VMware Horizon View 7.0 manual

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VMware Horizon View 7.0 manual | Manualzz

View Administration

VMware Horizon 7

Version 7.0

This document supports the version of each product listed and supports all subsequent versions until the document is replaced by a new edition. To check for more recent editions of this document, see http://www.vmware.com/support/pubs .

EN-002001-00

View Administration

You can find the most up-to-date technical documentation on the VMware Web site at: http://www.vmware.com/support/

The VMware Web site also provides the latest product updates.

If you have comments about this documentation, submit your feedback to: [email protected]

Copyright

©

2010–2016 VMware, Inc. All rights reserved. Copyright and trademark information .

VMware, Inc.

3401 Hillview Ave.

Palo Alto, CA 94304 www.vmware.com

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Contents

View Administration 7

1 Using View Administrator 9

View Administrator and View Connection Server 9

Log In to View Administrator 10

Tips for Using the View Administrator Interface 10

Troubleshooting the Text Display in View Administrator 12

2 Configuring View Connection Server 13

Configuring vCenter Server and View Composer 13

Backing Up View Connection Server 25

Configuring Settings for Client Sessions 25

Disable or Enable View Connection Server 36

Edit the External URLs 37

Join or Withdraw from the Customer Experience Program 38

View LDAP Directory 38

3 Setting Up Smart Card Authentication 41

Logging In with a Smart Card 42

Configure Smart Card Authentication on View Connection Server 42

Configure Smart Card Authentication on Third-Party Solutions 47

Prepare Active Directory for Smart Card Authentication 47

Verify Your Smart Card Authentication Configuration 50

Using Smart Card Certificate Revocation Checking 51

4 Setting Up Other Types of User Authentication 55

Using Two-Factor Authentication 55

Using SAML Authentication 59

Configure Biometric Authentication 63

5 Authenticating Users Without Requiring Credentials 65

Using the Log In as Current User Feature Available with Windows-Based Horizon Client 65

Allow Mobile Client Users to Save Credentials 66

Setting Up True SSO 67

6 Configuring Role-Based Delegated Administration 89

Understanding Roles and Privileges 89

Using Access Groups to Delegate Administration of Pools and Farms 90

Understanding Permissions 91

Manage Administrators 92

Manage and Review Permissions 93

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View Administration

Manage and Review Access Groups 95

Manage Custom Roles 97

Predefined Roles and Privileges 99

Required Privileges for Common Tasks 103

Best Practices for Administrator Users and Groups 105

7 Configuring Policies in View Administrator and Active Directory 107

Setting Policies in View Administrator 107

Using View Group Policy Administrative Template Files 109

8 Maintaining View Components 115

Backing Up and Restoring View Configuration Data 115

Monitor View Components 123

Monitor Machine Status 123

Understanding View Services 124

Change the Product License Key 126

Monitoring Product License Usage 126

Update General User Information from Active Directory 127

Migrate View Composer to Another Machine 128

Update the Certificates on a View Connection Server Instance, Security Server, or View Composer 133

Information Collected by the Customer Experience Improvement Program 134

9 Managing View Composer Linked-Clone Desktop Virtual Machines 151

Reduce Linked-Clone Size with Machine Refresh 151

Update Linked-Clone Desktops 153

Rebalance Linked-Clone Virtual Machines 157

Manage View Composer Persistent Disks 160

10 Managing Desktop Pools, Machines, and Sessions 165

Change the Image of an Instant-Clone Desktop Pool 165

Managing Desktop Pools 166

Managing Virtual Machine-Based Desktops 174

Managing Unmanaged Machines 179

Manage Remote Desktop and Application Sessions 182

Export View Information to External Files 183

11 Managing Application Pools, Farms, and RDS Hosts 185

Managing Application Pools 185

Managing Farms 186

Managing RDS Hosts 189

Configuring Load Balancing for RDS Hosts 193

Configure an Anti-Affinity Rule for an Application Pool 199

12 Managing ThinApp Applications in View Administrator 201

View Requirements for ThinApp Applications 201

Capturing and Storing Application Packages 202

Assigning ThinApp Applications to Machines and Desktop Pools 205

Maintaining ThinApp Applications in View Administrator 211

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Contents

Monitoring and Troubleshooting ThinApp Applications in View Administrator 214

ThinApp Configuration Example 217

13 Setting Up Clients in Kiosk Mode 219

Configure Clients in Kiosk Mode 219

14 Troubleshooting View 229

Monitoring System Health 229

Monitor Events in View 230

Collecting Diagnostic Information for View 231

Update Support Requests 235

Troubleshooting an Unsuccessful Security Server Pairing with View Connection Server 235

Troubleshooting View Server Certificate Revocation Checking 236

Troubleshooting Smart Card Certificate Revocation Checking 237

Further Troubleshooting Information 237

15 Using the vdmadmin Command 239

vdmadmin Command Usage 241

Configuring Logging in Horizon Agent Using the -A Option 243

Overriding IP Addresses Using the -A Option 244

Setting the Name of a View Connection Server Group Using the -C Option 245

Updating Foreign Security Principals Using the -F Option 246

Listing and Displaying Health Monitors Using the -H Option 247

Listing and Displaying Reports of View Operation Using the -I Option 248

Generating View Event Log Messages in Syslog Format Using the -I Option 249

Assigning Dedicated Machines Using the -L Option 250

Displaying Information About Machines Using the -M Option 251

Reclaiming Disk Space on Virtual Machines Using the -M Option 252

Configuring Domain Filters Using the -N Option 253

Configuring Domain Filters 255

Displaying the Machines and Policies of Unentitled Users Using the -O and -P Options 259

Configuring Clients in Kiosk Mode Using the -Q Option 260

Displaying the First User of a Machine Using the -R Option 264

Removing the Entry for a View Connection Server Instance or Security Server Using the -S Option 264

Providing Secondary Credentials for Administrators Using the -T Option 265

Displaying Information About Users Using the -U Option 267

Unlocking or Locking Virtual Machines Using the -V Option 267

Detecting and Resolving LDAP Entry Collisions Using the -X Option 268

Index 271

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View Administration

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View Administration

View Administration describes how to configure and administer VMware Horizon

®

7, including how to configure View Connection Server, create administrators, set up user authentication, configure policies, and manage VMware ThinApp

®

applications in View Administrator. This document also describes how to maintain and troubleshoot View components.

Intended Audience

This information is intended for anyone who wants to configure and administer VMware Horizon 7. The information is written for experienced Windows or Linux system administrators who are familiar with virtual machine technology and datacenter operations.

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View Administration

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Using View Administrator

1

View Administrator is the Web interface through which you configure View Connection Server and manage your remote desktops and applications.

For a comparison of the operations that you can perform with View Administrator, View cmdlets, and vdmadmin , see the View Integration document.

N

OTE

In Horizon 7, View Administrator is named Horizon Administrator. This document refers to Horizon

Administrator as View Administrator.

This chapter includes the following topics: n

“View Administrator and View Connection Server,” on page 9

n n n

“Log In to View Administrator,” on page 10

“Tips for Using the View Administrator Interface,” on page 10

“Troubleshooting the Text Display in View Administrator,” on page 12

View Administrator and View Connection Server

View Administrator provides a management interface for View.

Depending on your View deployment, you use one or more View Administrator interfaces.

n

Use one View Administrator interface to manage the View components that are associated with a single, standalone View Connection Server instance or a group of replicated View Connection Server instances.

You can use the host name or IP address of any replicated instance to log in to View Administrator.

n

You must use a separate View Administrator interface to manage the View components for each single, standalone View Connection Server instance and each group of replicated View Connection Server instances.

You also use View Administrator to manage security servers associated with View Connection Server. Each security server is associated with one View Connection Server instance.

N

OTE

If you use Access Point appliances rather than security servers, you must use the Access Point REST

API to manage the Access Point appliances. For more information, see Deploying and Configuring Access

Point.

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View Administration

Log In to View Administrator

To perform initial configuration tasks, you must log in to View Administrator. You access View

Administrator by using a secure (SSL) connection.

Prerequisites n

Verify that View Connection Server is installed on a dedicated computer.

n

Verify that you are using a Web browser supported by View Administrator. For View Administrator requirements, see the View Installation document.

Procedure

1 Open your Web browser and enter the following URL, where server is the host name of the View

Connection Server instance.

https://server/admin

N

OTE

You can use the IP address if you have to access a View Connection Server instance when the host name is not resolvable. However, the host that you contact will not match the SSL certificate that is configured for the View Connection Server instance, resulting in blocked access or access with reduced security.

Your access to View Administrator depends on the type of certificate that is configured on the View

Connection Server computer.

If you open your Web browser on the View Connection Server host, use https://127.0.0.1

to connect, not https://localhost . This method improves security by avoiding potential DNS attacks on the localhost

resolution.

Option

You configured a certificate signed by a CA for View Connection

Server.

The default, self-signed certificate supplied with View Connection

Server is configured.

Description

When you first connect, your Web browser displays View Administrator.

When you first connect, your Web browser might display a page warning that the security certificate associated with the address is not issued by a trusted certificate authority.

Click Ignore to continue using the current SSL certificate.

2 Log in as a user with credentials to access the View Administrators account.

You specify the View Administrators account when you install a standalone View Connection Server instance or the first View Connection Server instance in a replicated group. The View Administrators account can be the local Administrators group (BUILTIN\Administrators) on the View Connection

Server computer or a domain user or group account.

After you log in to View Administrator, you can use View Configuration > Administrators to change the list of users and groups that have the View Administrators role.

Tips for Using the View Administrator Interface

You can use View Administrator user-interface features to navigate View Pages and to find, filter, and sort

View objects.

View Administrator includes many common user interface features. For example, the navigation pane on the left side of each page directs you to other View Administrator pages. The search filters let you select filtering criteria that are related to the objects you are searching for.

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Chapter 1 Using View Administrator

Table 1-1 describes a few additional features that can help you to use View Administrator.

Table 1 ‑1. View Administrator Navigation and Display Features

View Administrator Feature Description

Navigating backward and forward in

View Administrator pages

Click your browser's Back button to go to the previously displayed View

Administrator page. Click the Forward button to return to the current page.

If you click the browser's Back button while you are using a View

Administrator wizard or dialog box, you return to the main View

Administrator page. The information you entered in the wizard or dialog is lost.

In View versions that preceded the View 5.1 release, you could not use your browser's Back and Forward buttons to navigate within View Administrator.

Separate Back and Forward buttons in the View Administrator window were provided for navigation. These buttons are removed in the View 5.1 release.

You can bookmark View Administrator pages in your browser.

Bookmarking View Administrator pages

Multicolumn sorting

Customizing table columns

You can sort View objects in a variety of ways by using multicolumn sorting.

Click a heading in the top row of a View Administrator table to sort the View objects in alphabetical order based on that heading.

For example, in the Resources > Machines page, you can click Desktop Pool to sort desktops by the pools that contain them.

The number 1 appears next to the heading to indicate that it is the primary sorting column. You can click the heading again to reverse the sorting order, indicated by an up or down arrow.

To sort the View objects by a secondary item, Ctrl+click another heading.

For example, in the Machines table, you can click Users to perform a secondary sort by users to whom the desktops are dedicated. A number 2 appears next to the secondary heading. In this example, desktops are sorted by pool and by users within each pool.

You can continue to Ctrl+click to sort all the columns in a table in descending order of importance.

Press Ctrl+Shift and click to deselect a sort item.

For example, you might want to display the desktops in a pool that are in a particular state and are stored on a particular datastore. You can select

Resources > Machines, click the Datastore heading, and Ctrl+click the Status heading.

You can customize the display of View Administrator table columns by hiding selected columns and locking the first column. This feature lets you control the display of large tables such as Catalog > Desktop Pools that contain many columns.

Right-click any column header to display a context menu that lets you take the following actions: n

Hide the selected column.

n n

Customize columns. A dialog displays all columns in the table. You can select the columns to display or hide.

Lock the first column. This option forces the left-hand column to remain displayed as you scroll horizontally across a table with many columns.

For example, on the Catalog > Desktop Pools page, the desktop ID remains displayed as you scroll horizontally to see other desktop characteristics.

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View Administration

Table 1 ‑1. View Administrator Navigation and Display Features (Continued)

View Administrator Feature

Selecting View objects and displaying

View object details

Description

In View Administrator tables that list View objects, you can select an object or display object details.

n

To select an object, click anywhere in the object's row in the table. At the top of the page, menus and commands that manage the object become active.

n

To display object details, double-click the left cell in the object's row. A new page displays the object's details.

For example, on the Catalog > Desktop Pools page, click anywhere in an individual pool's row to activate commands that affect the pool.

Double-click the ID cell in the left column to display a new page that contains details about the pool.

Expanding dialog boxes to view details You can expand View Administrator dialog boxes to view details such as desktop names and user names in table columns.

To expand a dialog box, place your mouse over the dots in the lower right corner of the dialog box and drag the corner.

Displaying context menus for View objects

You can right-click View objects in View Administrator tables to display context menus. A context menu gives you access to the commands that operate on the selected View object.

For example, in the Catalog > Desktop Pools page, you can right-click a desktop pool to display commands such as Add, Edit, Delete, Disable (or

Enable) Provisioning, and so on.

Troubleshooting the Text Display in View Administrator

If your Web browser runs on a non-Windows operating system such as Linux, UNIX, or Mac OS, the text in

View Administrator does not display properly.

Problem

The text in the View Administrator interface is garbled. For example, spaces occur in the middle of words.

Cause

View Administrator requires Microsoft-specific fonts.

Solution

Install Microsoft-specific fonts on your computer.

Currently, the Microsoft Web site does not distribute Microsoft fonts, but you can download them from independent Web sites.

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Configuring View Connection Server

2

After you install and perform initial configuration of View Connection Server, you can add vCenter Server instances and View Composer services to your View deployment, set up roles to delegate administrator responsibilities, and schedule backups of your configuration data.

This chapter includes the following topics: n

“Configuring vCenter Server and View Composer,” on page 13

n n n n n n

“Backing Up View Connection Server,” on page 25

“Configuring Settings for Client Sessions,” on page 25

“Disable or Enable View Connection Server,” on page 36

“Edit the External URLs,” on page 37

“Join or Withdraw from the Customer Experience Program,” on page 38

“View LDAP Directory,” on page 38

Configuring vCenter Server and View Composer

To use virtual machines as remote desktops, you must configure View to communicate with vCenter Server.

To create and manage linked-clone desktop pools, you must configure View Composer settings in View

Administrator.

You can also configure storage settings for View. You can allow ESXi hosts to reclaim disk space on linkedclone virtual machines. To allow ESXi hosts to cache virtual machine data, you must enable View Storage

Accelerator for vCenter Server.

Create a User Account for View Composer AD Operations

If you use View Composer, you must create a user account in Active Directory that allows View Composer to perform certain operations in Active Directory. View Composer requires this account to join linked-clone virtual machines to your Active Directory domain.

To ensure security, you should create a separate user account to use with View Composer. By creating a separate account, you can guarantee that it does not have additional privileges that are defined for another purpose. You can give the account the minimum privileges that it needs to create and remove computer objects in a specified Active Directory container. For example, the View Composer account does not require domain administrator privileges.

Procedure

1 In Active Directory, create a user account in the same domain as your View Connection Server host or in a trusted domain.

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View Administration

2 Add the Create Computer Objects, Delete Computer Objects, and Write All Properties permissions to the account in the Active Directory container in which the linked-clone computer accounts are created or to which the linked-clone computer accounts are moved.

The following list shows all the required permissions for the user account, including permissions that are assigned by default: n n n n

List Contents

Read All Properties

Write All Properties

Read Permissions n n n

Reset Password

Create Computer Objects

Delete Computer Objects

N

OTE

Fewer permissions are required if you select the Allow reuse of pre-existing computer accounts setting for a desktop pool. Make sure that the following permissions are assigned to the user account: n n

List Contents

Read All Properties n n

Read Permissions

Reset Password

3 Make sure that the user account's permissions apply to the Active Directory container and to all child objects of the container.

What to do next

Specify the account in View Administrator when you configure View Composer domains in the Add vCenter Server wizard and when you configure and deploy linked-clone desktop pools.

Add vCenter Server Instances to View

You must configure View to connect to the vCenter Server instances in your View deployment. vCenter

Server creates and manages the virtual machines that View uses in desktop pools.

If you run vCenter Server instances in a Linked Mode group, you must add each vCenter Server instance to

View separately.

View connects to the vCenter Server instance using a secure channel (SSL).

Prerequisites n

Install the View Connection Server product license key.

n

Prepare a vCenter Server user with permission to perform the operations in vCenter Server that are necessary to support View. To use View Composer, you must give the user additional privileges.

For details about configuring a vCenter Server user for View, see the View Installation document.

n

Verify that a TLS/SSL server certificate is installed on the vCenter Server host. In a production environment, install a valid certificate that is signed by a trusted Certificate Authority (CA).

In a testing environment, you can use the default certificate that is installed with vCenter Server, but you must accept the certificate thumbprint when you add vCenter Server to View.

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Chapter 2 Configuring View Connection Server n n n n n

Verify that all View Connection Server instances in the replicated group trust the root CA certificate for the server certificate that is installed on the vCenter Server host. Check if the root CA certificate is in the

Trusted Root Certification Authorities > Certificates folder in the Windows local computer certificate stores on the View Connection Server hosts. If it is not, import the root CA certificate into the Windows local computer certificate stores.

See "Import a Root Certificate and Intermediate Certificates into a Windows Certificate Store," in the

View Installation document.

Verify that the vCenter Server instance contains ESXi hosts. If no hosts are configured in the vCenter

Server instance, you cannot add the instance to View.

If you upgrade to vSphere 5.5 or a later release, verify that the domain administrator account that you use as the vCenter Server user was explicitly assigned permissions to log in to vCenter Server by a vCenter Server local user.

If you plan to use View in FIPS mode, verify that you have vCenter Server 6.0 or later and ESXi 6.0 or later hosts.

For more information, see "Installing View in FIPS Mode," in the View Installation document.

Familiarize yourself with the settings that determine the maximum operations limits for vCenter Server and View Composer. See

“Concurrent Operations Limits for vCenter Server and View Composer,” on page 20 and

“Setting a Concurrent Power Operations Rate to Support Remote Desktop Logon

Storms,” on page 21.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Servers.

2 On the vCenter Servers tab, click Add.

3 In the vCenter Server Settings Server address text box, type the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the vCenter Server instance.

The FQDN includes the host name and domain name. For example, in the FQDN myserverhost .companydomain.com

, myserverhost is the host name and companydomain .com

is the domain.

N

OTE

If you enter a server by using a DNS name or URL, View does not perform a DNS lookup to verify whether an administrator previously added this server to View by using its IP address. A conflict arises if you add a vCenter Server with both its DNS name and its IP address.

4 Type the name of the vCenter Server user.

For example: domain\user or [email protected]

5 Type the vCenter Server user password.

6 (Optional) Type a description for this vCenter Server instance.

7 Type the TCP port number.

The default port is 443.

8 Under Advanced Settings, set the concurrent operations limits for vCenter Server and View Composer operations.

9 Click Next to display the View Composer Settings page.

What to do next

Configure View Composer settings.

n

If the vCenter Server instance is configured with a signed SSL certificate, and View Connection Server trusts the root certificate, the Add vCenter Server wizard displays the View Composer Settings page.

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View Administration n

If the vCenter Server instance is configured with a default certificate, you must first determine whether

to accept the thumbprint of the existing certificate. See “Accept the Thumbprint of a Default SSL

Certificate,” on page 22.

If View uses multiple vCenter Server instances, repeat this procedure to add the other vCenter Server instances.

Configure View Composer Settings

To use View Composer, you must configure settings that allow View to connect to the VMware Horizon

View Composer service. View Composer can be installed on its own separate host or on the same host as vCenter Server.

There must be a one-to-one mapping between each VMware Horizon View Composer service and vCenter

Server instance. A View Composer service can operate with only one vCenter Server instance. A vCenter

Server instance can be associated with only one VMware Horizon View Composer service.

After the initial View deployment, you can migrate the VMware Horizon View Composer service to a new host to support a growing or changing View deployment. You can edit the initial View Composer settings in

View Administrator, but you must perform additional steps to ensure that the migration succeeds. See

“Migrate View Composer to Another Machine,” on page 128.

Prerequisites n

Verify that you created a user in Active Directory with permission to add and remove virtual machines from the Active Directory domain that contains your linked clones. See

“Create a User Account for

View Composer AD Operations,” on page 13.

n n

Verify that you configured View to connect to vCenter Server. To do so, you must complete the vCenter

Server Information page in the Add vCenter Server wizard. See “Add vCenter Server Instances to

View,” on page 14.

Verify that this VMware Horizon View Composer service is not already configured to connect to a different vCenter Server instance.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, complete the vCenter Server Information page in the Add vCenter Server wizard.

a Select View Configuration > Servers.

b On the vCenter Servers tab, click Add and provide the vCenter Server settings.

2 On the View Composer Settings page, if you are not using View Composer, select Do not use View

Composer.

If you select Do not use View Composer, the other View Composer settings become inactive. When you click Next, the Add vCenter Server wizard displays the Storage Settings page. The View Composer

Domains page is not displayed.

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Chapter 2 Configuring View Connection Server

3 If you are using View Composer, select the location of the View Composer host.

Option

View Composer is installed on the same host as vCenter Server.

View Composer is installed on its own separate host.

Description a Select View Composer co-installed with the vCenter Server.

b Make sure that the port number is the same as the port that you specified when you installed the VMware Horizon View Composer service on vCenter Server. The default port number is 18443.

a Select Standalone View Composer Server.

b In the View Composer server address text box, type the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the View Composer host.

c Type the name of the View Composer user.

For example: domain.com\user or [email protected] d Type the password of the View Composer user.

e Make sure that the port number is the same as the port that you specified when you installed the VMware Horizon View Composer service. The default port number is 18443.

4 Click Next to display the View Composer Domains page.

What to do next

Configure View Composer domains.

n n

If the View Composer instance is configured with a signed SSL certificate, and View Connection Server trusts the root certificate, the Add vCenter Server wizard displays the View Composer Domains page.

If the View Composer instance is configured with a default certificate, you must first determine

whether to accept the thumbprint of the existing certificate. See “Accept the Thumbprint of a Default

SSL Certificate,” on page 22.

Configure View Composer Domains

You must configure an Active Directory domain in which View Composer deploys linked-clone desktops.

You can configure multiple domains for View Composer. After you first add vCenter Server and View

Composer settings to View, you can add more View Composer domains by editing the vCenter Server instance in View Administrator.

Prerequisites n n

Your Active Directory administrator must create a View Composer user for AD operations. This domain user must have permission to add and remove virtual machines from the Active Directory domain that contains your linked clones. For information about the required permissions for this user, see

“Create a User Account for View Composer AD Operations,” on page 13.

In View Administrator, verify that you completed the vCenter Server Information and View Composer

Settings pages in the Add vCenter Server wizard.

Procedure

1 On the View Composer Domains page, click Add to add the View Composer user for AD operations account information.

2 Type the domain name of the Active Directory domain.

For example: domain.com

3 Type the domain user name, including the domain name, of the View Composer user.

For example: domain.com\admin

4 Type the account password.

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View Administration

5 Click OK.

6 To add domain user accounts with privileges in other Active Directory domains in which you deploy linked-clone pools, repeat the preceding steps.

7 Click Next to display the Storage Settings page.

What to do next

Enable virtual machine disk space reclamation and configure View Storage Accelerator for View.

Allow vSphere to Reclaim Disk Space in Linked-Clone Virtual Machines

In vSphere 5.1 and later, you can enable the disk space reclamation feature for View. Starting in vSphere 5.1,

View creates linked-clone virtual machines in an efficient disk format that allows ESXi hosts to reclaim unused disk space in the linked clones, reducing the total storage space required for linked clones.

