The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARYRDP uses cached glyphs and bitmaps for transmission across WAN and LAN connections and, therefore, does not transfer data in a recognizable form. MORE INFORMATION
RDP uses a highly efficient encoding algorithm that represent the vast
majority of Windows graphics operations with a small amount of network
traffic. For example, most dialog boxes consist of text items, a series of
gray, white, and so on rectangles, and light and dark shaded lines for a
3-D effect. These are not transmitted as comparative deltas from the
previous screen, but are encoded as pattern blts and cached glyphs. For
instance, we can draw the gray dialog box background color with "Draw color
X at x1,y1,x2,x2". Field compression is always enabled such that a second
draw with only a change in the x1,y1 position would only send an even
smaller packet with a single bit representing the fields that have not
changed, and the minimum possible number of bits to represent the delta
change in the coordinates. Bulk compression is applied over the final
packets (when enabled) for an even further improvement.
Additional query words:
Keywords : |
Last Reviewed: March 4, 1999 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |