]
> airgapped except for a bastion host that acts as a gateway
First time I've heard of an airgapped system you could access remotely. Doesn't that kind of defeat the label "airgapped"? I think I'd just call that "isolated" at that point instead.
debarshri 3 days ago [-]
This concept is related to PAM.
You often have to do ops on infra and need some DMZ to do the ops. In regulated industry you have to record every operations done by the person and have to follow principle of least privilege. This what should happen in an ideal world.
embedding-shape 3 days ago [-]
> You often have to do ops on infra and need some DMZ to do the ops.
This makes sense, "bastion" hosts and similar things is fairly common too. What's not common is calling those "airgapped", because they're clearly not.
hnlmorg 3 days ago [-]
I agree. They’re network enclaves. Which isn’t the same thing as an air gapped network.
zcw100 2 days ago [-]
You can have a network enclave in an air gapped network.
hnlmorg 2 days ago [-]
Of course you can. But you cannot connect to an air gapped network from outside of it via a bastion.
Air gapped means... there is nothing except air in the gap between systems.
A physical tether would defeat it.
Now, I pedant could start talking about wifi, but air-gapping is a concept older than the internet. (It stems from plumbing where there's air that prevents back leakage of contamination).
It's probably there not as a way to connect networks, but as a way to keep them separate, only allowing RDP between specific computers on different networks.
debarshri 3 days ago [-]
I am not sure if you have tried broadcasting feature in terminals, thats magical too.
debarshri 3 days ago [-]
We have a custom RDP client [1]. So i have some experience building something like this. We do some an implementation similar to this.
Clipboard sharing, uploading and downloading via shared drive is a freerdp feature that should be readily available.
We also have sessions recording which is non-negotiable in PAM.
And desktop scaling. And multi-monitor support. And file transfers. And drive redirection. And peripheral redirection. And...
rvz 3 days ago [-]
...A test suite, And security audits, And most importantly benchmarks.
What it does have is a license which it is GPLv3. So if anyone adds all those changes, they have to make the source code available with the same software license.
pixel_popping 3 days ago [-]
In this era tho, licenses (I don't agree with this, but this is what it is) are a matter of "tokens", I speak for a fact knowing multiple relatively-big companies just gobbling GPLv3 projects and rewriting them entirely, some do publish them as well.
tombuildsstuff 2 days ago [-]
This is neat!
A few months back I ended up building a RDC Server in Golang (i.e. no Windows required!) entirely with Claude, which was a fun experiment.
I ended up fronting that with GitHub Auth (purely for rate limiting purposes, since it's bandwidth intensive), but I've built it in such a way that it surfaces/renders any arbitrary binary on the RDC side. In my case, I ended up just fronting it with a Snake binary, but it's been fun to experiment and push the bounds somewhat.
I should really think about open sourcing it - in my case it was an experiment to see how far I could push Claude that turned out pretty great tbh
mcoliver 2 days ago [-]
With hp shutting down anyware / teradici / pcoip there are quite a few people looking for alternatives that support high resolution multi monitor with 60fps high bit depth playback and things like wacom tablet support and all three OS. Parsec and DCV are out there on the spend money side. I'm excited about the open source efforts. Things like rustdesk,kyber, and teraguchi. The community needs an open source high performance option.
FWIW DCV is free on EC2, and anywhere else it has a very minimal nag without a license.
rcarmo 23 hours ago [-]
Neat - I built https://github.com/rcarmo/go-rdp a few months back and use it daily, but it’s nice seeing a different take (I went all out on deep protocol suppose because I’m a network nerd)
jqpabc123 3 days ago [-]
Interesting from a technical perspective but with native RDP clients readily available on just about every platform, I don't see the need for it.
le-mark 3 days ago [-]
When it’s in a browser you don’t need to install anything on the local machine. I used to use Apache guacamole to access my machine at home from work when I was stuck in a cube all day.
1 contributor, 1 commit, new project... gives me vibe-coding feels.
zcw100 2 days ago [-]
If you have factual observations to make that's fine but can we stop with the "smells like vibe coding" attacks? It's like an AI version of an ad-hominem attack.
pixel_popping 3 days ago [-]
Browsers are sandboxes, your native client often isn't, there is definitely a huge advantage, portability and embeddability as well, it's also simpler to sniff traffic (and MITM it).
jqpabc123 3 days ago [-]
Doesn't this limit your ability to share resources and transfer data?
pixel_popping 2 days ago [-]
Why would it? You have access to your entire filesystem via the browser.
boredishBoi 3 days ago [-]
Not many good MFA options for native RDP/RDG. Putting it in the browser lets you wrap the whole thing with OAUTH/passkeys etc
hnlmorg 3 days ago [-]
Having just implemented OAUTH into a Go app this week, I can assure you that it’s surprising easy to do so without making your entire application a website.
boredishBoi 2 days ago [-]
I don’t disagree but none of the native RDP clients support oauth for non azure computers.
tom_alexander 3 days ago [-]
Perhaps as a web client for the remote desktop on the BMC chips?
igtztorrero 2 days ago [-]
Does Alt-Tab inside the Browser Tab can be hooked to the rdp client ???