As users interact with linked-clone desktops, the clones' OS disks grow and can eventually use almost as much disk space as full-clone desktops. Disk space reclamation reduces the size of the OS disks without requiring you to refresh or recompose the linked clones. Space can be reclaimed while the virtual machines are powered on and users are interacting with their remote desktops.

Disk space reclamation is especially useful for deployments that cannot take advantage of storage-saving strategies such as refresh on logoff. For example, knowledge workers who install user applications on dedicated remote desktops might lose their personal applications if the remote desktops were refreshed or recomposed. With disk space reclamation, View can maintain linked clones at close to the reduced size they start out with when they are first provisioned.

This feature has two components: space-efficient disk format and space reclamation operations.

In a vSphere 5.1 or later environment, when a parent virtual machine is virtual hardware version 9 or later,

View creates linked clones with space-efficient OS disks, whether or not space reclamation operations are enabled.

To enable space reclamation operations, you must use View Administrator to enable space reclamation for vCenter Server and reclaim VM disk space for individual desktop pools. The space reclamation setting for vCenter Server gives you the option to disable this feature on all desktop pools that are managed by the vCenter Server instance. Disabling the feature for vCenter Server overrides the setting at the desktop pool level.

The following guidelines apply to the space reclamation feature: n

It operates only on space-efficient OS disks in linked clones.

n n

It does not affect View Composer persistent disks.

It works only with vSphere 5.1 or later and only on virtual machines that are virtual hardware version 9 or later.

n n

It does not operate on full-clone desktops.

It operates on virtual machines with SCSI controllers. IDE controllers are not supported.

Native NFS snapshot technology (VAAI) is not supported in pools that contain virtual machines with spaceefficient disks.

Prerequisites n

Verify that your vCenter Server and ESXi hosts, including all ESXi hosts in a cluster, are version 5.1

with ESXi 5.1 download patch ESXi510-201212001 or later.

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Chapter 2 Configuring View Connection Server

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, complete the Add vCenter Server wizard pages that precede the Storage

Settings page.

a Select View Configuration > Servers.

b On the vCenter Servers tab, click Add.

c Complete the vCenter Server Information, View Composer Settings, and View Composer Domains pages.

2 On the Storage Settings page, make sure that Enable space reclamation is selected.

Space reclamation is selected by default if you are performing a fresh installation of View 5.2 or later.

You must select Enable space reclamation if you are upgrading to View 5.2 or later from View 5.1 or an earlier release.

What to do next

On the Storage Settings page, configure View Storage Accelerator.

To finish configuring disk space reclamation in View, set up space reclamation for desktop pools.

Configure View Storage Accelerator for vCenter Server

In vSphere 5.0 and later, you can configure ESXi hosts to cache virtual machine disk data. This feature, called View Storage Accelerator, uses the Content Based Read Cache (CBRC) feature in ESXi hosts. View

Storage Accelerator improves View performance during I/O storms, which can take place when many virtual machines start up or run anti-virus scans at once. The feature is also beneficial when administrators or users load applications or data frequently. Instead of reading the entire OS or application from the storage system over and over, a host can read common data blocks from cache.

By reducing the number of IOPS during boot storms, View Storage Accelerator lowers the demand on the storage array, which lets you use less storage I/O bandwidth to support your View deployment.

You enable caching on your ESXi hosts by selecting the View Storage Accelerator setting in the vCenter

Server wizard in View Administrator, as described in this procedure.

Make sure that View Storage Accelerator is also configured for individual desktop pools. To operate on a desktop pool, View Storage Accelerator must be enabled for vCenter Server and for the individual desktop pool.

View Storage Accelerator is enabled for desktop pools by default. The feature can be disabled or enabled when you create or edit a pool. The best approach is to enable this feature when you first create a desktop pool. If you enable the feature by editing an existing pool, you must ensure that a new replica and its digest disks are created before linked clones are provisioned. You can create a new replica by recomposing the pool to a new snapshot or rebalancing the pool to a new datastore. Digest files can only be configured for the virtual machines in a desktop pool when they are powered off.

You can enable View Storage Accelerator on desktop pools that contain linked clones and pools that contain full virtual machines.

View Storage Accelerator is now qualified to work in configurations that use View replica tiering, in which replicas are stored on a separate datastore than linked clones. Although the performance benefits of using

View Storage Accelerator with View replica tiering are not materially significant, certain capacity-related benefits might be realized by storing the replicas on a separate datastore. Hence, this combination is tested and supported.

I

MPORTANT

If you plan to use this feature and you are using multiple View pods that share some ESXi hosts, you must enable the View Storage Accelerator feature for all pools that are on the shared ESXi hosts. Having inconsistent settings in multiple pods can cause instability of the virtual machines on the shared ESXi hosts.

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Prerequisites n

Verify that your vCenter Server and ESXi hosts are version 5.0 or later.

n

In an ESXi cluster, verify that all the hosts are version 5.0 or later.

Verify that the vCenter Server user was assigned the Host > Configuration > Advanced settings privilege in vCenter Server.

See the topics in the View Installation document that describe View and View Composer privileges required for the vCenter Server user.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, complete the Add vCenter Server wizard pages that precede the Storage

Settings page.

a Select View Configuration > Servers.

b On the vCenter Servers tab, click Add.

c Complete the vCenter Server Information, View Composer Settings, and View Composer Domains pages.

2 On the Storage Settings page, make sure that the Enable View Storage Accelerator check box is selected.

This check box is selected by default.

3 Specify a default host cache size.

The default cache size applies to all ESXi hosts that are managed by this vCenter Server instance.

The default value is 1,024MB. The cache size must be between 100MB and 2,048MB.

4 To specify a different cache size for an individual ESXi host, select an ESXi host and click Edit cache

size.

a In the Host cache dialog box, check Override default host cache size.

b Type a Host cache size value between 100MB and 2,048MB and click OK.

5 On the Storage Settings page, click Next.

6 Click Finish to add vCenter Server, View Composer, and Storage Settings to View.

What to do next

Configure settings for client sessions and connections. See

“Configuring Settings for Client Sessions,” on page 25.

To complete View Storage Accelerator settings in View, configure View Storage Accelerator for desktop pools. See "Configure View Storage Accelerator for Desktop Pools" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application

Pools in View document.

Concurrent Operations Limits for vCenter Server and View Composer

When you add vCenter Server to View or edit the vCenter Server settings, you can configure several options that set the maximum number of concurrent operations that are performed by vCenter Server and View

Composer.

You configure these options in the Advanced Settings panel on the vCenter Server Information page.

20 VMware, Inc.

Chapter 2 Configuring View Connection Server

Table 2 ‑1. Concurrent Operations Limits for vCenter Server and View Composer

Setting Description

Max concurrent vCenter provisioning operations

Max concurrent power operations

Max concurrent View

Composer maintenance operations

Max concurrent View

Composer provisioning operations

Determines the maximum number of concurrent requests that View Connection

Server can make to provision and delete full virtual machines in this vCenter Server instance.

The default value is 20.

This setting applies to full virtual machines only.

Determines the maximum number of concurrent power operations (startup, shutdown, suspend, and so on) that can take place on virtual machines managed by

View Connection Server in this vCenter Server instance.

The default value is 50.

For guidelines for calculating a value for this setting, see

“Setting a Concurrent Power

Operations Rate to Support Remote Desktop Logon Storms,” on page 21.

This setting applies to full virtual machines and linked clones.

Determines the maximum number of concurrent View Composer refresh, recompose, and rebalance operations that can take place on linked clones managed by this View

Composer instance.

The default value is 12.

Remote desktops that have active sessions must be logged off before a maintenance operation can begin. If you force users to log off as soon as a maintenance operation begins, the maximum number of concurrent operations on remote desktops that require logoffs is half the configured value. For example, if you configure this setting as 24 and force users to log off, the maximum number of concurrent operations on remote desktops that require logoffs is 12.

This setting applies to linked clones only.

Determines the maximum number of concurrent creation and deletion operations that can take place on linked clones managed by this View Composer instance.

The default value is 8.

This setting applies to linked clones only.

Setting a Concurrent Power Operations Rate to Support Remote Desktop

Logon Storms

The Max concurrent power operations setting governs the maximum number of concurrent power operations that can occur on remote desktop virtual machines in a vCenter Server instance. This limit is set to 50 by default. You can change this value to support peak power-on rates when many users log on to their desktops at the same time.

As a best practice, you can conduct a pilot phase to determine the correct value for this setting. For planning guidelines, see "Architecture Design Elements and Planning Guidelines" in the View Architecture Planning document.

The required number of concurrent power operations is based on the peak rate at which desktops are powered on and the amount of time it takes for the desktop to power on, boot, and become available for connection. In general, the recommended power operations limit is the total time it takes for the desktop to start multiplied by the peak power-on rate.

For example, the average desktop takes two to three minutes to start. Therefore, the concurrent power operations limit should be 3 times the peak power-on rate. The default setting of 50 is expected to support a peak power-on rate of 16 desktops per minute.

The system waits a maximum of five minutes for a desktop to start. If the start time takes longer, other errors are likely to occur. To be conservative, you can set a concurrent power operations limit of 5 times the peak power-on rate. With a conservative approach, the default setting of 50 supports a peak power-on rate of 10 desktops per minute.

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View Administration

Logons, and therefore desktop power on operations, typically occur in a normally distributed manner over a certain time window. You can approximate the peak power-on rate by assuming that it occurs in the middle of the time window, during which about 40% of the power-on operations occur in 1/6th of the time window.

For example, if users log on between 8:00 AM and 9:00 AM, the time window is one hour, and 40% of the logons occur in the 10 minutes between 8:25 AM and 8:35 AM. If there are 2,000 users, 20% of whom have their desktops powered off, then 40% of the 400 desktop power-on operations occur in those 10 minutes. The peak power-on rate is 16 desktops per minute.

Accept the Thumbprint of a Default SSL Certificate

When you add vCenter Server and View Composer instances to View, you must ensure that the SSL certificates that are used for the vCenter Server and View Composer instances are valid and trusted by View

Connection Server. If the default certificates that are installed with vCenter Server and View Composer are still in place, you must determine whether to accept these certificates' thumbprints.

If a vCenter Server or View Composer instance is configured with a certificate that is signed by a CA, and the root certificate is trusted by View Connection Server, you do not have to accept the certificate thumbprint. No action is required.

If you replace a default certificate with a certificate that is signed by a CA, but View Connection Server does not trust the root certificate, you must determine whether to accept the certificate thumbprint. A thumbprint is a cryptographic hash of a certificate. The thumbprint is used to quickly determine if a presented certificate is the same as another certificate, such as the certificate that was accepted previously.

N

OTE

If you install vCenter Server and View Composer on the same Windows Server host, they can use the same SSL certificate, but you must configure the certificate separately for each component.

For details about configuring SSL certificates, see "Configuring SSL Certificates for View Servers" in the View

Installation document.

You first add vCenter Server and View Composer in View Administrator by using the Add vCenter Server wizard. If a certificate is untrusted and you do not accept the thumbprint, you cannot add vCenter Server and View Composer.

After these servers are added, you can reconfigure them in the Edit vCenter Server dialog box.

N

OTE

You also must accept a certificate thumbprint when you upgrade from an earlier release and a vCenter Server or View Composer certificate is untrusted, or if you replace a trusted certificate with an untrusted certificate.

On the View Administrator dashboard, the vCenter Server or View Composer icon turns red and an Invalid

Certificate Detected dialog box appears. You must click Verify and follow the procedure shown here.

Similarly, in View Administrator you can configure a SAML authenticator for use by a View Connection

Server instance. If the SAML server certificate is not trusted by View Connection Server, you must determine whether to accept the certificate thumbprint. If you do not accept the thumbprint, you cannot configure the SAML authenticator in View. After a SAML authenticator is configured, you can reconfigure it in the Edit View Connection Server dialog box.

Procedure

1 When View Administrator displays an Invalid Certificate Detected dialog box, click View Certificate.

2 Examine the certificate thumbprint in the Certificate Information window.

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Chapter 2 Configuring View Connection Server

3 Examine the certificate thumbprint that was configured for the vCenter Server or View Composer instance.

a On the vCenter Server or View Composer host, start the MMC snap-in and open the Windows

Certificate Store.

b Navigate to the vCenter Server or View Composer certificate.

c Click the Certificate Details tab to display the certificate thumbprint.

Similarly, examine the certificate thumbprint for a SAML authenticator. If appropriate, take the preceding steps on the SAML authenticator host.

4 Verify that the thumbprint in the Certificate Information window matches the thumbprint for the vCenter Server or View Composer instance.

Similarly, verify that the thumbprints match for a SAML authenticator.

5 Determine whether to accept the certificate thumbprint.

Option

The thumbprints match.

The thumbprints do not match.

Description

Click Accept to use the default certificate.

Click Reject.

Troubleshoot the mismatched certificates. For example, you might have provided an incorrect IP address for vCenter Server or View Composer.

Remove a vCenter Server Instance from View

You can remove the connection between View and a vCenter Server instance. When you do so, View no longer manages the virtual machines created in that vCenter Server instance.

Prerequisites

Delete all the virtual machines that are associated with the vCenter Server instance. See

“Delete a Desktop

Pool,” on page 172.

Procedure

1 Click View Configuration > Servers.

2 On the vCenter Servers tab, select the vCenter Server instance.

3 Click Remove.

A dialog warns you that View will no longer have access to the virtual machines that are managed by this vCenter Server instance.

4 Click OK.

View can no longer access the virtual machines created in the vCenter Server instance.

Remove View Composer from View

You can remove the connection between View and the VMware Horizon View Composer service that is associated with a vCenter Server instance.

Before you disable the connection to View Composer, you must remove from View all the linked-clone virtual machines that were created by View Composer. View prevents you from removing View Composer if any associated linked clones still exist. After the connection to View Composer is disabled, View cannot provision or manage new linked clones.

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Procedure

1 Remove the linked-clone desktop pools that were created by View Composer.

a In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

b Select a linked-clone desktop pool and click Delete.

A dialog box warns that you will permanently delete the linked-clone desktop pool from View. If the linked-clone virtual machines are configured with persistent disks, you can detach or delete the persistent disks.

c Click OK.

The virtual machines are deleted from vCenter Server. In addition, the associated View Composer database entries and the replicas that were created by View Composer are removed.

d Repeat these steps for each linked-clone desktop pool that was created by View Composer.

2 Select View Configuration > Servers.

3 On the vCenter Servers tab, select the vCenter Server instance with which View Composer is associated.

4 Click Edit.

5 Under View Composer Server Settings, click Edit, select Do not use View Composer, and click OK.

You can no longer create linked-clone desktop pools in this vCenter Server instance, but you can continue to create and manage full virtual-machine desktop pools in the vCenter Server instance.

What to do next

If you intend to install View Composer on another host and reconfigure View to connect to the new

VMware Horizon View Composer service, you must perform certain additional steps. See

“Migrate View

Composer Without Linked-Clone Virtual Machines,” on page 131.

Conflicting vCenter Server Unique IDs

If you have multiple vCenter Server instances configured in your environment, an attempt to add a new instance might fail because of conflicting unique IDs.

Problem

You try to add a vCenter Server instance to View, but the unique ID of the new vCenter Server instance conflicts with an existing instance.

Cause

Two vCenter Server instances cannot use the same unique ID. By default, a vCenter Server unique ID is randomly generated, but you can edit it.

Solution

1 In vSphere Client, click Administration > vCenter Server Settings > Runtime Settings.

2 Type a new unique ID and click OK.

For details about editing vCenter Server unique ID values, see the vSphere documentation.

24 VMware, Inc.

Chapter 2 Configuring View Connection Server

Backing Up View Connection Server

After you complete the initial configuration of View Connection Server, you should schedule regular backups of your View and View Composer configuration data.

For information about backing up and restoring your View configuration, see

“Backing Up and Restoring

View Configuration Data,” on page 115.

Configuring Settings for Client Sessions

You can configure global settings that affect the client sessions and connections that are managed by a View

Connection Server instance or replicated group. You can set the session timeout length, display prelogin and warning messages, and set security-related client connection options.

Set Options for Client Sessions and Connections

You configure global settings to determine the way client sessions and connections work.

The global settings are not specific to a single View Connection Server instance. They affect all client sessions that are managed by a standalone View Connection Server instance or a group of replicated instances.

You can also configure View Connection Server instances to use direct, nontunneled connections between

Horizon clients and remote desktops. See

“Configure the Secure Tunnel and PCoIP Secure Gateway,” on page 32 for information about configuring direct connections.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the global settings. See

“Global Settings for Client Sessions,” on page 26 and

“Global Security Settings for Client Sessions and Connections,” on page 28.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Global Settings.

2 Choose whether to configure general settings or security settings.

Option

General global settings

Global security settings

3 Configure the global settings.

4 Click OK.

Description

In the General pane, click Edit.

In the Security pane, click Edit.

What to do next

You can change the data recovery password that was provided during installation. See “Change the Data

Recovery Password,” on page 25.

Change the Data Recovery Password

You provide a data recovery password when you install View Connection Server version 5.1 or later. After installation, you can change this password in View Administrator. The password is required when you restore the View LDAP configuration from a backup.

When you back up View Connection Server, the View LDAP configuration is exported as encrypted LDIF data. To restore the encrypted backup View configuration, you must provide the data recovery password.

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View Administration

The password must contain between 1 and 128 characters. Follow your organization's best practices for generating secure passwords.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Global Settings.

2 In the Security pane, click Change data recovery password.

3 Type and retype the new password.

4 (Optional) Type a password reminder.

N

OTE

You can also change the data recovery password when you schedule your View configuration data to

be backed up. See “Schedule View Configuration Backups,” on page 116.

What to do next

When you use the vdmimport

utility to restore a backup View configuration, provide the new password.

Global Settings for Client Sessions

General global settings determine session timeout lengths, SSO enablement and timeout limits, status updates in View Administrator, whether prelogin and warning messages are displayed, and whether View

Administrator treats Windows Server as a supported operating system for remote desktops.

Changes to any of the settings in the table below take effect immediately. You do not need to restart View

Connection Server or Horizon Client.

Table 2 ‑2. General Global Settings for Client Sessions

Setting Description

View Administrator session timeout

Forcibly disconnect users

Determines how long an idle View Administrator session continues before the session times out.

I

MPORTANT

Setting the View Administrator session timeout to a high number of minutes increases the risk of unauthorized use of View Administrator. Use caution when you allow an idle session to persist a long time.

By default, the View Administrator session timeout is 30 minutes. You can set a session timeout from 1 to 4320 minutes (72 hours).

Disconnects all desktops and applications after the specified number of minutes has passed since the user logged in to View. All desktops and applications will be disconnected at the same time regardless of when the user opened them.

For clients that do not support application remoting, a maximum timeout value of 1200 minutes applies if the value of this setting is Never or greater than 1200 minutes.

The default is After 600 minutes.

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Chapter 2 Configuring View Connection Server

Table 2 ‑2. General Global Settings for Client Sessions (Continued)

Setting Description

Single sign-on (SSO)

For clients that support applications.

If the user stops using the keyboard and mouse, disconnect their applications and discard SSO credentials:

Other clients.

Discard SSO credentials:

Enable automatic status updates

Display a pre-login message

If SSO is enabled, View caches a user's credentials so that the user can launch remote desktops or applications without having to provide credentials to log in to the remote Windows session. The default is Enabled.

If you plan to use the True SSO feature, introduced in Horizon 7 or later, SSO must be enabled. With True SSO, if a user logs in using some other form of authentication than Active Directory credentials, the True SSO feature generates short-term certificates to use, rather than cached credentials, after users log in to

VMware Identity Manager.

N

OTE

If a desktop is launched from Horizon Client, and the desktop is locked, either by the user or by Windows based on a security policy, and if the desktop is running View Agent 6.0 or later or Horizon Agent 7.0 or later, View Connection

Server discards the user's SSO credentials. The user must provide login credentials to launch a new desktop or a new application, or reconnect to any disconnected desktop or application. To enable SSO again, the user must disconnect from View Connection Server or exit Horizon Client, and reconnect to

View Connection Server. However, if the desktop is launched from

Workspace Portal or VMware Identity Manager and the desktop is locked, SSO credentials are not discarded.

Protects application sessions when there is no keyboard or mouse activity on the client device. If set to After ... minutes, View disconnects all applications and discards SSO credentials after the specified number of minutes without user activity. Desktop sessions are not disconnected. Users must log in again to reconnect to the applications that were disconnected or launch a new desktop or application.

This setting also applies to the True SSO feature. After SSO credentials are discarded, users are prompted for Active Directory credentials. If users logged in to VMware Identity Manager without using AD credentials and do not know what AD credentials to enter, users can log out and log in to VMware Identity

Manager again to access their remote desktops and applications.

I

MPORTANT

Users must be aware that when they have both applications and desktops open, and their applications are disconnected because of this timeout, their desktops remain connected. Users must not rely on this timeout to protect their desktops.

If set to Never, View never disconnects applications or discards SSO credentials due to user inactivity.

The default is Never.

Discards SSO credentials after the specified number of minutes. This setting is for clients that do not support application remoting. If set to After ... minutes, users must log in again to connect to a desktop after the specified number of minutes has passed since the user logged in to View, regardless of any user activity on the client device.

If set to Never, View stores SSO credentials until the user closes Horizon Client, or the Forcibly disconnect users timeout is reached, whichever comes first.

The default is After 15 minutes.

Determines if status updates appear in the global status pane in the upper-left corner of View Administrator every few minutes. The dashboard page of View

Administrator is also updated every few minutes.

By default, this setting is not enabled.

Displays a disclaimer or another message to Horizon Client users when they log in.

Type your information or instructions in the text box in the Global Settings dialog box.

To display no message, leave the check box unselected.

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Table 2 ‑2. General Global Settings for Client Sessions (Continued)

Setting

Display warning before forced logoff

Enable Windows Server desktops

Mirage Server configuration

Description

Displays a warning message when users are forced to log off because a scheduled or immediate update such as a desktop-refresh operation is about to start. This setting also determines how long to wait after the warning is shown before the user is logged off.

Check the box to display a warning message.

Type the number of minutes to wait after the warning is displayed and before logging off the user. The default is 5 minutes.

Type your warning message. You can use the default message:

Your desktop is scheduled for an important update and

will be shut down in 5 minutes. Please save any unsaved work now.

Determines whether you can select available Windows Server 2008 R2 and

Windows Server 2012 R2 machines for use as desktops. When this setting is enabled, View Administrator displays all available Windows Server machines, including machines on which View server components are installed.

N

OTE

The Horizon Agent software cannot coexist on the same virtual or physical machine with any other View server software component, including a security server, View Connection Server, or View Composer.

Allows you to specify the URL of a Mirage server, using the format

mirage://server-name:port or mirages://server-name:port. Here server-

name is the fully qualified domain name. If you do not specify the port number, the default port number 8000 is used.

N

OTE

You can override this global setting by specifying a Mirage server in the desktop pool settings.

Specifying the Mirage server in View Administrator is an alternative to specifying the Mirage server when installing the Mirage client. To find out which versions of Mirage support having the server specified in View Administrator, see the Mirage documentation, at https://www.vmware.com/support/pubs/mirage_pubs.html

.

Global Security Settings for Client Sessions and Connections

Global security settings determine whether clients are reauthenticated after interruptions, message security mode is enabled, and IPSec is used for security server connections.

SSL is required for all Horizon Client connections and View Administrator connections to View. If your

View deployment uses load balancers or other client-facing, intermediate servers, you can off-load SSL to them and then configure non-SSL connections on individual View Connection Server instances and security

servers. See “Off-load SSL Connections to Intermediate Servers,” on page 34.

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Chapter 2 Configuring View Connection Server

Table 2 ‑3. Global Security Settings for Client Sessions and Connections

Setting Description

Reauthenticate secure tunnel connections after network interruption

Message security mode

Enhanced Security Status (Readonly)

Use IPSec for Security Server connections

Determines if user credentials must be reauthenticated after a network interruption when Horizon clients use secure tunnel connections to remote desktops.

