Hi, I was wondering about the software utilised in DIY KVM products like PiKVM and BliKVM.
If I understand correctly, to be able to interface with a computer like with a KVM, you would have to:
- Have an HDMI capture card capture the feed from the server.
- Feed it into the main computer.
- Have both a VNC server and VNC client running on the main computer.
- Feed the HDMI capture to the VNC server.
If this is indeed the flow, then why do people use PiKVM? Or if I’m missing a step/am wrong in these steps, please let me know.
Thanks!
PiKVM is a collection of tools rolled into a distro to make keyboard/mouse input and attaching an emulated install media (virtual USB disk using ISO files) easily possible through a VNC-based web application. The idea is you can just build your own using the same software on different hardware, but it’s aimed at using a raspberry pi for low power consumption, portability, and it has specific hardware compatibility with a HAT/addon board. The software can also make “reverse connections” through a remote NAT for support purposes, and you’d just port forward on your end. There are a lot of well thought out features in PiKVM (hardware) that make it much more convenient than building your own solution. You could install PiKVM on a different system than a Pi and try to make it work with your configuration… You’d probably lose things like simulated power button press and virtual USB storage support. You might consider alternatives like PXE/netboot and wake-on-lan for those, but that might not always work for you.
(YMMV, I have not tried running PiKVM on an x86 cpu)