That was the main problem in guacamole rdp in browser.
yamapikarya 3 days ago [-]
is it work for opening rdp file from cyberark pam?
the_data_nerd 3 days ago [-]
[flagged]
maxloh 3 days ago [-]
> ...on the read side most browsers prompt the user every single time.
I don't think that is the case. Google Docs, Office 365, and Notion all function without requiring repeated user permissions.
jerrythegerbil 3 days ago [-]
I can assure you they’ve correctly described the problem and are correct regarding buffering and user gesture requirements.
The platforms you listed are all primarily text-based and the interaction lives in the DOM with happy paths defined. Still, you will find that clipboard media with a MIME type will prompt you with a Google provided modal to paste a very specific way to get around the permissions model in Google Docs etc…
An RDP interface is not a text box with features on top, the standing expectations for those existing behaviors do not apply. Namely clipboard, and any I/O for that matter. For example, the linked repo uses a protocol bridge (I/O) to support the RDP protocol from a browser, because “the browser speaks protocols” is a true general statement, but absolutely doesn’t apply when you actually need to get something non-trivial done.
At its core, when someone points to the Google Chrome desktop icon and says “that’s the internet” there’s really no point in discussing the nuance in most cases, because anything non-trivial immediately invalidates that understanding of the world and reaching that point organically is far more important than it being explained to them preemptively.
They are correct, because the nuance applies. Welcome to the un-happy path!
socalgal2 2 days ago [-]
Google Docs has the same issue. They ask you to install of Google Docs Offline chrome extension to fix it.
I've used Azure bastion to do just this, you auth to the azure portal using whatever authentication regime is configured for your tenant, then you rdp into virtual machines from your browser using the local vm login. it handles things like files and clipboards great. But it also supports console sessions in the browser.
I haven't used it with windows/rdp (if it even is supported), but in GCP, their in-browser SSH is the best I've seen so far.
Even for Linux, I've found xrdp to be better than alternatives at times.
The main problem I see this solving (one of many) is the decoupling of the management interface for virtual machines and servers from their service interfaces. not having your web server's management services on the same IP/domain/interface as the http server is a big improvement. Lots of security screw-ups happen because of this entanglement.
It’s a semi-common setup for higher security environments, and when you have a network of stuff that has known vulnerabilities you can’t patch for whatever reason. Traffic in and out is super carefully firewalled. It’s not great, but it’s better than a 25 year old MySQL with a direct public IP.
First time I've heard of an airgapped system you could access remotely. Doesn't that kind of defeat the label "airgapped"? I think I'd just call that "isolated" at that point instead.
This makes sense, "bastion" hosts and similar things is fairly common too. What's not common is calling those "airgapped", because they're clearly not.
Which is what we are specifically discussing.
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/aws-backup/latest/devguide/logic...
Air gapped means... there is nothing except air in the gap between systems.
A physical tether would defeat it.
Now, I pedant could start talking about wifi, but air-gapping is a concept older than the internet. (It stems from plumbing where there's air that prevents back leakage of contamination).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_gap_(networking)
Clipboard sharing, uploading and downloading via shared drive is a freerdp feature that should be readily available.
We also have sessions recording which is non-negotiable in PAM.
[1] https://adaptive.live
What it does have is a license which it is GPLv3. So if anyone adds all those changes, they have to make the source code available with the same software license.
A few months back I ended up building a RDC Server in Golang (i.e. no Windows required!) entirely with Claude, which was a fun experiment.
I ended up fronting that with GitHub Auth (purely for rate limiting purposes, since it's bandwidth intensive), but I've built it in such a way that it surfaces/renders any arbitrary binary on the RDC side. In my case, I ended up just fronting it with a Snake binary, but it's been fun to experiment and push the bounds somewhat.
I should really think about open sourcing it - in my case it was an experiment to see how far I could push Claude that turned out pretty great tbh
https://github.com/rustdesk/rustdesk
https://github.com/thedepartmentofexternalservices/teraguchi
https://kyber.tech/
https://guacamole.apache.org/
That was the main problem in guacamole rdp in browser.
I don't think that is the case. Google Docs, Office 365, and Notion all function without requiring repeated user permissions.
The platforms you listed are all primarily text-based and the interaction lives in the DOM with happy paths defined. Still, you will find that clipboard media with a MIME type will prompt you with a Google provided modal to paste a very specific way to get around the permissions model in Google Docs etc…
An RDP interface is not a text box with features on top, the standing expectations for those existing behaviors do not apply. Namely clipboard, and any I/O for that matter. For example, the linked repo uses a protocol bridge (I/O) to support the RDP protocol from a browser, because “the browser speaks protocols” is a true general statement, but absolutely doesn’t apply when you actually need to get something non-trivial done.
At its core, when someone points to the Google Chrome desktop icon and says “that’s the internet” there’s really no point in discussing the nuance in most cases, because anything non-trivial immediately invalidates that understanding of the world and reaching that point organically is far more important than it being explained to them preemptively.
They are correct, because the nuance applies. Welcome to the un-happy path!
https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/google-docs-offline...
> Note: This extension is also used to make advanced copy & paste functionality available in Google Docs, Sheets and Slides.