When you select this setting, if a secure tunnel connection is interrupted,

Horizon Client requires the user to reauthenticate before reconnecting.

This setting offers increased security. For example, if a laptop is stolen and moved to a different network, the user cannot automatically gain access to the remote desktop without entering credentials.

When this setting is not selected, the client reconnects to the remote desktop without requiring the user to reauthenticate.

This setting has no effect when the secure tunnel is not used.

Determines the security mechanism used for sending JMS messages between components n

When the mode is set to Enabled, signing and verification of the JMS messages passed between View components takes place.

n

When the mode is set to Enhanced, security is provided by mutually authenticated SSL JMS connections and access control on JMS topics.

For details, see “Message Security Mode for View Components,” on page 30.

For new installations, by default, message security mode is set to Enhanced. If you upgrade from a previous version, the setting used in the previous version is retained.

Read-only field that appears when Message security mode is changed from

Enabled to Enhanced. Because the change is made in phases, this field shows the progress through the phases: n

Waiting for Message Bus restart is the first phase. This state is displayed until you manually restart either all View Connection Server instances in the pod or the VMware Horizon View Message Bus Component service on all View

Connection Server hosts in the pod.

n n

Pending Enhanced is the next state. After all View Message Bus Component services have been restarted, the system begins changing the message security mode to Enhanced for all desktops and security servers.

Enhanced is the final state, indicating that all components are now using

Enhanced message security mode.

You can also use the vdmutil command-line utility to monitor progress. See

“Using the vdmutil Utility to Configure the JMS Message Security Mode,” on page 31.

Determines whether to use Internet Protocol Security (IPSec) for connections between security servers and View Connection Server instances.

By default, secure connections (using IPSec) for security server connections is enabled.

N

OTE

If you upgrade to View 5.1 or later from an earlier View release, the global setting Require SSL for

client connections is displayed in View Administrator, but only if the setting was disabled in your View configuration before you upgraded. Because SSL is required for all Horizon Client connections and View

Administrator connections to View, this setting is not displayed in fresh installations of View 5.1 or later versions and is not displayed after an upgrade if the setting was already enabled in the previous View configuration.

After an upgrade, if you do not enable the Require SSL for client connections setting, HTTPS connections from Horizon clients will fail, unless they connect to an intermediate device that is configured to make

onward connections using HTTP. See “Off-load SSL Connections to Intermediate Servers,” on page 34.

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30

Message Security Mode for View Components

You can set the message security mode to specify the security mechanism used when JMS messages pass among View components.

Table 2-4 shows the options you can select to configure the message security mode. To set an option, select it

from the Message security mode list in the Global Settings dialog window.

Table 2 ‑4. Message Security Mode Options

Option Description

Disabled

Mixed

Enabled

Enhanced

Message security mode is disabled.

Message security mode is enabled but not enforced.

You can use this mode to detect components in your View environment that predate View 3.0. The log files generated by View Connection Server contain references to these components. This setting is not recommended. Use this setting only to discover components that need to be upgraded.

Message security mode is enabled, using a combination of message signing and encryption. JMS messages are rejected if the signature is missing or invalid, or if a message was modified after it was signed.

Some JMS messages are encrypted because they carry sensitive information such as user credentials. If you use the Enabled setting, you can also use IPSec to encrypt all JMS messages between View Connection

Server instances, and between View Connection Server instances and security servers.

N

OTE

View components that predate View 3.0 are not allowed to communicate with other View components.

SSL is used for all JMS connections. JMS access control is also enabled so that desktops, security servers, and View Connection Server instances can only send and receive JMS messages on certain topics.

View components that predate Horizon 6 version 6.1 cannot communicate with a View Connection Server

6.1 instance.

N

OTE

Using this mode requires opening TCP port 4002 between DMZ-based security servers and their paired View Connection Server instances.

When you first install View on a system, the message security mode is set to Enhanced. If you upgrade

View from a previous release, the message security mode remains unchanged from its existing setting.

I

MPORTANT

If you plan to change an upgraded View environment from Enabled to Enhanced, you must first upgrade all View Connection Server instances, security servers, and View desktops to Horizon 6 version 6.1 or a later release. After you change the setting to Enhanced, the new setting takes place in stages.

1 You must manually restart the VMware Horizon View Message Bus Component service on all View

Connection Server hosts in the pod, or restart the View Connection Server instances.

2 After the services are restarted, the View Connection Server instances reconfigure the message security mode on all desktops and security servers, changing the mode to Enhanced.

3 To monitor the progress in View Administrator, go to View Configuration > Global Settings.

On the Security tab, the Enhanced Security Status item will show Enhanced when all components have made the transition to Enhanced mode.

Alternatively, you can use the vdmutil command-line utility to monitor progress. See

“Using the vdmutil Utility to Configure the JMS Message Security Mode,” on page 31.

View components that predate Horizon 6 version 6.1 cannot communicate with a View Connection Server

6.1 instance that uses Enhanced mode

If you plan to change an active View environment from Disabled to Enabled, or from Enabled to Disabled, change to Mixed mode for a short time before you make the final change. For example, if your current mode is Disabled, change to Mixed mode for one day, then change to Enabled. In Mixed mode, signatures are attached to messages but not verified, which allows the change of message mode to propagate through the environment.

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Chapter 2 Configuring View Connection Server

Using the vdmutil Utility to Configure the JMS Message Security Mode

You can use the vdmutil command-line interface to configure and manage the security mechanism used when JMS messages are passed between View components.

Syntax and Location of the Utility

The vdmutil

command can perform the same operations as the lmvutil

command that was included with earlier versions of View. In addition, the vdmutil

command has options for determining the message security mode being used and monitoring the progress of changing all View components to Enhanced mode. Use the following form of the vdmutil

command from a Windows command prompt.

vdmutil command_option [additional_option argument] ...

The additional options that you can use depend on the command option. This topic focuses on the options for message security mode. For the other options, which relate to Cloud Pod Architecture, see the

Administering View Cloud Pod Architecture document.

By default, the path to the vdmutil

command executable file is

C:\Program Files\VMware\VMware

View\Server\tools\bin

. To avoid entering the path on the command line, add the path to your PATH environment variable.

Authentication

You must run the command as a user who has the Administrators role. You can use View Administrator to assign the Administrators role to a user. See

Chapter 6, “Configuring Role-Based Delegated

Administration,” on page 89.

The vdmutil command includes options to specify the user name, domain, and password to use for authentication.

Table 2 ‑5. vdmutil Command Authentication Options

Option

--authAs

--authDomain

--authPassword

Description

Name of a View administrator user. Do not use domain\username or user principal name

(UPN) format.

Fully qualified domain name for the View administrator user specified in the --authAs option.

Password for the View administrator user specified in the --authAs option. Entering "*" instead of a password causes the vdmutil command to prompt for the password and does not leave sensitive passwords in the command history on the command line.

You must use the authentication options with all vdmutil command options except for --help and

--verbose .

Options Specific to JMS Message Security Mode

The following table lists only the vdmutil command-line options that pertain to viewing, setting, or monitoring the JMS message security mode. For a list of the arguments you can use with a specific option, use the --help command-line option.

The vdmutil command returns 0 when an operation succeeds and a failure-specific non-zero code when an operation fails. The vdmutil command writes error messages to standard error. When an operation produces output, or when verbose logging is enabled by using the --verbose option, the vdmutil command writes output to standard output, in US English.

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Table 2 ‑6. vdmutil Command Options

Option Description

Activates a pending security certificate for a View Connection Server instance in the local pod.

--countPendingMsgSecStatus Counts the number of machines preventing a transition to or from

Enhanced mode.

Creates a new pending security certificate for a View Connection

Server instance in the local pod.

--getMsgSecLevel

--getMsgSecMode

Gets the enhanced message security status for the local pod. This status pertains to the process of changing the JMS message security mode from Enabled to Enhanced for all the components in a View environment.

Gets the message security mode for the local pod.

--help

--listMsgBusSecStatus

--listPendingMsgSecStatus

--setMsgSecMode

--verbose

Lists the vdmutil command options. You can also use --help on a particular command, such as --setMsgSecMode --help.

Lists the message bus security status for all connection servers in the local pod.

List machines preventing a transition to or from Enhanced mode.

Limited to 25 entries by default.

Sets the message security mode for the local pod.

Enables verbose logging. You can add this option to any other option to obtain detailed command output. The vdmutil command writes to standard output.

Configure the Secure Tunnel and PCoIP Secure Gateway

When the secure tunnel is enabled, Horizon Client makes a second HTTPS connection to the View

Connection Server or security server host when users connect to a remote desktop.

When the PCoIP Secure Gateway is enabled, Horizon Client makes a further secure connection to the View

Connection Server or security server host when users connect to a remote desktop with the PCoIP display protocol.

N

OTE

With Horizon 6 version 6.2 and later releases, you can use Access Point appliances, rather than security servers, for secure external access to Horizon 6 servers and desktops. If you use Access Point appliances, you must disable the secure gateways on View Connection Server instances and enable these gateways on the Access Point appliances. For more information, see Deploying and Configuring Access Point.

When the secure tunnel or PCoIP Secure Gateway is not enabled, a session is established directly between the client system and the remote desktop virtual machine, bypassing the View Connection Server or security server host. This type of connection is called a direct connection.

I

MPORTANT

A typical network configuration that provides secure connections for external clients includes a security server. To use View Administrator to enable or disable the secure tunnel and PCoIP Secure

Gateway on a security server, you must edit the View Connection Server instance that is paired with the security server.

In a network configuration in which external clients connect directly to a View Connection Server host, you enable or disable the secure tunnel and PCoIP Secure Gateway by editing that View Connection Server instance in View Administrator.

32 VMware, Inc.

Chapter 2 Configuring View Connection Server

Prerequisites n

If you intend to enable the PCoIP Secure Gateway, verify that the View Connection Server instance and paired security server are View 4.6 or later.

n

If you pair a security server to a View Connection Server instance on which you already enabled the

PCoIP Secure Gateway, verify that the security server is View 4.6 or later.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Servers.

2 On the Connection Servers tab, select a View Connection Server instance and click Edit.

3 Configure use of the secure tunnel.

Option

Enable the secure tunnel

Description

Select Use Secure Tunnel connection to machine.

Disable the secure tunnel Deselect Use Secure Tunnel connection to machine.

The secure tunnel is enabled by default.

4 Configure use of the PCoIP Secure Gateway.

Option

Enable the PCoIP Secure Gateway

Description

Select Use PCoIP Secure Gateway for PCoIP connections to machine

Disable the PCoIP secure Gateway Deselect Use PCoIP Secure Gateway for PCoIP connections to machine

The PCoIP Secure Gateway is disabled by default.

5 Click OK to save your changes.

Configure the Blast Secure Gateway

In View Administrator, you can configure the use of the Blast Secure Gateway to provide secure access to remote desktops and applications, either through HTML Access or through client connections that use the

VMware Blast display protocol.

N

OTE

You can also use Access Point appliances, rather than security servers, for secure external access to

Horizon 7 servers and desktops. If you use Access Point appliances, you must disable the secure gateways on View Connection Server instances and enable these gateways on the Access Point appliances. For more information, see Deploying and Configuring Access Point.

When the Blast Secure Gateway is not enabled, client devices and client Web browsers use the VMware

Blast Extreme protocol to establish direct connections to remote desktop virtual machines and applications, bypassing the Blast Secure Gateway.

I

MPORTANT

A typical network configuration that provides secure connections for external users includes a security server. To enable or disable the Blast Secure Gateway on a security server, you must edit the View

Connection Server instance that is paired with the security server. If external users connect directly to a

View Connection Server host, you enable or disable the Blast Secure Gateway by editing that View

Connection Server instance.

Prerequisites

If users select remote desktops by using VMware Identity Manager, verify that VMware Identity Manager is installed and configured for use with View Connection Server and that View Connection Server is paired with a SAML 2.0 Authentication server.

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View Administration

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Servers.

2 On the Connection Servers tab, select a View Connection Server instance and click Edit.

3 Configure use of the Blast Secure Gateway.

Option Description

Enable the Blast Secure Gateway Select Use Blast Secure Gateway for Blast connections to machine

Disable the Blast secure Gateway

Deselect Use Blast Secure Gateway for Blast connections to machine

The Blast Secure Gateway is enabled by default.

4 Click OK to save your changes.

Off-load SSL Connections to Intermediate Servers

Horizon Client must use HTTPS to connect to View. If your Horizon clients connect to load balancers or other intermediate servers that pass on the connections to View Connection Server instances or security servers, you can off-load SSL to the intermediate servers.

Import SSL Off-loading Servers' Certificates to View Servers

If you off-load SSL connections to an intermediate server, you must import the intermediate server's certificate onto the View Connection Server instances or security servers that connect to the intermediate server. The same SSL server certificate must reside on both the off-loading intermediate server and each offloaded View server that connects to the intermediate server.

If you deploy security servers, the intermediate server and the security servers that connect to it must have the same SSL certificate. You do not have to install the same SSL certificate on View Connection Server instances that are paired to the security servers and do not connect directly to the intermediate server.

If you do not deploy security servers, or if you have a mixed network environment with some security servers and some external-facing View Connection Server instances, the intermediate server and any View

Connection Server instances that connect to it must have the same SSL certificate.

If the intermediate server's certificate is not installed on the View Connection Server instance or security server, clients cannot validate their connections to View. In this situation, the certificate thumbprint sent by the View server does not match the certificate on the intermediate server to which Horizon Client connects.

Do not confuse load balancing with SSL off-loading. The preceding requirement applies to any device that is configured to provide SSL off-loading, including some types of load balancers. However, pure load balancing does not require copying of certificates between devices.

For information about importing certificates to View servers, see "Import a Signed Server Certificate into a

Windows Certificate Store" in the View Installation document.

Set View Server External URLs to Point Clients to SSL Off-loading Servers

If SSL is off-loaded to an intermediate server and Horizon Client devices use the secure tunnel to connect to

View, you must set the secure tunnel external URL to an address that clients can use to access the intermediate server.

You configure the external URL settings on the View Connection Server instance or security server that connects to the intermediate server.

If you deploy security servers, external URLs are required for the security servers but not for the View

Connection Server instances that are paired with the security servers.

34 VMware, Inc.

Chapter 2 Configuring View Connection Server

If you do not deploy security servers, or if you have a mixed network environment with some security servers and some external-facing View Connection Server instances, External URLs are required for any

View Connection Server instances that connect to the intermediate server.

N

OTE

You cannot off-load SSL connections from a PCoIP Secure Gateway (PSG) or Blast Secure Gateway.

The PCoIP external URL and Blast Secure Gateway external URL must allow clients to connect to the computer that hosts the PSG and Blast Secure Gateway. Do not reset the PCoIP external URL and Blast external URL to point to the intermediate server unless you plan to require SSL connections between the intermediate server and the View server.

For information about configuring External URLs, see “Configuring External URLs for PCoIP Secure

Gateway and Tunnel Connections” in the View Installation document.

Allow HTTP Connections From Intermediate Servers

When SSL is off-loaded to an intermediate server, you can configure View Connection Server instances or security servers to allow HTTP connections from the client-facing, intermediate devices. The intermediate devices must accept HTTPS for Horizon Client connections.

To allow HTTP connections between View servers and intermediate devices, you must configure the locked.properties

file on each View Connection Server instance and security server on which HTTP connections are allowed.

Even when HTTP connections between View servers and intermediate devices are allowed, you cannot disable SSL in View. View servers continue to accept HTTPS connections as well as HTTP connections.

N

OTE

If your Horizon clients use smart card authentication, the clients must make HTTPS connections directly to View Connection Server or security server. SSL off-loading is not supported with smart card authentication.

Procedure

1 Create or edit the locked.properties

file in the SSL gateway configuration folder on the View

Connection Server or security server host.

For example:

install_directory\VMware\VMware View\Server\sslgateway\conf\locked.properties

2 To configure the View server's protocol, add the serverProtocol

property and set it to http

.

The value http

must be typed in lower case.

3 (Optional) Add properties to configure a non-default HTTP listening port and a network interface on the View server.

n n

To change the HTTP listening port from 80, set serverPortNonSSL

to another port number to which the intermediate device is configured to connect.

If the View server has more than one network interface, and you intend the server to listen for

HTTP connections on only one interface, set serverHostNonSSL

to the IP address of that network interface.

4 Save the locked.properties

file.

5 Restart the View Connection Server service or security server service to make your changes take effect.

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View Administration

Example: locked.properties file

This file allows non-SSL HTTP connections to a View server. The IP address of the View server's clientfacing network interface is 10.20.30.40. The server uses the default port 80 to listen for HTTP connections.

The value http

must be lower case.

serverProtocol=http serverHostNonSSL=10.20.30.40

Configure the Gateway Location for a View Connection Server or Security

Server Host

By default, View Connection Server instances set the gateway location to

Internal

and security servers set the gateway location to

External

. You can change the default gateway location by setting the gatewayLocation

property in the locked.properties

file.

The gateway location determines the value of the

ViewClient_Broker_GatewayLocation

registry key in a remote desktop. You can use this value with Smart Policies to create a policy that takes effect only if a user connects to a remote desktop from inside or outside your corporate network. For more information, see

"Using Smart Policies" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document.

Procedure

1 Create or edit the locked.properties

file in the SSL gateway configuration folder on the View

Connection Server or security server host.

For example: install_directory\VMware\VMware View\Server\sslgateway\conf\locked.properties

The properties in the locked.properties

file are case sensitive.

2 Add the following line to the locked.properties

file: gatewayLocation=value

value can be either External or Internal . External indicates that the gateway is available for users outside the corporate network. Internal indicates that the gateway is available only for users inside the corporate network.

For example: gatewayLocation=External

3 Save the locked.properties

file.

4 Restart the VMware Horizon View Connection Server service or the VMware Horizon View Security

Server service to make your changes take effect.

Disable or Enable View Connection Server

You can disable a View Connection Server instance to prevent users from logging in to their remote desktops and applications. After you disable an instance, you can enable it again.

When you disable a View Connection Server instance, users who are currently logged in to remote desktops and applications are not affected.

Your View deployment determines how users are affected by disabling an instance.

n n

If this is a single, standalone View Connection Server instance, users cannot log in to their remote desktops or applications. They cannot connect to View Connection Server.

If this is a replicated View Connection Server instance, your network topology determines whether users can be routed to another replicated instance. If users can access another instance, they can log in to their remote desktops and applications.

36 VMware, Inc.

Chapter 2 Configuring View Connection Server

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Servers.

2 On the Connection Servers tab, select the View Connection Server instance.

3 Click Disable.

You can enable the instance again by clicking Enable.

Edit the External URLs

You can use View Administrator to edit external URLs for View Connection Server instances and security servers.

By default, a View Connection Server or security server host can be contacted only by tunnel clients that reside within the same network. Tunnel clients that run outside of your network must use a clientresolvable URL to connect to a View Connection Server or security server host.

When users connect to remote desktops with the PCoIP display protocol, Horizon Client can make a further connection to the PCoIP Secure Gateway on the View Connection Server or security server host. To use the

PCoIP Secure Gateway, a client system must have access to an IP address that allows the client to reach the

View Connection Server or security server host. You specify this IP address in the PCoIP external URL.

A third URL allows users to make secure connections through the Blast Secure Gateway.

The secure tunnel external URL, PCoIP external URL, and Blast external URL must be the addresses that client systems use to reach this host.

N

OTE

You cannot edit the external URLs for a security server that has not been upgraded to View

Connection Server 4.5 or later.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Servers.

Option

View Connection Server instance

Action

Select the View Connection Server instance on the Connection Servers tab and click Edit.

Security server Select the security server on the Security Servers tab and click Edit.

2 Type the secure tunnel external URL in the External URL text box.

The URL must contain the protocol, client-resolvable host name and port number.

For example: https://view.example.com:443

N

OTE

You can use the IP address if you have to access a View Connection Server instance or security server when the host name is not resolvable. However, the host that you contact will not match the SSL certificate that is configured for the View Connection Server instance or security server, resulting in blocked access or access with reduced security.

3 Type the PCoIP Secure Gateway external URL in the PCoIP External URL text box.

Specify the PCoIP external URL as an IP address with the port number 4172. Do not include a protocol name.

For example: 10.20.30.40:4172

The URL must contain the IP address and port number that a client system can use to reach this security server or View Connection Server instance.

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View Administration

4 Type the Blast Secure Gateway external URL in the Blast External URL text box.

The URL must contain the HTTPS protocol, client-resolvable host name, and port number.

For example: https://myserver.example.com:8443

By default, the URL includes the FQDN of the secure tunnel external URL and the default port number,

8443. The URL must contain the FQDN and port number that a client system can use to reach this host.

5 Verify that all addresses in this dialog allow client systems to reach this host.

6 Click OK to save your changes.

The external URLs are updated immediately. You do not need to restart the View Connection Server service or the security server service for the changes to take effect.

Join or Withdraw from the Customer Experience Program

When you install View Connection Server with a new configuration, you can choose to participate in a customer experience improvement program. If you change your mind about participating after the installation, you can join or withdraw from the program by using View Administrator.

If you participate in the program, VMware collects anonymous data about your deployment in order to improve VMware's response to user requirements. No data that identifies your organization is collected.

To review the list of fields from which data is collected, including the fields that are made anonymous, see

“Information Collected by the Customer Experience Improvement Program,” on page 134.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Product Licensing and Usage.

2 In the Customer Experience Program pane, click Edit Settings.

3 Decide whether to participate in or withdraw from the program by selecting or deselecting the Send

anonymous data to VMware checkbox.

4 (Optional) If you participate, you can select the geographic location, type of business, and number of employees in your organization.

5 Click OK.

View LDAP Directory

View LDAP is the data repository for all View configuration information. View LDAP is an embedded

Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) directory that is provided with the View Connection Server installation.

View LDAP contains standard LDAP directory components that are used by View.

n

View schema definitions n n n n

Directory information tree (DIT) definitions

Access control lists (ACLs)

View LDAP contains directory entries that represent View objects.

n

Remote desktop entries that represent each accessible desktop. Each entry contains references to the

Foreign Security Principal (FSP) entries of Windows users and groups in Active Directory who are authorized to use the desktop.

Remote desktop pool entries that represent multiple desktops managed together

Virtual machine entries that represent the vCenter Server virtual machine for each remote desktop

38 VMware, Inc.

Chapter 2 Configuring View Connection Server n

View component entries that store configuration settings

View LDAP also contains a set of View plug-in DLLs that provide automation and notification services for other View components.

N

OTE

Security server instances do not contain a View LDAP directory.

LDAP Replication

When you install a replicated instance of View Connection Server, View copies the View LDAP configuration data from the existing View Connection Server instance. Identical View LDAP configuration data is maintained on all View Connection Server instances in the replicated group. When a change is made on one instance, the updated information is copied to the other instances.

If a replicated instance fails, the other instances in the group continue to operate. When the failed instance resumes activity, its configuration is updated with the changes that took place during the outage. With

Horizon 7 and later releases, a replication status check is performed every 15 minutes to determine whether each instance can communicate with the other servers in the replicated group and whether each instance can fetch LDAP updates from the other servers in the group.

You can use the dashboard in View Administrator to check the replication status. If any View Connection

Server instances have a red icon in the dashboard, click the icon to see the replication status. Replication might be impaired for any of the following reasons: n n n n

A firewall might be blocking communication

The VMware VDMDS service might be stopped on a View Connection Server instance

The VMware VDMDS DSA options might be blocking the replications

A network problem has occurred

By default, the replication check occurs every 15 minutes. You can use ADSI Edit on a View Connection

Server instance to change the interval. To set the number of minutes, connect to

DC=vdi,DC=vmware,DC=int and edit the pae-ReplicationStatusDataExpiryInMins attribute on the

CN=Common,OU=Global,OU=Properties object.

The pae-ReplicationStatusDataExpiryInMins attribute value should be between 10 minutes and 1440 minutes (one day). If the attribute value is less than 10 minutes, View treats it as 10 minutes. If the attribute value is greater than 1440, View treats it as 1440 minutes.

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View Administration

40 VMware, Inc.

Setting Up Smart Card Authentication

3

For added security, you can configure a View Connection Server instance or security server so that users and administrators can authenticate by using smart cards.

A smart card is a small plastic card that contains a computer chip. The chip, which is like a miniature computer, includes secure storage for data, including private keys and public key certificates. One type of smart card used by the United States Department of Defense is called a Common Access Card (CAC).

With smart card authentication, a user or administrator inserts a smart card into a smart card reader attached to the client computer and enters a PIN. Smart card authentication provides two-factor authentication by verifying both what the person has (the smart card) and what the person knows (the PIN).

See the View Installation document for information about hardware and software requirements for implementing smart card authentication. The Microsoft TechNet Web site includes detailed information on planning and implementing smart card authentication for Windows systems.

To use smart cards, client machines must have smart card middleware and a smart card reader. To install certificates on smart cards, you must set up a computer to act as an enrollment station. For information about whether a particular type of Horizon Client supports smart cards, see the Horizon Client documentation at https://www.vmware.com/support/viewclients/doc/viewclients_pubs.html

.

This chapter includes the following topics: n

“Logging In with a Smart Card,” on page 42

n n n n n

“Configure Smart Card Authentication on View Connection Server,” on page 42

“Configure Smart Card Authentication on Third-Party Solutions,” on page 47

“Prepare Active Directory for Smart Card Authentication,” on page 47

“Verify Your Smart Card Authentication Configuration,” on page 50

“Using Smart Card Certificate Revocation Checking,” on page 51

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View Administration

Logging In with a Smart Card

When a user or administrator inserts a smart card into a smart card reader, the user certificates on the smart card are copied to the local certificate store on the client system if the client operating system is Windows.

The certificates in the local certificate store are available to all of the applications running on the client computer, including Horizon Client.

When a user or administrator initiates a connection to a View Connection Server instance or security server that is configured for smart card authentication, the View Connection Server instance or security server sends a list of trusted certificate authorities (CAs) to the client system. The client system checks the list of trusted CAs against the available user certificates, selects a suitable certificate, and then prompts the user or administrator to enter a smart card PIN. If there are multiple valid user certificates, the client system prompts the user or administrator to select a certificate.

The client system sends the user certificate to the View Connection Server instance or security server, which verifies the certificate by checking the certificate trust and validity period. Typically, users and administrators can successfully authenticate if their user certificate is signed and valid. If certificate revocation checking is configured, users or administrators who have revoked user certificates are prevented from authenticating.

Display protocol switching is not supported with smart card authentication in Horizon Client. To change display protocols after authenticating with a smart card in Horizon Client, a user must log off and log on again.

Configure Smart Card Authentication on View Connection Server

To configure smart card authentication, you must obtain a root certificate and add it to a server truststore file, modify View Connection Server configuration properties, and configure smart card authentication settings. Depending on your particular environment, you might need to perform additional steps.

Procedure

1

Obtain the Certificate Authority Certificates on page 43

You must obtain all applicable CA (certificate authority) certificates for all trusted user certificates on the smart cards presented by your users and administrators. These certificates include root certificates and can include intermediate certificates if the user's smart card certificate was issued by an intermediate certificate authority.

2

Obtain the CA Certificate from Windows on page 43

If you have a CA-signed user certificate or a smart card that contains one, and Windows trusts the root certificate, you can export the root certificate from Windows. If the issuer of the user certificate is an intermediate certificate authority, you can export that certificate.

3

Add the CA Certificate to a Server Truststore File on page 44

You must add root certificates, intermediate certificates, or both to a server truststore file for all users and administrators that you trust. View Connection Server instances and security servers use this information to authenticate smart card users and administrators.

4

Modify View Connection Server Configuration Properties on page 44

To enable smart card authentication, you must modify View Connection Server configuration properties on your View Connection Server or security server host.

5

Configure Smart Card Settings in View Administrator on page 45

You can use View Administrator to specify settings to accommodate different smart card authentication scenarios.

42 VMware, Inc.

Chapter 3 Setting Up Smart Card Authentication

Obtain the Certificate Authority Certificates

You must obtain all applicable CA (certificate authority) certificates for all trusted user certificates on the smart cards presented by your users and administrators. These certificates include root certificates and can include intermediate certificates if the user's smart card certificate was issued by an intermediate certificate authority.

If you do not have the root or intermediate certificate of the CA that signed the certificates on the smart cards presented by your users and administrators, you can export the certificates from a CA-signed user

certificate or a smart card that contains one. See “Obtain the CA Certificate from Windows,” on page 43.

Procedure u

Obtain the CA certificates from one of the following sources.

n n

A Microsoft IIS server running Microsoft Certificate Services. See the Microsoft TechNet Web site for information on installing Microsoft IIS, issuing certificates, and distributing certificates in your organization.

The public root certificate of a trusted CA. This is the most common source of a root certificate in environments that already have a smart card infrastructure and a standardized approach to smart card distribution and authentication.

What to do next

Add the root certificate, intermediate certificate, or both to a server truststore file. See

“Add the CA

Certificate to a Server Truststore File,” on page 44.

Obtain the CA Certificate from Windows

If you have a CA-signed user certificate or a smart card that contains one, and Windows trusts the root certificate, you can export the root certificate from Windows. If the issuer of the user certificate is an intermediate certificate authority, you can export that certificate.

Procedure

1 If the user certificate is on a smart card, insert the smart card into the reader to add the user certificate to your personal store.

If the user certificate does not appear in your personal store, use the reader software to export the user

certificate to a file. This file will be used in Step 4

.

2 In Internet Explorer, select Tools > Internet Options.

3 On the Content tab, click Certificates.

4 On the Personal tab, select the certificate you want to use and click View.

If the user certificate does not appear on the list, click Import to manually import it from a file. After the certificate is imported, you can select it from the list.

5 On the Certification Path tab, select the certificate at the top of the tree and click View Certificate.

If the user certificate is signed as part of a trust hierarchy, the signing certificate might be signed by another higher-level certificate. Select the parent certificate (the one that actually signed the user certificate) as your root certificate. In some cases, the issuer might be an intermediate CA.

6 On the Details tab, click Copy to File.

The Certificate Export Wizard appears.

7 Click Next > Next and type a name and location for the file that you want to export.

8 Click Next to save the file as a root certificate in the specified location.

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What to do next

Add the CA certificate to a server truststore file.

Add the CA Certificate to a Server Truststore File

You must add root certificates, intermediate certificates, or both to a server truststore file for all users and administrators that you trust. View Connection Server instances and security servers use this information to authenticate smart card users and administrators.

Prerequisites n

Obtain the root or intermediate certificates that were used to sign the certificates on the smart cards presented by your users or administrators. See

“Obtain the Certificate Authority Certificates,” on page 43 and “Obtain the CA Certificate from Windows,” on page 43.

n

I

MPORTANT

These certificates can include intermediate certificates if the user's smart card certificate was issued by an intermediate certificate authority.

Verify that the keytool utility is added to the system path on your View Connection Server or security server host. See the View Installation document for more information.

Procedure

1 On your View Connection Server or security server host, use the keytool

utility to import the root certificate, intermediate certificate, or both into the server truststore file.

For example: keytool -import -alias alias -file root_certificate -keystore truststorefile.key

In this command, alias is a unique case-sensitive name for a new entry in the truststore file,

root_certificate is the root or intermediate certificate that you obtained or exported, and truststorefile.key is the name of the truststore file that you are adding the root certificate to. If the file does not exist, it is created in the current directory.

N

OTE

The keytool utility might prompt you to create a password for the truststore file. You will be asked to provide this password if you need to add additional certificates to the truststore file at a later time.

2 Copy the truststore file to the SSL gateway configuration folder on the View Connection Server or security server host.

For example:

install_directory\VMware\VMware View\Server\sslgateway\conf\truststorefile.key

What to do next

Modify View Connection Server configuration properties to enable smart card authentication.

Modify View Connection Server Configuration Properties

To enable smart card authentication, you must modify View Connection Server configuration properties on your View Connection Server or security server host.

Prerequisites

Add the CA (certificate authority) certificates for all trusted user certificates to a server truststore file. These certificates include root certificates and can include intermediate certificates if the user's smart card certificate was issued by an intermediate certificate authority.

44 VMware, Inc.

Chapter 3 Setting Up Smart Card Authentication

Procedure

1 Create or edit the locked.properties

file in SSL gateway configuration folder on the View Connection

Server or security server host.

For example:

install_directory\VMware\VMware View\Server\sslgateway\conf\locked.properties

2 Add the trustKeyfile

, trustStoretype

, and useCertAuth

properties to the locked.properties

file.

a Set trustKeyfile

to the name of your truststore file.

b Set trustStoretype

to jks .

c Set useCertAuth

to true to enable certificate authentication.

3 Restart the View Connection Server service or security server service to make your changes take effect.

Example: locked.properties File

The file shown specifies that the root certificate for all trusted users is located in the file lonqa.key

, sets the trust store type to jks , and enables certificate authentication.

trustKeyfile=lonqa.key

trustStoretype=jks useCertAuth=true

What to do next

If you configured smart card authentication for a View Connection Server instance, configure smart card authentication settings in View Administrator. You do not need to configure smart card authentication settings for a security server. Settings that are configured on a View Connection Server instance are also applied to a paired security server.

Configure Smart Card Settings in View Administrator

You can use View Administrator to specify settings to accommodate different smart card authentication scenarios.

When you configure these settings on a View Connection Server instance, the settings are also applied to paired security servers.

Prerequisites n

Modify View Connection Server configuration properties on your View Connection Server host.

n

Verify that Horizon clients make HTTPS connections directly to your View Connection Server or security server host. Smart card authentication is not supported if you off-load SSL to an intermediate device.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Servers.

2 On the Connection Servers tab, select the View Connection Server instance and click Edit.

VMware, Inc. 45

View Administration

3 To configure smart card authentication for remote desktop and application users, perform these steps.

a On the Authentication tab, select a configuration option from the Smart card authentication for

users drop-down menu in the View Authentication section.

Option Action

Not allowed

Optional

Smart card authentication is disabled on the View Connection Server instance.

Users can use smart card authentication or password authentication to connect to the View Connection Server instance. If smart card authentication fails, the user must provide a password.

Required Users are required to use smart card authentication when connecting to the View Connection Server instance.

When smart card authentication is required, authentication fails for users who select the Log in as current user check box when they connect to the View Connection Server instance. These users must reauthenticate with their smart card and PIN when they log in to View

Connection Server.

N

OTE

Smart card authentication replaces Windows password authentication only. If SecurID is enabled, users are required to authenticate by using both SecurID and smart card authentication.

b Configure the smart card removal policy.

You cannot configure the smart card removal policy when smart card authentication is set to Not

Allowed.

Option Action

Disconnect users from View

Connection Server when they remove their smart cards

Select the Disconnect user sessions on smart card removal check box.

Keep users connected to View

Connection Server when they remove their smart cards and let them start new desktop or application sessions without

Deselect the Disconnect user sessions on smart card removal check box.

reauthenticating

The smart card removal policy does not apply to users who connect to the View Connection Server instance with the Log in as current user check box selected, even if they log in to their client system with a smart card.

4 To configure smart card authentication for administrators logging in to View Administrator, click the

Authentication tab and select a configuration option from the Smart card authentication for

administrators drop-down menu in the View Administration Authentication section.

Option

Not allowed

Optional

Required

5 Click OK.

Action

Smart card authentication is disabled on the View Connection Server instance.

Administrators can use smart card authentication or password authentication to log in to the View Administrator. If smart card authentication fails, the administrator must provide a password.

Administrators are required to use smart card authentication when they log in to View Administrator.

46 VMware, Inc.

Chapter 3 Setting Up Smart Card Authentication

6 Restart the View Connection Server service.

You must restart the View Connection Server service for changes to smart card settings to take effect, with one exception. You can change smart card authentication settings between Optional and Required without having to restart the View Connection Server service.

Currently logged in user and administrators are not affected by changes to smart card settings.

What to do next

Prepare Active Directory for smart card authentication, if required. See

“Prepare Active Directory for Smart

Card Authentication,” on page 47.

Verify your smart card authentication configuration. See

“Verify Your Smart Card Authentication

Configuration,” on page 50.

Configure Smart Card Authentication on Third-Party Solutions

Third-party solutions such as load balancers and gateways can perform smart card authentication by passing a SAML assertion that contains the smart card's X.590 certificate and encrypted PIN.

This topic outlines the tasks involved in setting up third-party solutions to provide the relevant X.590

certificate to View Connection Server after the certificate has been validated by the partner device. Because this feature uses SAML authentication, one of the tasks is to create a SAML authenticator in View

Administrator.

For information about configuring smart card authentication on Access Point, see Deploying and Configuring

Access Point.

Procedure

1 Create a SAML authenticator for the third-party gateway or load balancer.

See

“Configure a SAML Authenticator in View Administrator,” on page 60.

2 Extend the expiration period of the View Connection Server metadata so that remote sessions are not terminated after only 24 hours.

See

“Change the Expiration Period for Service Provider Metadata on View Connection Server,” on page 62.

3 If necessary, configure the third-party device to use service provider metadata from View Connection

Server.

See the product documentation for the third-party device.

4 Configure smart card settings on the third-party device.

See the product documentation for the third-party device.

Prepare Active Directory for Smart Card Authentication

You might need to perform certain tasks in Active Directory when you implement smart card authentication.

n n

Add UPNs for Smart Card Users on page 48

Because smart card logins rely on user principal names (UPNs), the Active Directory accounts of users and administrators that use smart cards to authenticate in View must have a valid UPN.

Add the Root Certificate to the Enterprise NTAuth Store on page 48

If you use a CA to issue smart card login or domain controller certificates, you must add the root certificate to the Enterprise NTAuth store in Active Directory. You do not need to perform this procedure if the Windows domain controller acts as the root CA.

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View Administration n n

Add the Root Certificate to Trusted Root Certification Authorities on page 49

If you use a certification authority (CA) to issue smart card login or domain controller certificates, you must add the root certificate to the Trusted Root Certification Authorities group policy in Active

Directory. You do not need to perform this procedure if the Windows domain controller acts as the root CA.

Add an Intermediate Certificate to Intermediate Certification Authorities on page 49

If you use an intermediate certification authority (CA) to issue smart card login or domain controller certificates, you must add the intermediate certificate to the Intermediate Certification Authorities group policy in Active Directory.

Add UPNs for Smart Card Users

Because smart card logins rely on user principal names (UPNs), the Active Directory accounts of users and administrators that use smart cards to authenticate in View must have a valid UPN.

If the domain a smart card user resides in is different from the domain that your root certificate was issued from, you must set the user’s UPN to the Subject Alternative Name (SAN) contained in the root certificate of the trusted CA. If your root certificate was issued from a server in the smart card user's current domain, you do not need to modify the user's UPN.

N

OTE

You might need to set the UPN for built-in Active Directory accounts, even if the certificate is issued from the same domain. Built-in accounts, including Administrator, do not have a UPN set by default.

Prerequisites n

Obtain the SAN contained in the root certificate of the trusted CA by viewing the certificate properties.

n

If the ADSI Edit utility is not present on your Active Directory server, download and install the appropriate Windows Support Tools from the Microsoft Web site.

Procedure

1 On your Active Directory server, start the ADSI Edit utility.

2 In the left pane, expand the domain the user is located in and double-click

CN=Users

.

3 In the right pane, right-click the user and then click Properties.

4 Double-click the userPrincipalName

attribute and type the SAN value of the trusted CA certificate.

5 Click OK to save the attribute setting.

Add the Root Certificate to the Enterprise NTAuth Store

If you use a CA to issue smart card login or domain controller certificates, you must add the root certificate to the Enterprise NTAuth store in Active Directory. You do not need to perform this procedure if the

Windows domain controller acts as the root CA.

Procedure u

On your Active Directory server, use the certutil command to publish the certificate to the Enterprise

NTAuth store.

For example: certutil -dspublish -f path_to_root_CA_cert NTAuthCA

The CA is now trusted to issue certificates of this type.

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Chapter 3 Setting Up Smart Card Authentication

Add the Root Certificate to Trusted Root Certification Authorities

If you use a certification authority (CA) to issue smart card login or domain controller certificates, you must add the root certificate to the Trusted Root Certification Authorities group policy in Active Directory. You do not need to perform this procedure if the Windows domain controller acts as the root CA.

Procedure

1 On the Active Directory server, navigate to the Group Policy Management plug-in.

AD Version

Windows 2003

Navigation Path a Select Start > All Programs > Administrative Tools > Active Directory

Users and Computers.

b Right-click your domain and click Properties.

c On the Group Policy tab, click Open to open the Group Policy

Management plug-in.

d Right-click Default Domain Policy, and click Edit.

Windows 2008 a Select Start > Administrative Tools > Group Policy Management.

b Expand your domain, right-click Default Domain Policy, and click

Edit.

2 Expand the Computer Configuration section and open Windows Settings\Security Settings\Public

Key.

3 Right-click Trusted Root Certification Authorities and select Import.

4 Follow the prompts in the wizard to import the root certificate (for example, rootCA.cer

) and click OK.

5 Close the Group Policy window.

All of the systems in the domain now have a copy of the root certificate in their trusted root store.

What to do next

If an intermediate certification authority (CA) issues your smart card login or domain controller certificates, add the intermediate certificate to the Intermediate Certification Authorities group policy in Active

Directory. See “Add an Intermediate Certificate to Intermediate Certification Authorities,” on page 49.

Add an Intermediate Certificate to Intermediate Certification Authorities

If you use an intermediate certification authority (CA) to issue smart card login or domain controller certificates, you must add the intermediate certificate to the Intermediate Certification Authorities group policy in Active Directory.

Procedure

1 On the Active Directory server, navigate to the Group Policy Management plug-in.

AD Version

Windows 2003

Windows 2008

Navigation Path a Select Start > All Programs > Administrative Tools > Active Directory

Users and Computers.

b Right-click your domain and click Properties.

c On the Group Policy tab, click Open to open the Group Policy

Management plug-in.

d Right-click Default Domain Policy, and click Edit.

a Select Start > Administrative Tools > Group Policy Management.

b Expand your domain, right-click Default Domain Policy, and click

Edit.

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View Administration

2 Expand the Computer Configuration section and open the policy for Windows Settings\Security

Settings\Public Key.

3 Right-click Intermediate Certification Authorities and select Import.

4 Follow the prompts in the wizard to import the intermediate certificate (for example, intermediateCA.cer

) and click OK.

5 Close the Group Policy window.

All of the systems in the domain now have a copy of the intermediate certificate in their intermediate certification authority store.

Verify Your Smart Card Authentication Configuration

After you set up smart card authentication for the first time, or when smart card authentication is not working correctly, you should verify your smart card authentication configuration.

Procedure n

Verify that each client system has smart card middleware, a smart card with a valid certificate, and a smart card reader. For end users, verify that they have Horizon Client.

n

See the documentation provided by your smart card vendor for information on configuring smart card software and hardware.

On each client system, select Start > Settings > Control Panel > Internet Options > Content >

Certificates > Personal to verify that certificates are available for smart card authentication.

n

When a user or administrator inserts a smart card into the smart card reader, Windows copies certificates from the smart card to the user's computer. Applications on the client system, including

Horizon Client, can use these certificates.

In the locked.properties

file on the View Connection Server or security server host, verify that the useCertAuth property is set to true and is spelled correctly.

n n

The locked.properties

file is located in install_directory\VMware\VMware

View\Server\sslgateway\conf . The useCertAuth property is commonly misspelled as userCertAuth .

If you configured smart card authentication on a View Connection Server instance, check the smart card authentication setting in View Administrator.

a Select View Configuration > Servers.

b On the Connection Servers tab, select the View Connection Server instance and click Edit.

c If you configured smart card authentication for users, on the Authentication tab, verify that Smart

card authentication for users is set to either Optional or Required.

d If you configured smart card authentication for administrators, on the Authentication tab, verify that Smart card authentication for administrators is set to either Optional or Required.

You must restart the View Connection Server service for changes to smart card settings to take effect.

If the domain a smart card user resides in is different from the domain your root certificate was issued from, verify that the user’s UPN is set to the SAN contained in the root certificate of the trusted CA.

a Find the SAN contained in the root certificate of the trusted CA by viewing the certificate properties.

b On your Active Directory server, select Start > Administrative Tools > Active Directory Users and

Computers.

c Right-click the user in the Users folder and select Properties.

The UPN appears in the User logon name text boxes on the Account tab.

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Chapter 3 Setting Up Smart Card Authentication n n

If smart card users select the PCoIP display protocol or the VMware Blast display protocol to connect to single-session desktops, verify that the View Agent or Horizon Agent component called Smartcard

Redirection is installed on the single-user machines. The smart card feature lets users log in to singlesession desktops with smart cards. RDS hosts, which have the Remote Desktop Services role installed, support the smart card feature automatically and you do not need to install the feature.

Check the log files in

drive:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\VMware\VDM\logs on the View Connection Server or security server host for messages stating that smart card authentication is enabled.

Using Smart Card Certificate Revocation Checking

You can prevent users who have revoked user certificates from authenticating with smart cards by configuring certificate revocation checking. Certificates are often revoked when a user leaves an organization, loses a smart card, or moves from one department to another.

View supports certificate revocation checking with certificate revocation lists (CRLs) and with the Online

Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP). A CRL is a list of revoked certificates published by the CA that issued the certificates. OCSP is a certificate validation protocol that is used to get the revocation status of an X.509

certificate.

You can configure certificate revocation checking on a View Connection Server instance or on a security server. When a View Connection Server instance is paired with a security server, you configure certificate revocation checking on the security server. The CA must be accessible from the View Connection Server or security server host.

You can configure both CRL and OCSP on the same View Connection Server instance or security server.

When you configure both types of certificate revocation checking, View attempts to use OCSP first and falls back to CRL if OCSP fails. View does not fall back to OCSP if CRL fails.

n n

Logging in with CRL Checking on page 52

When you configure CRL checking, View constructs and reads a CRL to determine the revocation status of a user certificate.

Logging in with OCSP Certificate Revocation Checking on page 52

When you configure OCSP certificate revocation checking, View sends a request to an OCSP

Responder to determine the revocation status of a specific user certificate. View uses an OCSP signing certificate to verify that the responses it receives from the OCSP Responder are genuine.

n n n

Configure CRL Checking on page 52

When you configure CRL checking, View reads a CRL to determine the revocation status of a smart card user certificate.

Configure OCSP Certificate Revocation Checking on page 53

When you configure OCSP certificate revocation checking, View sends a verification request to an

OCSP Responder to determine the revocation status of a smart card user certificate.

Smart Card Certificate Revocation Checking Properties on page 53

You set values in the locked.properties

file to enable and configure smart card certificate revocation checking.

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Logging in with CRL Checking

When you configure CRL checking, View constructs and reads a CRL to determine the revocation status of a user certificate.

If a certificate is revoked and smart card authentication is optional, the Enter your user name and password dialog box appears and the user must provide a password to authenticate. If smart card authentication is required, the user receives an error message and is not allowed to authenticate. The same events occur if

View cannot read the CRL.

Logging in with OCSP Certificate Revocation Checking

When you configure OCSP certificate revocation checking, View sends a request to an OCSP Responder to determine the revocation status of a specific user certificate. View uses an OCSP signing certificate to verify that the responses it receives from the OCSP Responder are genuine.

If the user certificate is revoked and smart card authentication is optional, the Enter your user name and password dialog box appears and the user must provide a password to authenticate. If smart card authentication is required, the user receives an error message and is not allowed to authenticate.

View falls back to CRL checking if it does not receive a response from the OCSP Responder or if the response is invalid.

Configure CRL Checking

When you configure CRL checking, View reads a CRL to determine the revocation status of a smart card user certificate.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the locked.properties

file properties for CRL checking. See

“Smart Card

Certificate Revocation Checking Properties,” on page 53.

Procedure

1 Create or edit the locked.properties

file in the SSL gateway configuration folder on the View

Connection Server or security server host.

For example:

install_directory\VMware\VMware View\Server\sslgateway\conf\locked.properties

2 Add the enableRevocationChecking

and crlLocation

properties to the locked.properties

file.

a Set enableRevocationChecking

to true to enable smart card certificate revocation checking.

b Set crlLocation

to the location of the CRL. The value can be a URL or a file path.

3 Restart the View Connection Server service or security server service to make your changes take effect.

Example: locked.properties File

The file shown enables smart card authentication and smart card certificate revocation checking, configures

CRL checking, and specifies a URL for the CRL location.

trustKeyfile=lonqa.key

trustStoretype=jks useCertAuth=true enableRevocationChecking=true crlLocation=http://root.ocsp.net/certEnroll/ocsp-ROOT_CA.crl

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Chapter 3 Setting Up Smart Card Authentication

Configure OCSP Certificate Revocation Checking

When you configure OCSP certificate revocation checking, View sends a verification request to an OCSP

Responder to determine the revocation status of a smart card user certificate.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the locked.properties

file properties for OCSP certificate revocation checking. See

“Smart Card Certificate Revocation Checking Properties,” on page 53.

Procedure

1 Create or edit the locked.properties

file in the SSL gateway configuration folder on the View

Connection Server or security server host.

For example:

install_directory\VMware\VMware View\Server\sslgateway\conf\locked.properties

2 Add the enableRevocationChecking

, enableOCSP

, ocspURL

, and ocspSigningCert

properties to the locked.properties

file.

a Set enableRevocationChecking

to true to enable smart card certificate revocation checking.

b Set enableOCSP

to true to enable OCSP certificate revocation checking.

c Set ocspURL

to the URL of the OCSP Responder.

d Set ocspSigningCert

to the location of the file that contains the OCSP Responder's signing certificate.

3 Restart the View Connection Server service or security server service to make your changes take effect.

Example: locked.properties File

The file shown enables smart card authentication and smart card certificate revocation checking, configures both CRL and OCSP certificate revocation checking, specifies the OCSP Responder location, and identifies the file that contains the OCSP signing certificate.

trustKeyfile=lonqa.key

trustStoretype=jks useCertAuth=true enableRevocationChecking=true enableOCSP=true allowCertCRLs=true ocspSigningCert=te-ca.signing.cer

ocspURL=http://te-ca.lonqa.int/ocsp

Smart Card Certificate Revocation Checking Properties

You set values in the locked.properties

file to enable and configure smart card certificate revocation checking.

Table 3-1 lists the

locked.properties

file properties for certificate revocation checking.

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Table 3 ‑1. Properties for Smart Card Certificate Revocation Checking

Property Description enableRevocationChecking crlLocation allowCertCRLs enableOCSP ocspURL ocspResponderCert ocspSendNonce ocspCRLFailover

Set this property to true to enable certificate revocation checking.

When this property is set to false, certificate revocation checking is disabled and all other certificate revocation checking properties are ignored.

The default value is false.

Specifies the location of the CRL, which can be either a

URL or a file path.

If you do not specify a URL, or if the specified URL is invalid, View uses the list of CRLs on the user certificate if allowCertCRLs is set to true or is not specified.

If View cannot access a CRL, CRL checking fails.

When this property is set to true, View extracts a list of

CRLs from the user certificate.

The default value is true.

Set this property to true to enable OCSP certificate revocation checking.

The default value is false.

Specifies the URL of an OCSP Responder.

Specifies the file that contains the OCSP Responder's signing certificate. View uses this certificate to verify that the OCSP Responder's responses are genuine.

When this property is set to true, a nonce is sent with

OCSP requests to prevent repeated responses.

The default value is false.

When this property is set to true, View uses CRL checking if OCSP certificate revocation checking fails.

The default value is true.

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Setting Up Other Types of User

Authentication

4

View uses your existing Active Directory infrastructure for user and administrator authentication and management. You can also integrate View with other forms of authentication besides smart cards, such as biometric authentication or two-factor authentication solutions, such as RSA SecurID and RADIUS, to authenticate remote desktop and application users.

This chapter includes the following topics: n

“Using Two-Factor Authentication,” on page 55

n n

“Using SAML Authentication,” on page 59

“Configure Biometric Authentication,” on page 63

Using Two-Factor Authentication

You can configure a View Connection Server instance so that users are required to use RSA SecurID authentication or RADIUS (Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service) authentication.

n

RADIUS support offers a wide range of alternative two-factor token-based authentication options.

n

View also provides an open standard extension interface to allow third-party solution providers to integrate advanced authentication extensions into View.

Because two-factor authentication solutions such as RSA SecurID and RADIUS work with authentication managers, installed on separate servers, you must have those servers configured and accessible to the View

Connection Server host. For example, if you use RSA SecurID, the authentication manager would be RSA

Authentication Manager. If you have RADIUS, the authentication manager would be a RADIUS server.

To use two-factor authentication, each user must have a token, such as an RSA SecurID token, that is registered with its authentication manager. A two-factor authentication token is a piece of hardware or software that generates an authentication code at fixed intervals. Often authentication requires knowledge of both a PIN and an authentication code.

If you have multiple View Connection Server instances, you can configure two-factor authentication on some instances and a different user authentication method on others. For example, you can configure twofactor authentication only for users who access remote desktops and applications from outside the corporate network, over the Internet.

View is certified through the RSA SecurID Ready program and supports the full range of SecurID capabilities, including New PIN Mode, Next Token Code Mode, RSA Authentication Manager, and load balancing.

n

Logging in Using Two-Factor Authentication on page 56

When a user connects to a View Connection Server instance that has RSA SecurID authentication or

RADIUS authentication enabled, a special login dialog box appears in Horizon Client.

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View Administration n n n

Enable Two-Factor Authentication in View Administrator on page 56

You enable a View Connection Server instance for RSA SecurID authentication or RADIUS authentication by modifying View Connection Server settings in View Administrator.

Troubleshooting RSA SecurID Access Denial on page 58

Access is denied when Horizon Client connects with RSA SecurID authentication.

Troubleshooting RADIUS Access Denial on page 58

Access is denied when Horizon Client connects with RADIUS two-factor authentication.

Logging in Using Two-Factor Authentication

When a user connects to a View Connection Server instance that has RSA SecurID authentication or

RADIUS authentication enabled, a special login dialog box appears in Horizon Client.

Users enter their RSA SecurID or RADIUS authentication user name and passcode in the a special login dialog box. A two-factor authentication passcode typically consists of a PIN followed by a token code.

n n

If RSA Authentication Manager requires users to enter a new RSA SecurID PIN after entering their RSA

SecurID username and passcode, a PIN dialog box appears. After setting a new PIN, users are prompted to wait for the next token code before logging in. If RSA Authentication Manager is configured to use system-generated PINs, a dialog box appears to confirm the PIN.

When logging in to View, RADIUS authentication works much like RSA SecurID. If the RADIUS server issues an access challenge, Horizon Client displays a dialog box similar to the RSA SecurID prompt for the next token code. Currently support for RADIUS challenges is limited to prompting for text input.

Any challenge text sent from the RADIUS server is not displayed. More complex forms of challenge, such as multiple choice and image selection, are currently not supported.

n

After a user enters credentials in Horizon Client, the RADIUS server can send an SMS text message or email, or text using some other out-of-band mechanism, to the user's cell phone with a code. The user can enter this text and code into Horizon Client to complete the authentication.

Because some RADIUS vendors provide the ability to import users from Active Directory, end users might first be prompted to supply Active Directory credentials before being prompted for a RADIUS authentication user name and passcode.

Enable Two-Factor Authentication in View Administrator

You enable a View Connection Server instance for RSA SecurID authentication or RADIUS authentication by modifying View Connection Server settings in View Administrator.

Prerequisites

Install and configure the two-factor authentication software, such as the RSA SecurID software or the

RADIUS software, on an authentication manager server.

n n

For RSA SecurID authentication, export the sdconf.rec

file for the View Connection Server instance from RSA Authentication Manager. See the RSA Authentication Manager documentation.

For RADIUS authentication, follow the vendor's configuration documentation. Make a note of the

RADIUS server's host name or IP address, the port number on which it is listening for RADIUS authentication (usually 1812), the authentication type (PAP, CHAP, MS-CHAPv1, or MS-CHAPv2) and the shared secret. You will enter these values in View Administrator. You can enter values for a primary and a secondary RADIUS authenticator.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Servers.

2 On the Connection Servers tab, select the server and click Edit.

56 VMware, Inc.

Chapter 4 Setting Up Other Types of User Authentication

3 On the Authentication tab, from the 2-factor authentication drop-down list in the Advanced

Authentication section, select RSA SecureID or RADIUS.

4 To force RSA SecurID or RADIUS user names to match user names in Active Directory, select Enforce

SecurID and Windows user name matching or Enforce 2-factor and Windows user name matching.

If you select this option, users must use the same RSA SecurID or RADIUS user name for Active

Directory authentication. If you do not select this option, the names can be different.

5 For RSA SecurID, click Upload File, type the location of the sdconf.rec

file, or click Browse to search for the file.

6 For RADIUS authentication, complete the rest of the fields: a Select Use the same username and password for RADIUS and Windows authentication if the initial RADIUS authentication uses Windows authentication that triggers an out-of-band transmission of a token code, and this token code is used as part of a RADIUS challenge.

If you select this check box, users will not be prompted for Windows credentials after RADIUS authentication if the RADIUS authentication uses the Windows username and password. Users do not have to reenter the Windows username and password after RADIUS authentication.

b From the Authenticator drop-down list, select Create New Authenticator and complete the page.

n

Set Accounting port to 0 unless you want to enable RADIUS accounting. Set this port to a nonzero number only if your RADIUS server supports collecting accounting data. If the RADIUS server does not support accounting messages and you set this port to a nonzero number, the messages will be sent and ignored and retried a number of times, resulting in a delay in authentication.

Accounting data can be used in order to bill users based on usage time and data. Accounting data can also be used for statistical purposes and for general network monitoring.

n

If you specify a realm prefix string, the string is placed at the beginning of the username when it is sent to the RADIUS server. For example, if the username entered in Horizon Client is jdoe and the realm prefix DOMAIN-A\ is specified, the username DOMAIN-A\jdoe is sent to the RADIUS server. Similarly if you use the realm suffix, or postfix, string @mycorp.com

, the username [email protected]

is sent to the RADIUS server.

7 Click OK to save your changes.

You do not need to restart the View Connection Server service. The necessary configuration files are distributed automatically and the configuration settings take effect immediately.

When users open Horizon Client and authenticate to View Connection Server, they are prompted for twofactor authentication. For RADIUS authentication, the login dialog box displays text prompts that contain the token label you specified.

Changes to RADIUS authentication settings affect remote desktop and application sessions that are started after the configuration is changed. Current sessions are not affected by changes to RADIUS authentication settings.

What to do next

If you have a replicated group of View Connection Server instances and you want to also set up RADIUS authentication on them, you can re-use an existing RADIUS authenticator configuration.

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Troubleshooting RSA SecurID Access Denial

Access is denied when Horizon Client connects with RSA SecurID authentication.

Problem

A Horizon Client connection with RSA SecurID displays Access Denied and the RSA Authentication

Manager Log Monitor displays the error Node Verification Failed .

Cause

The RSA Agent host node secret needs to be reset.

Solution

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Servers.

2 On the Connection Servers tab, select the View Connection Server and click Edit.

3 On the Authentication tab, select Clear node secret.

4 Click OK to clear the node secret.

5 On the computer that is running RSA Authentication Manager, select Start > Programs > RSA Security

> RSA Authentication Manager Host Mode.

6 Select Agent Host > Edit Agent Host.

7 Select View Connection Server from the list and deselect the Node Secret Created check box.

Node Secret Created is selected by default each time you edit it.

8 Click OK.

Troubleshooting RADIUS Access Denial

Access is denied when Horizon Client connects with RADIUS two-factor authentication.

Problem

A Horizon Client connection using RADIUS two-factor authentication displays Access Denied .

Cause

RADIUS does not receive a reply from the RADIUS server, causing View to time out.

Solution

The following common configuration mistakes most often lead to this situation: n n

The RADIUS server has not been configured to accept the View Connection Server instance as a

RADIUS client. Each View Connection Server instance using RADIUS must be set up as a client on the

RADIUS server. See the documentation for your RADIUS two-factor authentication product.

The shared secret values on the View Connection Server instance and the RADIUS server do not match.

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Chapter 4 Setting Up Other Types of User Authentication

Using SAML Authentication

The Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) is an XML-based standard that is used to describe and exchange authentication and authorization information between different security domains. SAML passes information about users between identity providers and service providers in XML documents called SAML assertions.

You can use SAML authentication to integrate View with VMware Workspace Portal,

VMware Identity Manager, or a third-party load balancer or gateway. When SSO is enabled, users who log in to VMware Identity Manager or a third-party device can launch remote desktops and applications without having to go through a second login procedure. You can also use SAML authentication to implement smart card authentication on VMware Access Point, or on third-party devices.

To delegate responsibility for authentication to Workspace Portal, VMware Identity Manager, or a thirdparty device, you must create a SAML authenticator in View. A SAML authenticator contains the trust and metadata exchange between View and Workspace Portal, VMware Identity Manager, or the third-party device. You associate a SAML authenticator with a View Connection Server instance.

Using SAML Authentication for VMware Identity Manager Integration

Integration between View and VMware Identity Manager (formerly called Workspace Portal) uses the

SAML 2.0 standard to establish mutual trust, which is essential for single sign-on (SSO) functionality. When

SSO is enabled, users who log in to VMware Identity Manager or Workspace Portal with Active Directory credentials can launch remote desktops and applications without having to go through a second login procedure.

When VMware Identity Manager and View are integrated, VMware Identity Manager generates a unique

SAML artifact whenever a user logs in to VMware Identity Manager and clicks a desktop or application icon. VMware Identity Manager uses this SAML artifact to create a Universal Resource Identifier (URI). The

URI contains information about the View Connection Server instance where the desktop or application pool resides, which desktop or application to launch, and the SAML artifact.

VMware Identity Manager sends the SAML artifact to the Horizon client, which in turn sends the artifact to the View Connection Server instance. The View Connection Server instance uses the SAML artifact to retrieve the SAML assertion from VMware Identity Manager.

After a View Connection Server instance receives a SAML assertion, it validates the assertion, decrypts the user's password, and uses the decrypted password to launch the desktop or application.

Setting up VMware Identity Manager and View integration involves configuring VMware Identity Manager with View information and configuring View to delegate responsibility for authentication to

VMware Identity Manager.

To delegate responsibility for authentication to VMware Identity Manager, you must create a SAML authenticator in View. A SAML authenticator contains the trust and metadata exchange between View and

VMware Identity Manager. You associate a SAML authenticator with a View Connection Server instance.

N

OTE

If you intend to provide access to your desktops and applications through

VMware Identity Manager, verify that you create the desktop and application pools as a user who has the

Administrators role on the root access group in View Administrator. If you give the user the Administrators role on an access group other than the root access group, VMware Identity Manager will not recognize the

SAML authenticator you configure in View, and you cannot configure the pool in

VMware Identity Manager.

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Configure a SAML Authenticator in View Administrator

To launch remote desktops and applications from VMware Identity Manager or to connect to remote desktops and applications through a third-party load balancer or gateway, you must create a SAML authenticator in View Administrator. A SAML authenticator contains the trust and metadata exchange between View and the device to which clients connect.

You associate a SAML authenticator with a View Connection Server instance. If your deployment includes more than one View Connection Server instance, you must associate the SAML authenticator with each instance.

You can allow one static authenticator and multiple dynamic authenticators to go live at a time. You can configure vIDM (Dynamic) and Access Point (Static) authenticators and retain them in active state. You can make connections through either of these authenticators.

You can configure more than one SAML authenticator to a View Connection Server and all the authenticators can be active simultaneously. However, the entity-ID of each of these SAML authenticators configured on the View Connection Server must be different.

The status of the SAML authenticator in dashboard is always green as it is predefined metadata that is static in nature. The red and green toggling is only applicable for dynamic authenticators.

For information about configuring a SAML authenticator for VMware Access Point appliances, see

Deploying and Configuring Access Point.

Prerequisites n

Verify that Workspace Portal, VMware Identity Manager, or a third-party gateway or load balancer is installed and configured. See the installation documentation for that product.

n

Verify that the root certificate for the signing CA for the SAML server certificate is installed on the connection server host. VMware does not recommend that you configure SAML authenticators to use self-signed certificates. For information about certificate authentication, see the View Installation document.

n n n

Make a note of the FQDN or IP address of the Workspace Portal server, VMware Identity Manager server, or external-facing load balancer.

(Optional) If you are using Workspace Portal or VMware Identity Manager, make a note of the URL of the connector Web interface.

If you are creating an authenticator for Access Point or a third-party appliance that requires you to generate SAML metadata and create a static authenticator, perform the procedure on the device to generate the SAML metadata, and then copy the metadata.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Configuration > Servers.

2 On the Connection Servers tab, select a server instance to associate with the SAML authenticator and click Edit.

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Chapter 4 Setting Up Other Types of User Authentication

3 On the Authentication tab, select a setting from the Delegation of authentication to VMware Horizon

(SAML 2.0 Authenticator) drop-down menu to enable or disable the SAML authenticator.

Option Description

Disabled

Allowed

SAML authentication is disabled. You can launch remote desktops and applications only from Horizon Client.

SAML authentication is enabled. You can launch remote desktops and applications from both Horizon Client and VMware Identity Manager or the third-party device.

Required SAML authentication is enabled. You can launch remote desktops and applications only from VMware Identity Manager or the third-party device. You cannot launch desktops or applications from Horizon Client manually.

You can configure each View Connection Server instance in your deployment to have different SAML authentication settings, depending on your requirements.

4 Click Manage SAML Authenticators and click Add.

5 Configure the SAML authenticator in the Add SAML 2.0 Authenticator dialog box.

Option Description

Type

Label

Description

Metadata URL

Administration URL

For Access Point or a third-party device, select Static. For

VMware Identity Manager select Dynamic. For dynamic authenticators, you can specify a metadata URL and an administration URL. For static authenticators, you must first generate the metadata on the Access Point or a third-party device, copy the metadata, and then paste it into the SAML

metadata text box.

Unique name that identifies the SAML authenticator.

Brief description of the SAML authenticator. This value is optional.

(For dynamic authenticators) URL for retrieving all of the information required to exchange SAML information between the SAML identity provider and the View Connection Server instance. In the URL https://<YOUR HORIZON SERVER

NAME>/SAAS/API/1.0/GET/metadata/idp.xml

, click <YOUR

HORIZON SERVER NAME> and replace it with the FQDN or IP address of the VMware Identity Manager server or external-facing load balancer

(third-party device).

(For dynamic authenticators) URL for accessing the administration console of the SAML identity provider. For VMware Identity Manager, this URL should point to the VMware Identity Manager Connector Web interface.

This value is optional.

SAML metadata (For static authenticators) Metadata text that you generated and copied from the Access Point or a third-party device.

Enabled for Connection Server Select this check box to enable the authenticator. You can enable multiple authenticators. Only enabled authenticators are displayed in the list.

6 Click OK to save the SAML authenticator configuration.

If you provided valid information, you must either accept the self-signed certificate (not recommended) or use a trusted certificate for View and VMware Identity Manager or the third-party device.

The Manage SAML Authenticators dialog box displays the newly created authenticator.

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7 In the System Health section on the View Administrator dashboard, select Other components > SAML

2.0 Authenticators, select the SAML authenticator that you added, and verify the details.

If the configuration is successful, the authenticator's health is green. An authenticator's health can display red if the certificate is untrusted, if VMware Identity Manager is unavailable, or if the metadata

URL is invalid. If the certificate is untrusted, you might be able to click Verify to validate and accept the certificate.

What to do next

Extend the expiration period of the View Connection Server metadata so that remote sessions are not terminated after only 24 hours. See

“Change the Expiration Period for Service Provider Metadata on View

Connection Server,” on page 62.

Change the Expiration Period for Service Provider Metadata on View

Connection Server

If you do not change the expiration period, View Connection Server will stop accepting SAML assertions from the SAML authenticator, such as Access Point or a third-party identity provider, after 24 hours, and the metadata exchange must be repeated.

Use this procedure to specify the number of days that can elapse before View Connection Server stops accepting SAML assertions from the identity provider. This number is used when the current expiration period ends. For example, if the current expiration period is 1 day and you specify 90 days, after 1 day elapses, View Connection Server generates metadata with an expiration period of 90 days.

Prerequisites

See the Microsoft TechNet Web site for information on how to use the ADSI Edit utility on your Windows operating system version.

Procedure

1 Start the ADSI Edit utility on your View Connection Server host.

2 In the console tree, select Connect to.

3 In the Select or type a Distinguished Name or Naming Context text box, type the distinguished name

DC=vdi, DC=vmware, DC=int .

4 In the Computer pane, select or type localhost:389 or the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the

View Connection Server host followed by port 389.

For example: localhost:389 or mycomputer.example.com:389

5 Expand the ADSI Edit tree, expand OU=Properties, select OU=Global, and double-click OU=Common in the right pane.

6 In the Properties dialog box, edit the pae-NameValuePair attribute to add the following values cs-samlencryptionkeyvaliditydays=number-of-days cs-samlsigningkeyvaliditydays=number-of-days

In this example, number-of-days is the number of days that can elapse before a remote View Connection

Server stops accepting SAML assertions. After this period of time, the process of exchanging SAML metadata must be repeated.

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Generate SAML Metadata So That View Connection Server Can Be Used as a

Service Provider

After you create and enable a SAML authenticator for the identity provider you want to use, you might need to generate View Connection Server metadata. You use this metadata to create a service provider on the Access Point appliance or a third-party load balancer that is the identity provider.

Prerequisites

Verify that you have created a SAML authenticator for the identity provider: Access Point or a third-party load balancer or gateway. In the System Health section on the View Administrator dashboard, you can select Other components > SAML 2.0 Authenticators, select the SAML authenticator that you added, and verify the details.

Procedure

1 Open a new browser tab and enter the URL for getting the View Connection Server SAML metadata.

https://connection-server.example.com/SAML/metadata/sp.xml

In this example, connection-server.example.com is the fully qualified domain name of the View

Connection Server host.

This page displays the SAML metadata from View Connection Server.

2 Use a Save As command to save the Web page to an XML file.

For example, you could save the page to a file named connection-server-metadata.xml

. The contents of this file begin with the following text:

<md:EntityDescriptor xmlns:md="urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:metadata" ...

What to do next

Use the appropriate procedure on the identity provider to copy in the View Connection Server SAML metadata. Refer to the documentation for Access Point or a third-party load balancer or gateway.

Response Time Considerations for Multiple Dynamic SAML Authenticators

If you configure SAML 2.0 Authentication as optional or required on a View Connection Server instance and you associate multiple dynamic SAML authenticators with the View Connection Server instance, if any of the dynamic SAML authenticators become unreachable, the response time to launch remote desktops from the other dynamic SAML authenticators increases.

You can decrease the response time for remote desktop launch on the other dynamic SAML authenticators by using View Administrator to disable the unreachable dynamic SAML authenticators. For information

about disabling a SAML authenticator, see “Configure a SAML Authenticator in View Administrator,” on page 60.

Configure Biometric Authentication

You can configure biometric authentication by editing the pae-ClientConfig attribute in the LDAP database.

Prerequisites

See the Microsoft TechNet Web site for information on how to use the ADSI Edit utility on your Windows server.

Procedure

1 Start the ADSI Edit utility on the View Connection Server host.

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2 In the Connection Settings dialog box, select or connect to DC=vdi,DC=vmware,DC=int.

3 In the Computer pane, select or type localhost:389 or the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the

View Connection Server host followed by port 389.

For example: localhost:389 or mycomputer.mydomain.com:389

4 On the object CN=Common, OU=Global, OU=Properties, edit the pae-ClientConfig attribute and add the value BioMetricsTimeout=<integer>.

The following

BioMetricsTimeout

values are valid:

BioMetricsTimeout Value

0

-1

Any positive integer

Description

Biometric authentication is not supported. This is the default.

Biometric authentication is supported without any time limit.

Biometric authentication is supported and can be used for the specified number of minutes.

The new setting takes effect immediately. You do not need to restart the View Connection Server service or the client device.

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Authenticating Users Without

Requiring Credentials

5

After users log in to a client device or to VMware Identity Manager, they can connect to a remote application or desktop without being prompted for Active Directory credentials.

For Windows clients, administrators can configure the setup so that users do not need to supply additional credentials to log in to a Horizon server after they log in to a Windows client with Active Directory (AD) credentials.

For mobile clients, administrators can configure the Horizon server to save credentials. With this feature, users do not need to remember AD credentials for SSO (single sign-on) after supplying them once to a mobile client.

For VMware Identity Manager, administrators can configure True SSO so that users who authenticate using some method other than AD credentials can then also log in to a remote desktop or application without being prompted for AD credentials.

This chapter includes the following topics: n

“Using the Log In as Current User Feature Available with Windows-Based Horizon Client,” on page 65

n n

“Allow Mobile Client Users to Save Credentials,” on page 66

“Setting Up True SSO,” on page 67

Using the Log In as Current User Feature Available with Windows-

Based Horizon Client

With Horizon Client for Windows, when users select the Log in as current user check box, the credentials that they provided when logging in to the client system are used to authenticate to the View Connection

Server instance and to the remote desktop. No further user authentication is required.

To support this feature, user credentials are stored on both the View Connection Server instance and on the client system.

n n

On the View Connection Server instance, user credentials are encrypted and stored in the user session along with the username, domain, and optional UPN. The credentials are added when authentication occurs and are purged when the session object is destroyed. The session object is destroyed when the user logs out, the session times out, or authentication fails. The session object resides in volatile memory and is not stored in View LDAP or in a disk file.

On the client system, user credentials are encrypted and stored in a table in the Authentication Package, which is a component of Horizon Client. The credentials are added to the table when the user logs in and are removed from the table when the user logs out. The table resides in volatile memory.

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Administrators can use Horizon Client group policy settings to control the availability of the Log in as

current user check box and to specify its default value. Administrators can also use group policy to specify which View Connection Server instances accept the user identity and credential information that is passed when users select the Log in as current user check box in Horizon Client.

The Log in as current user feature has the following limitations and requirements: n n n n

When smart card authentication is set to Required on a View Connection Server instance, authentication fails for users who select the Log in as current user check box when they connect to the

View Connection Server instance. These users must reauthenticate with their smart card and PIN when they log in to View Connection Server.

The time on the system where the client logs in and the time on the View Connection Server host must be synchronized.

If the default Access this computer from the network user-right assignments are modified on the client system, they must be modified as described in VMware Knowledge Base (KB) article 1025691.

The client machine must be able to communicate with the corporate Active Directory server and not use cached credentials for authentication. For example, if users log in to their client machines from outside the corporate network, cached credentials are used for authentication. If the user then attempts to connect to a security server or a View Connection Server instance without first establishing a VPN connection, the user is prompted for credentials, and the Log in as Current User feature does not work.

Allow Mobile Client Users to Save Credentials

Administrators can configure View Connection Server to allow Horizon Client mobile devices to remember a user's user name, password, and domain information. If users choose to have their credentials saved, the credentials are added to the login fields in Horizon Client on subsequent connections.

On Windows-based Horizon clients, the feature for logging in as the current user avoids requiring users to supply credentials multiple times. With Horizon Client for mobile devices, such as Android and iPad, you can configure a feature that allows a Save Password check box to appear on the login dialog boxes.

You configure a timeout limit that indicates how long to save credential information by setting a value in

View LDAP. The timeout limit is set in minutes. When you change View LDAP on a View Connection

Server instance, the change is propagated to all replicated View Connection Server instances.

Prerequisites

See the Microsoft TechNet Web site for information on how to use the ADSI Edit utility on your Windows operating system version.

Procedure

1 Start the ADSI Edit utility on your View Connection Server host.

2 In the Connection Settings dialog box, select or connect to DC=vdi,DC=vmware,DC=int.

3 In the Computer pane, select or type localhost:389 or the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the

View Connection Server host followed by port 389.

For example: localhost:389 or mycomputer.mydomain.com:389

4 On the object CN=Common, OU=Global, OU=Properties, edit the pae-ClientConfig attribute and add the value clientCredentialCacheTimeout=<integer>.

When clientCredentialCacheTimeout

is not set or is set to 0 , the feature is disabled. To enable this feature, you can set the number of minutes to retain the credential information, or set a value of -1, meaning that there is no timeout.

N

OTE

The parameter name clientCredentialCacheTimeout is case-sensitive.

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On View Connection Server, the new setting takes effect immediately. You do not need to restart the View

Connection Server service or the client computer.

Setting Up True SSO

With the True SSO (single sign-on) feature, after users log in to VMware Identity Manager using a smart card or RSA SecurID or RADIUS authentication, users are not required to also enter Active Directory credentials in order to use a remote desktop or application.

If a user authenticates by using Active Directory credentials, the True SSO feature is not necessary, but you can configure True SSO to be used even in this case, so that the AD credentials that the user provides are ignored and True SSO is used.

When connecting to a virtual desktop or remote application, users can select to use either the native Horizon

Client or HTML Access.

This feature has the following limitations: n

This feature does not work for virtual desktops that are provided by using the View Agent Direct

Connection plug-in.

n

This feature is supported only in IPv4 environments.

Following is a list tasks you must perform to set up your environment for True SSO:

1

“Determining an Architecture for True SSO,” on page 67

2

“Set Up an Enterprise Certificate Authority,” on page 70

3

“Create Certificate Templates Used with True SSO,” on page 71

4

“Install and Set Up an Enrollment Server,” on page 73

5

“Export the Enrollment Service Client Certificate,” on page 74

6

“Configure SAML Authentication to Work with True SSO,” on page 76

7

“Configure View Connection Server for True SSO,” on page 78

Determining an Architecture for True SSO

To use True SSO, you must have or add a certificate authority and create an enrollment server. These two servers communicate to create the short-lived Horizon virtual certificate that enables a password-free

Windows logon. You can use True SSO in a single domain, in a single-forest with multiple domains, and in a multiple-forest, multiple-domain setup.

VMware recommends to have two CAs and two ESs deployed to use True SSO. The following examples illustrate True SSO in different architectures.

The following figure illustrates a simple True SSO architecture.

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VMware Identity

Manager Appliance

Very Simple True SSO Architecture

AD

Certificate Authority

Enrollment Server

SAML Trust

Connection Server

Client

The following figure illustrates True SSO in a single domain architecture.

Typical HA True SSO Architecture (Single Domain)

CAs

AD

VMware Identity

Manager Appliance

Enrollment Servers

Optionally; co-host

Enrollment Server on CA

SAML Trust

Connection Servers

Client

The following figure illustrates True SSO in a single-forest with multiple domains architecture.

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Chapter 5 Authenticating Users Without Requiring Credentials

True SSO Single Forest Multiple Domain Architecture (non HA)

Forest

Domain #2 Domain #1 (Root Domain)

CA CA

AD AD

Enrollment

Server

VMware

Identity

Manager

Appliance

Connection

Server

Client

The following figure illustrates True SSO in a multiple-forest architecture.

Forest #2

Domain #2

CA

True SSO Multi-Forest Architecture (non HA)

Forest #1

Domain #1 (Root Domain)

2-way, Forest Level,

Transitive Trust

CA

AD AD

Enrollment

Server

Enrollment

Server

VMware

Identity

Manager

Appliance

Connection

Server

Client

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Set Up an Enterprise Certificate Authority

If you do not already have a certificate authority set up, you must add the Active Directory Certificate

Services (AD CS) role to a Windows server and configure the server to be an enterprise CA.

If you do already have an enterprise CA set up, verify that you are using the settings described in this procedure.

You must have at least one enterprise CA, and VMware recommends that you have two for purposes of failover and load balancing. The enrollment server you will create for True SSO communicates with the enterprise CA. If you configure the enrollment server to use multiple enterprise CAs, the enrollment server will alternate between the CAs available. If you install the enrollment server on the same machine that hosts the enterprise CA, you can configure the enrollment server to prefer using the local CA. This configuration is recommended for best performance.

Part of this procedure involves enabling non-persistent certificate processing. By default, certificate processing includes storing a record of each certificate request and issued certificate in the CA database. A sustained high volume of requests increases the CA database growth rate and could consume all available disk space if not monitored. Enabling non-persistent certificate processing and can help reduce the CA database growth rate and frequency of database management tasks.

Prerequisites n

Create a Windows Server 2008 R2 or Windows Server 2012 R2 virtual machine.

n n n

Verify that the virtual machine is part of the Active Directory domain for the Horizon 7 deployment.

Verify that you are using an IPv4 environment. This feature is currently not supported in an IPv6 environment.

Verify that the system has a static IP address.

Procedure

1 Log in to the virtual machine operating system as an administrator and start Server Manager.

2 Select the settings for adding roles.

Operating System Selections

Windows Server 2012 R2

Windows Server 2008 R2 a Select Add roles and features.

b On the Select Installation Type page, select Role-based or feature-

based installation.

c On the Select Destination Server page, select a server.

a Select Roles in the navigation tree.

b Click Add Roles to start the Add Role wizard.

3 On the Select Server Roles page, select Active Directory Certificate Services.

4 In the Add Roles and Features wizard, click Add Features, and leave the Include management tools check box selected.

5 On the Select Features page, accept the defaults.

6 On the Select Role Services page, select Certification Authority.

7 Follow the prompts and finish the installation.

8 When installation is complete, on the Installation Progress page, click the Configure Active Directory

Certificate Services on destination server link to open the AD CS Configuration wizard.

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9 On the Credentials page, click Next and complete the AD CS Configuration wizard pages as described in the following table.

Option Action

Role Services

Setup Type

CA Type

Private Key

Cryptography for CA

CA Name

Select Certification Authority, and click Next (rather than Configure).

Select Enterprise CA.

Select Root CA or Subordinate CA. Some enterprises prefer two-tier PKI deployment. For more information, see http://social.technet.microsoft.com/wiki/contents/articles/15037.ad-cs-stepby-step-guide-two-tier-pki-hierarchy-deployment.aspx

.

Select Create a new private key.

For hash algorithm, you can select SHA1, SHA256, SHA384, or SHA512.

For key length, you can select 1024, 2048, 3072, or 4096.

VMware recommends a minimum of SHA256 and a 2048 key.

Accept the default or change the name.

Accept the default of 5 years.

Validity Period

Certificate Database Accept the defaults.

10 On the Confirmation page, click Configure, and when the wizard reports a successful configuration, close the wizard.

11 Open a command prompt and enter the following command to configure the CA for non-persistent certificate processing: certutil -setreg DBFlags +DBFLAGS_ENABLEVOLATILEREQUESTS

12 Enter the following command to ignore offline CRL (certificate revocation list) errors on the CA: certutil -setreg ca\CRLFlags +CRLF_REVCHECK_IGNORE_OFFLINE

This flag is required because the root certificate that True SSO uses will usually be offline, and thus revocation checking will fail, which is expected.

13 Enter the following commands to restart the service: sc stop certsvc sc start certsvc

What to do next

Create a certificate template. See “Create Certificate Templates Used with True SSO,” on page 71.

Create Certificate Templates Used with True SSO

You must create a certificate template that can be used for issuing short-lived certificates, and you must specify which computers in the domain can request this type of certificate.

You can create more than one certificate template, but you can configure only one template to be used at any one time.

Prerequisites n

Verify that you have an enterprise CA to use for creating the template described in this procedure. See

“Set Up an Enterprise Certificate Authority,” on page 70.

n

Create a security group in the domain and forest for the enrollment servers, and add the computer accounts of the enrollment servers to that group.

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Procedure

1 On the machine that you are using for the certificate authority, log in to the operating system as an administrator and go to Administrative Tools > Certification Authority.

2 Expand the tree in the left pane, right-click Certificate Templates and select Manage.

3 Right-click the Smartcard Logon template and select Duplicate.

4 Make the following changes on the following tabs:

Tab

Compatibility tab

General tab n n n n

Action

For Certificate Authority, select Windows Server 2008 R2.

For Certificate Recipient, select Windows 7/Windows Server 2008 R2.

Change the template display name to True SSO.

Change the validity period to a period that is as long as a typical working day; that is, as long as he user is likely to remain logged into the system.

So that the user does not lose access to network resources while logged on, the validity period must be longer than the Kerberos TGT renewal time in the users domain.

Request Handling tab

Cryptography tab

Server tab n n n n

(The default maximum lifetime of the ticket is 10 hours. To find the default domain policy, you can go to Computer Configuration >

Policies > Windows Settings > Security Settings > Account Policies >

Kerberos Policy:Maximum lifetime for user ticket.)

Change the renewal period to 1 day.

For Purpose, select Signature and smartcard logon.

Select Allow private key to be exported.

Select, For automatic renewal of smart cards, … n n

For Provider Category, select Key Storage Provider.

For Algorithm name, select RSA.

Select Do not store certificates and requests in the CA database.

I

MPORTANT

Make sure to deselect Do not include revocation information

in issued certificates. (This box gets selected when you select the first one, and you have to deselect (clear) it.)

Issuance Requirements tab

Security tab n n n

Select This number of authorized signatures, and type 1 in the box.

For Policy type, select Application Policy and set the policy to

Certificate Request Agent.

For, Require the following for reenrollment, select Valid existing

certificate.

For the security group that you created for the enrollment server computer accounts, as described in the prerequisites, provide the following permissions: Read, Enroll a Click Add.

b Specify which computers to allow to enroll for certificates.

c For these computers select the appropriate check boxes to give the computers the following permissions: Read, Enroll.

5 Click OK in the Properties of New Template dialog box.

6 Close the Certificate Templates Console window.

7 Right-click Certificate Templates and select New > Certificate Template to Issue.

N

OTE

This step is required for all certificate authorities that issue certificates based on this template.

8 In the Enable Certificate Templates window, select the template you just created (for example, True

SSO Template) and click OK.

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9 In the Enable Certificate Templates window, select Enrollment Agent Computer and click OK.

What to do next

Create an enrollment service. See “Install and Set Up an Enrollment Server,” on page 73.

Install and Set Up an Enrollment Server

You run the Connection Server installer and select the Horizon 7 Enrollment Server option to install an enrollment server. The enrollment server requests short-lived certificates on behalf of the users you specify.

These short-term certificates are the mechanism True SSO uses for authentication to avoid prompting users for Active Directory credentials.

You must install and set up at least one enrollment server, and the enrollment server cannot be installed on the same host as View Connection Server. VMware recommends that you have two enrollment servers for purposes of failover and load balancing. If you have two enrollment servers, by default one is preferred and the other is used for failover. You can change this default, however, so that the connection server alternates sending certificate requests to both enrollment servers.

If you install the enrollment server on the same machine that hosts the enterprise CA, you can configure the enrollment server to prefer using the local CA. For best performance, VMware recommends combining the configuration to prefer using the local CA with the configuration to load balance the enrollment servers. As a result, when certificate requests arrive, the connection server will use alternate enrollment servers, and each enrollment server will service the requests using the local CA. For information about the configuration

settings to use, see “Enrollment Server Configuration Settings,” on page 84 and

“Connection Server

Configuration Settings,” on page 85.

Prerequisites n

Create a Windows Server 2008 R2 or Windows Server 2012 R2 virtual machine with at least 4GB of memory, or use the virtual machine that hosts the enterprise CA. Do not use a machine that is a domain controller.

n n n n n

Verify that no other View component, including View Connection Server, View Composer, security server, Horizon Client, or View Agent or Horizon Agent is installed on the virtual machine.

Verify that the virtual machine is part of the Active Directory domain for the Horizon 7 deployment.

Verify that you are using an IPv4 environment. This feature is currently not supported in an IPv6 environment

VMware recommends that the system must have a static IP address.

Verify that you can log in to the operating system as a domain user with Administrator privileges. You must log in as an administrator to run the installer.

Procedure

1 On the machine that you plan to use for the enrollment server, add the Certificate snap-in to MMC: a Open the MMC console and select File > Add/Remove Snap-in b Under Available snap-ins, select Certificates and click Add.

c In the Certificates snap-in window, select Computer account, click Next, and click Finish.

d In the Add or Remove Snap-in window, click OK.

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2 Issue an enrollment agent certificate: a In the Certificates console, expand the console root tree, right-click the Personal folder, and select

All Tasks > Request New Certificate.

b In the Certificate Enrollment wizard, accept the defaults until you get to the Request Certificates page.

c On the Request Certificates page, select the Enrollment Agent (Computer) check box and click

Enroll.

d Accept the defaults on the other wizard pages, and click Finish on the last page.

In the MMC console, if you expand the Personal folder and select Certificates in the left pane, you will see a new certificate listed in the right pane.

3 Install the enrollment server: a Download the View Connection Server installer file from the VMware download site at https://my.vmware.com/web/vmware/downloads .

Under Desktop & End-User Computing, select the VMware Horizon 7 download, which includes

View Connection Server.

The installer filename is

VMware-viewconnectionserver-x86_64-y.y.y-xxxxxx.exe

, where xxxxxx is the build number and y.y.y is the version number.

b Double-click the installer file to start the wizard, and follow the prompts until you get to the

Installation Options page.

c On the Installation Options page, select Horizon 7 Enrollment Server and click Next.

d Follow the prompts to finish the installation.

You must enable the incoming connections on Port 32111 (TCP) for enrollment server to be functional.

The installer opens the port by default during installation.

What to do next n

If you installed the enrollment server on the same machine that hosts an enterprise CA, configure the enrollment server to prefer using the local CA. See

“Enrollment Server Configuration Settings,” on page 84.

n n

If you install and set up more than one enrollment server, configure connection servers to enable load

balancing between the enrollment servers. See “Connection Server Configuration Settings,” on page 85.

Pair connection servers with enrollment servers. See “Export the Enrollment Service Client Certificate,” on page 74.

Export the Enrollment Service Client Certificate

To accomplish pairing, you can use the MMC Certificates snap-in to export automatically generated, selfsigned Enrollment Service Client certificate from one connection server in the cluster. This certificate is called a client certificate because the connection server is a client of the Enrollment Service provided by the enrollment server.

Enrollment Service must trust the VMware Horizon View Connection Server when it prompts the

Enrollment Servers to issue the short lived certificates for Active Directory users. Hence, the VMware

Horizon View Connection Server clusters or pods must be paired with Enrollment Servers.

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The Enrollment Service Client certificate is automatically created when a Horizon 7 or later connection server is installed and the VMware Horizon View Connection Server service starts. The certificate is distributed through View LDAP to other Horizon 7 connection servers that get added to the cluster later.

The certificate is then stored in a custom container (

VMware Horizon View Certificates\Certificates

) in the Windows Certificate Store on the computer.

Prerequisites

Verify that you have a Horizon 7 or later connection server. For installation instructions, see View

Installation. For upgrade instructions, see View Upgrades.

I

MPORTANT

Customers can use their own certificates for pairing, rather than using the self-generated certificate created by the connection server. To do so, place the preferred certificate (and the associated private key) in the custom container ( VMware Horizon View Certificates\Certificates ) in the Windows

Certificate Store on the connection server machine. You must then set the friendly name of the certificate to vdm.ec.new

, and restart the server. The other servers in the cluster will fetch this certificate from LDAP. You can then perform the steps in this procedure.

Procedure

1 On one of the connection server machines in the cluster, add the Certificates snap-in to MMC: a Open the MMC console and select File > Add/Remove Snap-in b Under Available snap-ins, select Certificates and click Add.

c In the Certificates snap-in window, select Computer account, click Next, and click Finish.

d In the Add or Remove Snap-in window, click OK.

2 In the MMC console, in the left pane, expand the VMware Horizon View Certificates folder and select the Certificates folder.

3 In the right pane, right-click the certificate file with the friendly name vdm.ec, and select All Tasks >

Export.

4 In the Certificate Export wizard, accept the defaults, including leaving the No, do not export the

private key radio button selected.

5 When you are prompted to name the file, type a file name such as EnrollClient , for Enrollment Service

Client certificate, and follow the prompts to finish exporting the certificate.

What to do next

Import the certificate into the enrollment server. See “Import the Enrollment Service Client Certificate on the

Enrollment Server,” on page 75.

Import the Enrollment Service Client Certificate on the Enrollment Server

To complete the pairing process, you use the MMC Certificates snap-in to import the Enrollment Service

Client certificate into the enrollment server. You must perform this procedure on every enrollment server.

Prerequisites n

Verify that you have a Horizon 7 or later enrollment server. See “Install and Set Up an Enrollment

Server,” on page 73.

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Verify that you have the correct certificate to import. You can use either your own certificate or the automatically generated, self-signed Enrollment Service Client certificate from one connection server in the cluster, as described in

“Export the Enrollment Service Client Certificate,” on page 74.

I

MPORTANT

To use your own certificates for pairing, place the preferred certificate (and the associated private key) in the custom container ( VMware Horizon View Certificates\Certificates ) in the

Windows Certificate Store on the connection server machine. You must then set the friendly name of the certificate to vdm.ec.new

, and restart the server. The other servers in the cluster will fetch this certificate from LDAP. You can then perform the steps in this procedure.

If you have your own client certificate, the certificate that you must copy to the enrollment server is the root certificate used to generate the client certificate.

Procedure

1 Copy the appropriate certificate file to the enrollment server machine.

To use the automatically generated certificate, copy the Enrollment Service Client certificate from the connection server. To use your own certificate, copy the root certificate that was used to generate the client certificate.

2 On the enrollment server, add the Certificates snap-in to MMC: a Open the MMC console and select File > Add/Remove Snap-in b Under Available snap-ins, select Certificates and click Add.

c In the Certificates snap-in window, select Computer account, click Next, and click Finish.

d In the Add or Remove Snap-in window, click OK.

3 In the MMC console, in the left pane, right-click the VMware Horizon View Enrollment Server

Trusted Roots folder and select All Tasks > Import.

4 In the Certificate Import wizard, follow the prompts to browse to and open the EnrollClient certificate file.

5 Follow the prompts and accept the defaults to finish importing the certificate.

6 Right-click the imported certificate and add a friendly name such as vdm.ec

(for Enrollment Client certificate).

VMware recommends you use a friendly name that identifies the View cluster, but you can use any name that helps you easily identify the client certificate.

What to do next

Configure the SAML authenticator used for delegating authentication to VMware Identity Manager. See

“Configure SAML Authentication to Work with True SSO,” on page 76.

Configure SAML Authentication to Work with True SSO

With the True SSO feature introduced in Horizon 7, users can log in to VMware Identity Manager 2.6 and later releases using smart card, RADIUS, or RSA SecurID authentication, and they will no longer be prompted for Active Directory credentials, even when they launch a remote desktop or application for the first time.

With earlier releases, SSO (single sign-on) worked by prompting users for their Active Directory credentials the first time they launched a remote desktop or hosted application if they had not previously authenticated with their Active Directory credentials. The credentials were then cached so that subsequent launches would not require users to re-enter their credentials. With True SSO, short-term certificates are created and used instead of AD credentials.

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Although the process for configuring SAML authentication for VMware Identity Manager has not changed, one additional step has been added for True SSO. You must configure VMware Identity Manager so that password pop-ups are suppressed.

N

OTE

If your deployment includes more than one View Connection Server instance, you must associate the

SAML authenticator with each instance.

Prerequisites n

Verify that single sign-on is enabled as a global setting. In View Administrator, select Configuration >

Global Settings, and verify that Single sign-on (SSO) is set to Enabled.

n n n

Verify that VMware Identity Manager is installed and configured. See the VMware Identity Manager documentation, available at https://www.vmware.com/support/pubs/vidm_pubs.html

Verify that the root certificate for the signing CA for the SAML server certificate is installed on the connection server host. VMware does not recommend that you configure SAML authenticators to use self-signed certificates. See the topic "Import a Root Certificate and Intermediate Certificates into a

Windows Certificate Store," in the chapter "Configuring SSL Certificates for View Servers," in the View

Installation document.

Make a note of the FQDN of the VMware Identity Manager server instance.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Configuration > Servers.

2 On the Connection Servers tab, select a server instance to associate with the SAML authenticator and click Edit.

3 On the Authentication tab, from the Delegation of authentication to VMware Horizon (SAML 2.0

Authenticator) drop-down menu, select Allowed or Required.

You can configure each View Connection Server instance in your deployment to have different SAML authentication settings, depending on your requirements.

4 Click Manage SAML Authenticators and click Add.

5 Configure the SAML authenticator in the Add SAML 2.0 Authenticator dialog box.

Option Description

Label

Description

You can use the FQDN of the VMware Identity Manager server instance.

(Optional) You can use the FQDN of the VMware Identity Manager server instance.

Metadata URL URL for retrieving all of the information required to exchange SAML information between the SAML identity provider and the View

Connection Server instance. In the URL https://<YOUR HORIZON SERVER

NAME>/SAAS/API/1.0/GET/metadata/idp.xml

, click <YOUR

HORIZON SERVER NAME> and replace it with the FQDN of the

VMware Identity Manager server instance.

Administration URL

URL for accessing the administration console of the SAML identity provider (VMware Identity Manager instance). This URL has the format https://<Identity-Manager-FQDN>:8443.

6 Click OK to save the SAML authenticator configuration.

If you provided valid information, you must either accept the self-signed certificate (not recommended) or use a trusted certificate for View and VMware Identity Manager.

The SAML 2.0 Authenticator drop-down menu displays the newly created authenticator, which is now set as the selected authenticator.

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7 In the System Health section on the View Administrator dashboard, select Other components > SAML

2.0 Authenticators, select the SAML authenticator that you added, and verify the details.

If the configuration is successful, the authenticator's health is green. An authenticator's health can display red if the certificate is untrusted, if the VMware Identity Manager service is unavailable, or if the metadata URL is invalid. If the certificate is untrusted, you might be able to click Verify to validate and accept the certificate.

8 Log in to the VMware Identity Manager administration console, go to the View Pools page, and select the Suppress Password Popup check box.

What to do next n

Extend the expiration period of the View Connection Server metadata so that remote sessions are not terminated after only 24 hours. See

“Change the Expiration Period for Service Provider Metadata on

View Connection Server,” on page 62.

n

Use the vdmutil

command-line interface to configure True SSO on a connection server. See “Configure

View Connection Server for True SSO,” on page 78.

For more information about how SAML authentication works, see

“Using SAML Authentication,” on page 59.

Configure View Connection Server for True SSO

You can use the vdmutil command-line interface to configure and enable or disable True SSO.

This procedure is required to be performed on only one connection server in the cluster.

I

MPORTANT

This procedure uses only the commands necessary for enabling True SSO. For a list of all the configuration options available for managing True SSO configurations, and a description of each option, see

“Command-line Reference for Configuring True SSO,” on page 80.

Prerequisites n

Verify that you can run the command as a user who has the Administrators role. You can use View

Administrator to assign the Administrators role to a user. See Chapter 6, “Configuring Role-Based

Delegated Administration,” on page 89.

n

Verify that you have the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) for the following servers: n

Connection server n

Enrollment server

For more information, see

“Install and Set Up an Enrollment Server,” on page 73.

n n n n

Enterprise certificate authority

For more information, see

“Set Up an Enterprise Certificate Authority,” on page 70.

Verify that you have the Netbios name or the FQDN of the domain.

Verify that you have created a certificate template. See

“Create Certificate Templates Used with True

SSO,” on page 71.

Verify that you have created a SAML authenticator to delegate authentication to VMware Identity

Manager. See “Configure SAML Authentication to Work with True SSO,” on page 76.

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Procedure

1 On a connection server in the cluster, open a command prompt and enter the command to add an enrollment server.

vdmUtil --authAs admin-role-user --authDomain domain-name --authPassword admin-user-password

--truesso --environment --add --enrollmentServer enroll-server-fqdn

The enrollment server is added to the global list.

2 Enter the command to list the information for that enrollment server.

vdmUtil --authAs admin-role-user --authDomain domain-name --authPassword admin-user-password

--truesso --environment --list --enrollmentServer enroll-server-fqdn --domain domain-fqdn

The output shows the forest name, whether the certificate for the enrollment server is valid, the name and details of the certificate template you can use, and the common name of the certificate authority. To configure which domains the enrollment server can connect to, you can use a Windows Registry setting on the enrollment server. The default is to connect to all trusting domains.

I

MPORTANT

You will be required to specify the common name of the certificate authority in the next step.

3 Enter the command to create a True SSO connector, which will hold the configuration information, and enable the connector.

vdmUtil --authAs admin-role-user --authDomain domain-name --authPassword admin-user-password

--truesso --create --connector --domain domain-fqdn --template TrueSSO-template-name -primaryEnrollmentServer enroll-server-fqdn --certificateServer ca-common-name --mode enabled

In this command, TrueSSO-template-name is the name of the template shown in the output for the previous step, and ca-common-name is the common name of the enterprise certificate authority shown in that output.

The True SSO connector is enabled on a pool or cluster for the domain specified. To disable True SSO at the pool level, run vdmUtil --certsso --edit --connector <domain> --mode disabled

. To disable true

SSO for an individual virtual machine, you can use GPO (vdm_agent.adm).

4 Enter the command to discover which SAML authenticators are available.

vdmUtil --authAs admin-role-user --authDomain domain-name --authPassword admin-user-password

--truesso --list --authenticator

Authenticators are created when you configure SAML authentication between VMware Identity

Manager and a connection server, using View Administrator.

The output shows the name of the authenticator and shows whether True SSO is enabled.

I

MPORTANT

You will be required to specify the authenticator name in the next step.

5 Enter the command to enable the authenticator to use True SSO mode.

vdmUtil --authAs admin-role-user --authDomain domain-name --authPassword admin-user-password

--truesso --authenticator --edit --name authenticator-fqdn --truessoMode {ENABLED|ALWAYS}

For --truessoMode, use ENABLED if you want True SSO to be used only if no password was supplied when the user logged in to VMware Identity Manager. In this case if a password was used and cached, the system will use the password. Set --truessoMode to ALWAYS if you want True SSO to be used even if a password was supplied when the user logged in to VMware Identity Manager.

What to do next

In View Administrator, verify the health status of the True SSO configuration. For more information, see

“Using the System Health Dashboard to Troubleshoot Issues Related to True SSO,” on page 86.

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To configure advanced options, use Windows advanced settings on the appropriate system. See “Advanced

Configuration Settings for True SSO,” on page 83.

Command-line Reference for Configuring True SSO

You can use the vdmutil command-line interface to configure and manage the True SSO feature.

Location of the Utility

By default, the path to the vdmutil command executable file is C:\Program Files\VMware\VMware

View\Server\tools\bin . To avoid entering the path on the command line, add the path to your PATH environment variable.

Syntax and Authentication

Use the following form of the vdmutil

command from a Windows command prompt.

vdmutil authentication options --truesso additional options and arguments

The additional options that you can use depend on the command option. This topic focuses on the options for configuring True SSO (--truesso). Following is an example of a command for listing connectors that have been configured for True SSO: vdmUtil --authAs admin-role-user --authDomain domain-name --authPassword admin-user-password -truesso --list --connector

The vdmutil command includes authentication options to specify the user name, domain, and password to use for authentication.

Table 5 ‑1. vdmutil Command Authentication Options

Option Description

--authAs

--authDomain

--authPassword

Name of a View administrator user. Do not use domain\username or user principal name (UPN) format.

Fully qualified domain name or Netbios name of the domain for the View administrator user specified in the --authAs option.

Password for the View administrator user specified in the --authAs option. Entering "*" instead of a password causes the vdmutil command to prompt for the password and does not leave sensitive passwords in the command history on the command line.

You must use the authentication options with all vdmutil command options except for --help and

--verbose .

Command Output

The vdmutil command returns 0 when an operation succeeds and a failure-specific non-zero code when an operation fails. The vdmutil command writes error messages to standard error. When an operation produces output, or when verbose logging is enabled by using the --verbose option, the vdmutil command writes output to standard output, in US English.

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Commands for Managing Enrollment Servers

You must add one enrollment server for each domain. You can also add a second enrollment server and later designate that server to be used as a backup.

For readability, the options shown in the following table do not represent the complete command you would enter. Only the options specific to the particular task are included. For example, one row shows the

--environment --list --enrollmentServers options, but the vdmUtil

command you would actually enter also contains options for authentication and for specifying that you are configuring True SSO: vdmUtil --authAs admin-role-user --authDomain netbios-name --authPassword admin-user-password -truesso --environment --list --enrollmentServers

For more information about the authentication options, see

“Command-line Reference for Configuring True

SSO,” on page 80.

Table 5 ‑2. vdmutil truesso Command Options for Managing Enrollment Servers

Command and Options Description

--environment --add --enrollmentServer enroll-server-fqdn

--environment --remove --enrollmentServer enroll-server-fqdn

Adds the specified enrollment server to the environment, where

enroll-server-fqdn is the FQDN of the enrollment server. If the enrollment server has already been added, when you run this command, nothing happens.

Removes the specified enrollment server from the environment, where enroll-server-fqdn is the FQDN of the enrollment server. If the enrollment server has already been removed, when you run this command, nothing happens.

--environment --list --enrollmentServers Lists the FQDNs of all enrollment servers in the environment.

--environment --list --enrollmentServer enroll-server-fqdn

--environment --list --enrollmentServer

enroll-server-fqdn --domain domain-fqdn

List s the FQDNs of the domains and forests that are trusted by the domains and forests to which the enrollment server belongs, and the state of the enrollment certificate, which can be VALID or

INVALID. VALID means the enrollment server has an Enrollment

Agent certificate installed. The state might be INVALID for any of several reasons: n n

The certificate has not been installed.

The certificate Is not yet valid, or has expired.

n n

The certificate was not issued by a trusted Enterprise CA.

The private key is not available.

n

The certificate has been corrupted.

The log file on the enrollment server can provide the reason for the

INVALID state.

For the enrollment server in the specified domain, lists the CNs

(common names) of the available certificate authorities, and provides the following information about each certificate template that can be used for True SSO: name, minimum key length, and hash algorithm.

Commands for Managing Connectors

You create one connector for each domain. The connector defines the parameters that are used for True SSO.

For readability, the options shown in the following table do not represent the complete command you would enter. Only the options specific to the particular task are included. For example, one row shows the

--list --connector options, but the vdmUtil

command you would actually enter also contains options for authentication and for specifying that you are configuring True SSO: vdmUtil --authAs admin-role-user --authDomain netbios-name --authPassword admin-user-password -truesso --list --connector

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For more information about the authentication options, see

“Command-line Reference for Configuring True

SSO,” on page 80.

Table 5 ‑3. vdmutil truesso Command Options for Managing Connectors

Options Description

--create --connector --domain domain-fqdn

--template template-name

--primaryEnrollmentServer enroll-server1-

fqdn [--secondaryEnrollmentServer enroll-

server2-fqdn] --certificateServer CA-

common-name --mode {enabled |disabled}

--list --connector

--list --connector --verbose

--edit --connector domain-fqdn [--template

template-name] [--mode {enabled |disabled]

[--primaryEnrollmentServer enroll-server1-

fqdn] [--secondaryEnrollmentServer enroll-

server2-fqdn] [--certificateServer CA-

common-name]

--delete --connector domain-fqdn

Creates a connector for the specified domain and configures the connector to use the following settings: n

template-name is the name of the certificate template to use.

n n

enroll-server1-fqdn is the FQDN of the primary enrollment server to use.

enroll-server2-fqdn is the FQDN of the secondary enrollment server to use. This setting is optional.

n

CA-common-name is the common name of the certificate authority to use. This can be a comma-separated list of CAs.

To determine which certificate template and certificate authority are available for a particular enrollment server, you can run the vdmutil command with the

--truesso --environment --list --enrollmentServer enroll-

server-fqdn --domain domain-fqdn options.

Lists the FQDNs of the domains that already have a connector created.

Lists all the domains that have connectors, and for each connector, provides the following information: n n

Primary enrollment server

Secondary enrollment server, if there is one n n n

Name of the certificate template

Whether the connector is enabled or disabled

Common name of the certificate authority server or servers, if there are more than one

For the connector created for the domain specified by domain-fqdn, allows you to change any of the following settings: n

template-name is the name of the certificate template to use.

n n n n

The mode can be either enabled or disabled.

enroll-server1-fqdn is the FQDN of the primary enrollment server to use.

enroll-server2-fqdn is the FQDN of the secondary enrollment server to use. This setting is optional.

CA-common-name is the common name of the certificate authority to use. This can be a comma-separated list of CAs.

Deletes the connector that has been created for the domain specified by domain-fqdn.

Commands for Managing Authenticators

Authenticators are created when you configure SAML authentication between VMware Identity Manager and a connection server. The only management task is to enable or disable True SSO for the authenticator.

For readability, the options shown in the following table do not represent the complete command you would enter. Only the options specific to the particular task are included. For example, one row shows the

--list --authenticator options, but the vdmUtil command you would actually enter also contains options for authentication and for specifying that you are configuring True SSO: vdmUtil --authAs admin-role-user --authDomain netbios-name --authPassword admin-user-password -truesso --list --authenticator

For more information about the authentication options, see

“Command-line Reference for Configuring True

SSO,” on page 80.

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Table 5 ‑4. vdmutil truesso Command Options for Managing Authenticators

Command and Options Description

--list --authenticator [--verbose]

--list --authenticator --name label

--edit --authenticator --name label

--truessoMode mode-value

Lists the fully qualified domain names (FQDNs) of all SAML authenticators found in the domain. For each one, specifies whether

True SSO is enabled. If you use the --verbose option, the FQDNs of the associated connection servers are also listed.

For the specified authenticator, lists whether True SSO is enabled, and lists the FQDNs of the associated connection servers. For label use one of the names listed when you use the --authenticator option without the --name option.

For the specified authenticator, sets the True SSO mode to the value you specify, where mode-value can be one of the following values: n ENABLED . True SSO is used only when the Active Directory credentials of the user is not available.

n n

ALWAYS . True SSO is always used even if vIDM has the AD credentials of the user.

DISABLED . True SSO is disabled.

For label use one of the names listed when you use the

--authenticator option without the --name option.

Advanced Configuration Settings for True SSO

You can manage the True SSO advanced settings by using the GPO template on the Horizon Agent machine, registry settings on the enrollment server, and LDAP entries on the connection server. These settings include default timeout, configure load balancing, specify domains to be included, and more.

Horizon Agent Configuration Settings

You can use GPO template on the agent OS to turn off True SSO at the pool level or to change defaults for certificate settings such as key size and count and settings for reconnect attempts.

N

OTE

The following table shows the settings to use for configuring the agent on individual virtual machines, but you can alternatively use the Horizon Agent Configuration ADM template file

( vdm_agent.adm

) to make these policy settings apply to all the virtual machines in a desktop or application pool. If a policy is set the policy takes precedence over the registry settings

This ADM file is available in a bundled .zip

file named VMware-Horizon-Extras-Bundle-x.x.x-yyyyyyy.zip

, which you can download from the VMware download site at https://my.vmware.com/web/vmware/downloads . Under Desktop & End-User Computing, select the

VMware Horizon 7 download, which includes the bundled .zip

file.

Table 5 ‑5. Keys for Configuring True SSO on Horizon Agent

Key

Min &

Max Description

Disable True SSO N/A

Certificate wait timeout

Minimum key size

All key sizes

10

-120

1024 -

8192

N/A

Set this key to true to disable the feature on the agent. Use this setting in the group policy to disable True SSO at the pool level. The default is false.

Specifies timeout period of certificates to arrive on the agent, in seconds. The default is 40.

Minimum allowed size for a key. The default is 1024, meaning that by default, if the key size is below 1024, the key cannot be used.

Comma-separated list of key sizes that can be used. Up to 5 sizes can be specified; for example: 1024,2048,3072,4096. The default is 2048.

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Table 5 ‑5. Keys for Configuring True SSO on Horizon Agent (Continued)

Key

Number of keys to pre-create

Minimum validity period required for a certificate

Min &

Max Description

1-100 Number of keys to pre-create on RDS servers that provide remote desktops and hosted Windows applications. The default is 5.

N/A Minimum validity period, in minutes, required for a certificate when it is being reused to reconnect a user. The default is 5.

Enrollment Server Configuration Settings

You can use Windows Registry settings on the enrollment server OS to configure which domains to connect to, various timeout periods, polling periods, and retries, and whether to prefer using the certificate authority that is installed on the same local server (recommended).

To change the advanced configuration settings, you can open the Windows Registry Editor ( regedit.exe

) on the enrollment server machine and navigate to the following registry key:

HKLM\SOFTWARE\VMware, Inc.\VMware VDM\Enrollment Service

Table 5 ‑6. Registry Keys for Configuring True SSO on the Enrollment Server

Registry Key

Min

&

Max Type Description

ConnectToDomains N/A REG_MUL

TI_SZ

ExcludeDomains

ConnectToDomainsInForest

ConnectToTrustingDomains

N/A

N/A

N/A

REG_MUL

TI_SZ

REG_SZ

REG_SZ

List of domains the enrollment server attempts to connect to automatically. For this multi-string registry type, the

DNS fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of each domain is listed on its own line.

The default is to trust all domains.

List of domains the enrollment server does not connect to automatically. If the connection server provides a configuration set with any of the domains, the enrollment server will attempt to connect to that domain or domains.

For this multi-string registry type, the DNS FQDN of each domain is listed on its own line.

The default is to exclude no domains.

Specifies whether to connect to and use all domains in the forest that the enrollment server is a member of. The default is TRUE.

Use one of the following values: n n

0 means false; do not connect to the domains of the forest being used.

!=0 means true.

Specifies whether to connect to explicitly trusting/incoming domains. The default is TRUE.

Use one of the following values: n n

0 means false; do not connect to explicitly trusting/incoming domains.

!=0 means true.

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Table 5 ‑6. Registry Keys for Configuring True SSO on the Enrollment Server (Continued)

Registry Key

PreferLocalCa

MaxSubmitRetryTime

SubmitLatencyWarningTime

Min

&

Max

N/A

9500-

59000

500 -

5000

Type

REG_SZ

DWORD

DWORD

Description

Specifies whether to prefer the locally installed CA, if available, for performance benefits. If set to TRUE, the enrollment server will send requests to the local CA. If the connection to the local CA fails, the enrollment server will try to send certificates requests to alternate CAs. The default is FALSE.

Use one of the following values: n n

0 means false.

!=0 means true.

Amount of time to wait before retrying to submit a certificate signing request, in milliseconds. The default is

25000.

Submit latency warning time when the interface is marked "Degraded" (in milliseconds). The default is 1500.

The enrollment server uses this setting to determine whether a CA should be considered to be in a degraded state. If the last three certificate requests took more milliseconds to complete than are specified by this setting, the CA is considered degraded, and this status appears in the View Administrator Health Status dashboard.

A CA usually issues a certificate within 20 ms, but if the

CA has been idle for a few hours, any initial request might take longer to complete. This setting allows an administrator to find out that a CA is slow, without necessary having the CA marked as slow. Use this setting to configure the threshold for marking the CA as slow.

Connection Server Configuration Settings

You can edit View LDAP on View Connection Server to configure a timeout for generating certificates and whether to enable load balancing certificate requests between enrollment server (recommended).

To change the advanced configuration settings, you must use ADSI Edit on a View Connection Server host.

You can connect by typing in the distinguished name DC=vdi, DC=vmware, DC=int as the connection point, and typing in the server name and port for the computer localhost:389 . Expand OU=Properties, select

OU=Global, and double-click CN=Common in the right pane.

You can then edit the pae-NameValuePair attribute to add one or more of the values listed in the following table. You must use the syntax name=value when adding values.

Table 5 ‑7. Advanced True SSO Settings for Connection Servers

Registry Key Description cs-view-certsso-enable-esloadbalance=[true|false] cs-view-certsso-certgen-timeoutsec= number

Specifies whether to enable load balancing CSR requests between two enrollment servers. The default is false.

For example, add cs-view-certsso-enable-es-loadbalance=true to enable load balancing so that when certificate requests arrive, the connection server will use alternate enrollment servers,. Each enrollment server can service the requests using the local CA, if you have the enrollment server and CA on the same host.

Amount of time to wait for generating a certificate after receiving a CSR, in seconds. The default is 35.

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Using the System Health Dashboard to Troubleshoot Issues Related to True

SSO

You can use the system health dashboard in View Administrator to quickly see problems that might affect the operation of the True SSO feature.

For end users, if True SSO stops working, when the system attempts to log the user in to the remote desktop or application, the user sees the following message: "

The user name or password is incorrect

." After the user clicks OK, the user is taken to the login screen. On the Windows login screen the user sees an extra tile labeled VMware SSO User. If the user has the Active Directory credentials for an entitled user, the user can log in with AD credentials.

The system health dashboard in the top-left portion of the View Administrator display contains a couple of items that pertain to True SSO.

N

OTE

The True SSO feature provides information to the dashboard only once per minute. Click the refresh icon in the upper-right corner to refresh the information immediately.

n n

You can click to expand View Components > True SSO to see a list of the domains that are using True

SSO.

You can click a domain name to see the following information: a list of enrollment servers configured for that domain, a list of enterprise certificate authorities, the name of the certificate template being used, and the status. If there is a problem, the Status field explains what it is.

To change any of the configuration settings shown in the True SSO Domain Details dialog box, use the vdmutil

command-line interface to edit the True SSO connector. For more information, see

“Commands for Managing Connectors,” on page 81.

You can click to expand Other Components > SAML 2.0 Authenticators to see a list of the SAML authenticators that have been created for delegating authentication to VMware Identity Manager instances. You can click the authenticator name to examine the details and status.

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In order for True SSO to be used, the global setting for SSO must be enabled. In View Administrator, select Configuration > Global Settings, and verify that Single sign-on (SSO) is set to Enabled.

Table 5 ‑8. Broker to Enrollment Server Connection Status

Status Text Description

The dashboard is unable to retrieve the health information from the broker.

Failed to fetch True SSO health information.

The <FQDN> enrollment server cannot be contacted by the True

SSO configuration service.

The <FQDN> enrollment server cannot be contacted to manage sessions on this connection server.

In a POD, one of the brokers is elected to send the configuration information to all enrollment servers used by the POD. This broker will refresh the enrollment server configuration once every minute. This message is displayed if the configuration task has failed to updated the enrollment server. For additional information, see the table for Enrollment Server Connectivity.

The current broker is unable to connect to the enrollment server. This status is only displayed for the broker that your browser is pointing to. If there are multiple brokers in the pod, you need to change your browser to point to the other brokers in order to check their status. For additional information, see the table for

Enrollment Server Connectivity.

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Chapter 5 Authenticating Users Without Requiring Credentials

Table 5 ‑9. Enrollment Server Connectivity

Status Text Description

This domain <Domain Name> does not exist on the <FQDN> enrollment server.

The <FQDN> enrollment server's connection to the domain <Domain

Name> is still being established.

The <FQDN> enrollment server's connection to the domain <Domain

Name> is stopping or in a problematic state.

The <FQDN> enrollment server has not yet read the enrollment properties from a domain controller.

The <FQDN> enrollment server has read the enrollment properties at least once, but has not been able to reach a domain controller for some time.

The <FQDN> enrollment server has read the enrollment properties at least once but either has not been able to reach a domain controller for an extended time or another issue exists.

The True SSO connector has been configured to use this enrollment server for this domain, but the enrollment server has not yet been configured to connect to this domain. If the state remains for longer than one minute, you need to check the state of the broker currently responsible for refreshing the enrollment configuration.

The enrollment server has not been able to connect to a domain controller in this domain. If this state remains for longer than a minute, you might have to verify that name resolution from the enrollment server to the domain is correct, and that there is network connectivity between the enrollment server and the domain.

The enrollment server has connected to a domain controller in the domain, but it has not been able to read the PKI information from the domain controller. If this happens, then there is likely a problem with the actual domain controller. This issue can also happen if DNS is not configured correctly. Check the log file on the enrollment server to see what domain controller the enrollment server is trying to use, and verify that the domain controller is fully operational.

This state is transitional, and is only displayed during startup of the enrollment server, or when a new domain has been added to the environment. This state usually lasts less than one minute. If this state lasts longer than a minute, either the network is extremely slow, or there is an issue causing difficulties accessing the domain controller.

As long as the enrollment server reads the PKI configuration from a domain controller, it keeps polling for changes once every two minutes. This status will be set if the domain controller (DC) has been unreachable for a short period of time.

Typically this inability to contact the DC might mean the enrollment server cannot detect any changes in PKI configuration. As long the certificate servers can still access a domain controller, certificates can still be issued.

If the enrollment server has not been able to reach the domain controller for an extended period, then this state is displayed. The enrollment server will then try to discover an alternative domain controller for this domain. If a certificate server can still access a domain controller, then certificates can still be issued, but if this state remains for more than one minute, it means the enrollment server has lost access to all domain controllers for the domain, and it is likely that certificates can no longer be issued.

Table 5 ‑10. Enrollment Certificate Status

Status Text Description

A valid enrollment certificate for this domain's <domain name> forest is not installed on the

<FQDN> enrollment server, or it may have expired

No enrollment certificate for this domain has been installed, or the certificate is invalid or has expired. The enrollment certificate must be issued by an enterprise

CA that is trusted by the forest this domain is a member of. Verify that you have completed the steps in the View Administration document, which describes how to install the enrollment certificate on the enrollment server. You can also open the

MMC, certificate management snap-in, opening the local computer store. Open the

Personal certificate container and verify that the certificate is installed, and that it is valid. You can also open the enrollment server log file. The enrollment server will log additional information about the state of any certificate it located.

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Table 5 ‑11. Certificate Template Status

Status Text Description

Check that you specified the correct template name.

The template <name> does not exist on the <FQDN> enrollment server domain.

Certificates generated by this template can NOT be used to log on to windows.

The template <name> is smartcard logon enabled, but cannot be used.

This template does not have the smart card usage enabled and data signing enabled. Check that you specified the correct template name. Verify that you have .completed the steps described in

“Create Certificate Templates Used with

True SSO,” on page 71.

This template is enabled for smart card logon, but the template cannot be used with True SSO. Check that you specified the correct template name, verify that

you have gone through the steps described in “Create Certificate Templates Used with True SSO,” on page 71. You can also check the enrollment server log file,

since it will log what setting in the template is preventing it from being used for

True SSO.

Table 5 ‑12. Certificate Server Configuration Status

Status Text Description

The certificate server <CN of CA> does not exist in the domain.

The certificate is not in the NTAuth

(Enterprise) store.

Verify that you specified the correct name for the CA. You must specify the

Common Name (CN).

This CA is not an enterprise CA or its CA certificate has not been added to the

NTAUTH store. If this CA is not a member of the forest, you must manually add the CA certificate to the NTAUTH store of this forest.

Table 5 ‑13. Certificate Server Connection Status

Status Text Description

The <FQDN> enrollment server is not connected to the certificate server <CN of CA>.

The <FQDN> enrollment server has connected to the certificate server

<CN of CA>, but the certificate server is in a degraded state

The <FQDN> enrollment server can connect to the certificate server <CN of CA>, but the service is unavailable.

The enrollment server is not connected to the certificate server. This state might be a transitional state if the enrollment server just started, or if the CA was recently added to a True SSO connector. If the state remains for longer than one minute, it means that the enrollment server failed to connect to the CA. Validate that name resolution is working correctly, and that you have network connectivity to the CA, and that the system account for the enrollment server has permission to access the

CA.

This state is displayed if the CA is slow at issuing certificates. If the CA remains in this state, check the load of the CA or the domain controllers used by the CA.

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OTE

If the CA has been marked as slow, it will retain this state until at least one certificate request has been completed successfully, and that certificate was issued within a normal time frame.

This state is issued if the enrollment server has an active connection to the CA but it is unable to issue certificates. This state is typically a transitional state. If the CA does not become available quickly, the state will be changed to disconnected.

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Configuring Role-Based Delegated

Administration

6

One key management task in a View environment is to determine who can use View Administrator and what tasks those users are authorized to perform. With role-based delegated administration, you can selectively assign administrative rights by assigning administrator roles to specific Active Directory users and groups.

This chapter includes the following topics: n

“Understanding Roles and Privileges,” on page 89

n n n n

“Using Access Groups to Delegate Administration of Pools and Farms,” on page 90

“Understanding Permissions,” on page 91

“Manage Administrators,” on page 92

“Manage and Review Permissions,” on page 93

n n n n n

“Manage and Review Access Groups,” on page 95

“Manage Custom Roles,” on page 97

“Predefined Roles and Privileges,” on page 99

“Required Privileges for Common Tasks,” on page 103

“Best Practices for Administrator Users and Groups,” on page 105

Understanding Roles and Privileges

The ability to perform tasks in View Administrator is governed by an access control system that consists of administrator roles and privileges. This system is similar to the vCenter Server access control system.

An administrator role is a collection of privileges. Privileges grant the ability to perform specific actions, such as entitling a user to a desktop pool. Privileges also control what an administrator can see in View

Administrator. For example, if an administrator does not have privileges to view or modify global policies, the Global Policies setting is not visible in the navigation panel when the administrator logs in to View

Administrator.

Administrator privileges are either global or object-specific. Global privileges control system-wide operations, such as viewing and changing global settings. Object-specific privileges control operations on specific types of objects.

Administrator roles typically combine all of the individual privileges required to perform a higher-level administration task. View Administrator includes predefined roles that contain the privileges required to perform common administration tasks. You can assign these predefined roles to your administrator users and groups, or you can create your own roles by combining selected privileges. You cannot modify the predefined roles.

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To create administrators, you select users and groups from your Active Directory users and groups and assign administrator roles. Administrators obtain privileges through their role assignments. You cannot assign privileges directly to administrators. An administrator that has multiple role assignments acquires the sum of all the privileges contained in those roles.

Using Access Groups to Delegate Administration of Pools and Farms

By default, automated desktop pools, manual desktop pools, and farms are created in the root access group, which appears as / or Root(/) in View Administrator. RDS desktop pools and application pools inherit their farm's access group. You can create access groups under the root access group to delegate the administration of specific pools or farms to different administrators.

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You cannot change the access group of an RDS desktop pool or an application pool directly. You must change the access group of the farm that the RDS desktop pool or the application pool belongs to.

A virtual or physical machine inherits the access group from its desktop pool. An attached persistent disk inherits the access group from its machine. You can have a maximum of 100 access groups, including the root access group.

You configure administrator access to the resources in an access group by assigning a role to an administrator on that access group. Administrators can access the resources that reside only in access groups for which they have assigned roles. The role that an administrator has on an access group determines the level of access that the administrator has to the resources in that access group.

Because roles are inherited from the root access group, an administrator that has a role on the root access group has that role on all access groups. Administrators who have the Administrators role on the root access group are super administrators because they have full access to all of the objects in the system.

A role must contain at least one object-specific privilege to apply to an access group. Roles that contain only global privileges cannot be applied to access groups.

You can use View Administrator to create access groups and to move existing desktop pools to access groups. When you create an automated desktop pool, a manual pool, or a farm, you can accept the default root access group or select a different access group.

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If you intend to provide access to your desktops and applications through

VMware Identity Manager, verify that you create the desktop and application pools as a user who has the

Administrators role on the root access group in View Administrator. If you give the user the Administrators role on an access group other than the root access group, VMware Identity Manager will not recognize the

SAML authenticator you configure in View, and you cannot configure the pool in

VMware Identity Manager.

n n

Different Administrators for Different Access Groups on page 90

You can create a different administrator to manage each access group in your configuration.

Different Administrators for the Same Access Group on page 91

You can create different administrators to manage the same access group.

Different Administrators for Different Access Groups

You can create a different administrator to manage each access group in your configuration.

For example, if your corporate desktop pools are in one access group and your desktop pools for software developers are in another access group, you can create different administrators to manage the resources in each access group.

Table 6-1 shows an example of this type of configuration.

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Table 6 ‑1. Different Administrators for Different Access Groups

Administrator Role view-domain.com\Admin1 view-domain.com\Admin2

Inventory Administrators

Inventory Administrators

Access Group

/CorporateDesktops

/DeveloperDesktops

In this example, the administrator called Admin1 has the Inventory Administrators role on the access group called CorporateDesktops and the administrator called Admin2 has the Inventory Administrators role on the access group called DeveloperDesktops.

Different Administrators for the Same Access Group

You can create different administrators to manage the same access group.

For example, if your corporate desktop pools are in one access group, you can create one administrator that can view and modify those pools and another administrator that can only view them.

Table 6-2 shows an example of this type of configuration.

Table 6 ‑2. Different Administrators for the Same Access Group

Administrator view-domain.com\Admin1 view-domain.com\Admin2

Role

Inventory Administrators

Inventory Administrators (Read only)

Access Group

/CorporateDesktops

/CorporateDesktops

In this example, the administrator called Admin1 has the Inventory Administrators role on the access group called CorporateDesktops and the administrator called Admin2 has the Inventory Administrators (Read only) role on the same access group.

Understanding Permissions

View Administrator presents the combination of a role, an administrator user or group, and an access group as a permission. The role defines the actions that can be performed, the user or group indicates who can perform the action, and the access group contains the objects that are the target of the action.

Permissions appear differently in View Administrator depending on whether you select an administrator user or group, an access group, or a role.

Table 6-3 shows how permissions appear in View Administrator when you select an administrator user or

group. The administrator user is called Admin 1 and it has two permissions.

Table 6 ‑3. Permissions on the Administrators and Groups Tab for Admin 1

Role Access Group

Inventory Administrators

Administrators (Read only)

MarketingDesktops

/

The first permission shows that Admin 1 has the Inventory Administrators role on the access group called

MarketingDesktops . The second permission shows that Admin 1 has the Administrators (Read only) role on the root access group.

Table 6-4 shows how the same permissions appear in View Administrator when you select the

MarketingDesktops access group.

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Table 6 ‑4. Permissions on the Folders Tab for MarketingDesktops

Admin Role Inherited view-domain.com\Admin1 view-domain.com\Admin1

Inventory Administrators

Administrators (Read only) Yes

The first permission is the same as the first permission shown in Table 6-3 . The second permission is inherited from the second permission shown in Table 6-3 . Because access groups inherit permissions from

the root access group, Admin1 has the Administrators (Read only) role on the MarketingDesktops access group. When a permission is inherited, Yes appears in the Inherited column.

Table 6-5 shows how the first permission in

Table 6-3 appears in View Administrator when you select the

Inventory Administrators role.

Table 6 ‑5. Permissions on the Role Tab for Inventory Administrators

Administrator view-domain.com\Admin1

Access Group

/MarketingDesktops

Manage Administrators

Users who have the Administrators role can use View Administrator to add and remove administrator users and groups.

The Administrators role is the most powerful role in View Administrator. Initially, members of the View

Administrators account are given the Administrators role. You specify the View Administrators account when you install View Connection Server. The View Administrators account can be the local Administrators group (BUILTIN\Administrators) on the View Connection Server computer or a domain user or group account.

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By default, the Domain Admins group is a member of the local Administrators group. If you specified the View Administrators account as the local Administrators group, and you do not want domain administrators to have full access to inventory objects and View configuration settings, you must remove the Domain Admins group from the local Administrators group.

n n

Create an Administrator on page 92

To create an administrator, you select a user or group from your Active Directory users and groups in

View Administrator and assign an administrator role.

Remove an Administrator on page 93

You can remove an administrator user or group. You cannot remove the last super administrator in the system. A super administrator is an administrator that has the Administrators role on the root access group.

Create an Administrator

To create an administrator, you select a user or group from your Active Directory users and groups in View

Administrator and assign an administrator role.

Prerequisites n n

Become familiar with the predefined administrator roles. See

“Predefined Roles and Privileges,” on page 99.

Become familiar with the best practices for creating administrator users and groups. See “Best Practices for Administrator Users and Groups,” on page 105.

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Chapter 6 Configuring Role-Based Delegated Administration n n

To assign a custom role to the administrator, create the custom role. See

“Add a Custom Role,” on page 98.

To create an administrator that can manage specific desktop pools, create an access group and move the

desktop pools to that access group. See “Manage and Review Access Groups,” on page 95.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Administrators.

2 On the Administrators and Groups tab, click Add User or Group.

3 Click Add, select one or more search criteria, and click Find to filter Active Directory users or groups based on your search criteria.

4 Select the Active Directory user or group that you want to be an administrator user or group, click OK and click Next.

You can press the Ctrl and Shift keys to select multiple users and groups.

5 Select a role to assign to the administrator user or group.

The Applies to an access group column indicates whether a role applies to access groups. Only roles that contain object-specific privileges apply to access groups. Roles that contain only global privileges do not apply to access groups.

Option

The role you selected applies to access groups

Action

Select one or more access groups and click Next.

You want the role to apply to all access groups

Select the root access group and click Next.

6 Click Finish to create the administrator user or group.

The new administrator user or group appears in the left pane and the role and access group that you selected appear in the right pane on the Administrators and Groups tab.

Remove an Administrator

You can remove an administrator user or group. You cannot remove the last super administrator in the system. A super administrator is an administrator that has the Administrators role on the root access group.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Administrators.

2 On the Administrators and Groups tab, select the administrator user or group, click Remove User or

Group, and click OK.

The administrator user or group no longer appears on the Administrators and Groups tab.

Manage and Review Permissions

You can use View Administrator to add, delete, and review permissions for specific administrator users and groups, for specific roles, and for specific access groups.

n

Add a Permission on page 94

You can add a permission that includes a specific administrator user or group, a specific role, or a specific access group.

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View Administration n n

Delete a Permission on page 94

You can delete a permission that includes a specific administrator user or group, a specific role, or a specific access group.

Review Permissions on page 95

You can review the permissions that include a specific administrator or group, a specific role, or a specific access group.

Add a Permission

You can add a permission that includes a specific administrator user or group, a specific role, or a specific access group.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Administrators.

2 Create the permission.

Option

Create a permission that includes a specific administrator user or group

Create a permission that includes a specific role

Create a permission that includes a specific access group

Action a On the Administrators and Groups tab, select the administrator or group and click Add Permission.

b Select a role.

c If the role does not apply to access groups, click Finish.

d If the role applies to access groups, click Next, select one or more access groups, and click Finish. A role must contain at least one objectspecific privilege to apply to an access group.

a On the Roles tab, select the role, click Permissions, and click Add

Permission.

b Click Add, select one or more search criteria, and click Find to find administrator users or groups that match your search criteria.

c Select an administrator user or group to include in the permission and click OK. You can press the Ctrl and Shift keys to select multiple users and groups.

d If the role does not apply to access groups, click Finish.

e If the role applies to access groups, click Next, select one or more access groups, and click Finish. A role must contain at least one objectspecific privilege to apply to an access group.

a On the Access Groups tab, select the access group and click Add

Permission.

b Click Add, select one or more search criteria, and click Find to find administrator users or groups that match your search criteria.

c Select an administrator user or group to include in the permission and click OK. You can press the Ctrl and Shift keys to select multiple users and groups.

d Click Next, select a role, and click Finish. A role must contain at least one object-specific privilege to apply to an access group.

Delete a Permission

You can delete a permission that includes a specific administrator user or group, a specific role, or a specific access group.

If you remove the last permission for an administrator user or group, that administrator user or group is also removed. Because at least one administrator must have the Administrators role on the root access group, you cannot remove a permission that would cause that administrator to be removed. You cannot delete an inherited permission.

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Chapter 6 Configuring Role-Based Delegated Administration

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Administrators.

2 Select the permission to delete.

Option Action

Delete a permission that applies to a specific administrator or group

Select the administrator or group on the Administrators and Groups tab.

Delete a permission that applies to a specific role

Select the role on the Roles tab.

Delete a permission that applies to a specific access group

Select the folder on the Access Groups tab.

3 Select the permission and click Delete Permission.

Review Permissions

You can review the permissions that include a specific administrator or group, a specific role, or a specific access group.

Procedure

1 Select View Configuration > Administrators.

2 Review the permissions.

Option

Review the permissions that include a specific administrator or group

Review the permissions that include a specific role

Review the permissions that include a specific access group

Action

Select the administrator or group on the Administrators and Groups tab.

Select the role on the Roles tab and click Permissions.

Select the folder on the Access Groups tab.

Manage and Review Access Groups

You can use View Administrator to add and delete access groups and to review the desktop pools and machines in a particular access group.

n n n n

Add an Access Group on page 96

You can delegate the administration of specific machines, desktop pools, or farms to different administrators by creating access groups. By default, desktop pools, application pools, and farms reside in the root access group.

Move a Desktop Pool or a Farm to a Different Access Group on page 96

After you create an access group, you can move automated desktop pools, manual pools, or farms to the new access group.

Remove an Access Group on page 96

You can remove an access group if it does not contain any object. You cannot remove the root access group.

Review the Desktop Pools, Application Pools, or Farms in an Access Group on page 97

You can see the desktop pools, the application pools, or the farms in a particular access group in View

Administrator.

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View Administration n

Review the vCenter Virtual Machines in an Access Group on page 97

You can see the vCenter virtual machines in a particular access group in View Administrator. A vCenter virtual machine inherits the access group from its pool.

Add an Access Group

You can delegate the administration of specific machines, desktop pools, or farms to different administrators by creating access groups. By default, desktop pools, application pools, and farms reside in the root access group.

You can have a maximum of 100 access groups, including the root access group.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, navigate to the Add Access Group dialog box.

Option Action

From Catalog

From Resources n n n n

Select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

From the Access Group drop-down menu in the top window pane, select New Access Group.

Select Resources > Farms.

From the Access Group drop-down menu in the top window pane, select New Access Group.

From View Configuration n n

Select View Configuration > Administrators.

From the Access Groups tab, select Add Access Group.

2 Type a name and description for the access group and click OK.

The description is optional.

What to do next

Move one or more objects to the access group.

Move a Desktop Pool or a Farm to a Different Access Group

After you create an access group, you can move automated desktop pools, manual pools, or farms to the new access group.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools or Resources > Farms.

2 Select a pool or a farm.

3 Select Change Access Group from the Access Group drop-down menu in the top window pane.

4 Select the access group and click OK.

View Administrator moves the pool to the access group that you selected.

Remove an Access Group

You can remove an access group if it does not contain any object. You cannot remove the root access group.

Prerequisites

If the access group contains objects, move the objects to another access group or to the root access group. See

“Move a Desktop Pool or a Farm to a Different Access Group,” on page 96.

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Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Administrators.

2 On the Access Groups tab, select the access group and click Remove Access Group.

3 Click OK to remove the access group.

Review the Desktop Pools, Application Pools, or Farms in an Access Group

You can see the desktop pools, the application pools, or the farms in a particular access group in View

Administrator.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, navigate to the main page for the objects.

Object

Desktop Pools

Action

Select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

Application Pools Select Catalog > Application Pools.

Farms

Select Resources > Farms.

By default, the objects in all access groups are displayed.

2 Select an access group from the Access Group drop-down menu in the main window pane.

The objects in the access group that you selected are displayed.

Review the vCenter Virtual Machines in an Access Group

You can see the vCenter virtual machines in a particular access group in View Administrator. A vCenter virtual machine inherits the access group from its pool.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Machines.

2 Select the vCenter VMs tab.

By default, the vCenter virtual machines in all access groups are displayed.

3 Select an access group from the Access Group drop-down menu.

The vCenter virtual machines in the access group that you selected are displayed.

Manage Custom Roles

You can use View Administrator to add, modify, and delete custom roles.

n

Add a Custom Role on page 98

If the predefined administrator roles do not meet your needs, you can combine specific privileges to create your own roles in View Administrator.

n n

Modify the Privileges in a Custom Role on page 98

You can modify the privileges in a custom role. You cannot modify the predefined administrator roles.

Remove a Custom Role on page 98

You can remove a custom role if it is not included in a permission. You cannot remove the predefined administrator roles.

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Add a Custom Role

If the predefined administrator roles do not meet your needs, you can combine specific privileges to create your own roles in View Administrator.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the administrator privileges that you can use to create custom roles. See

“Predefined Roles and Privileges,” on page 99.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Administrators.

2 On the Roles tab, click Add Role.

3 Type a name and description for the new role, select one or more privileges, and click OK.

The new role appears in the left pane.

Modify the Privileges in a Custom Role

You can modify the privileges in a custom role. You cannot modify the predefined administrator roles.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the administrator privileges that you can use to create custom roles. See

“Predefined Roles and Privileges,” on page 99.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Administrators.

2 On the Roles tab, select the role.

3 Click Privileges to display the privileges in the role and click Edit.

4 Select or deselect privileges.

5 Click OK to save your changes.

Remove a Custom Role

You can remove a custom role if it is not included in a permission. You cannot remove the predefined administrator roles.

Prerequisites

If the role is included in a permission, delete the permission. See “Delete a Permission,” on page 94.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Administrators.

2 On the Roles tab, select the role and click Remove Role.

The Remove Role button is not available for predefined roles or for custom roles that are included in a permission.

3 Click OK to remove the role.

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Predefined Roles and Privileges

View Administrator includes predefined roles that you can assign to your administrator users and groups.

You can also create your own administrator roles by combining selected privileges.

n n n n

Predefined Administrator Roles on page 99

The predefined administrator roles combine all of the individual privileges required to perform common administration tasks. You cannot modify the predefined roles.

Global Privileges on page 101

Global privileges control system-wide operations, such as viewing and changing global settings. Roles that contain only global privileges cannot be applied to access groups.

Object-Specific Privileges on page 102

Object-specific privileges control operations on specific types of inventory objects. Roles that contain object-specific privileges can be applied to access groups.

Internal Privileges on page 102

Some of the predefined administrator roles contain internal privileges. You cannot select internal privileges when you create custom roles.

Predefined Administrator Roles

The predefined administrator roles combine all of the individual privileges required to perform common administration tasks. You cannot modify the predefined roles.

Table 6-6 describes the predefined roles and indicates whether a role can be applied to an access group.

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Table 6 ‑6. Predefined Roles in View Administrator

Role

Administrators

Administrators (Read only)

Agent Registration

Administrators

Global Configuration and

Policy Administrators

Global Configuration and

Policy Administrators (Read only)

Inventory Administrators

Inventory Administrators

(Read only)

User Capabilities

Perform all administrator operations, including creating additional administrator users and groups. In a Cloud Pod

Architecture environment, administrators that have this role can configure and manage a pod federation and manage remote pod sessions.

Administrators that have the Administrators role on the root access group are super users because they have full access to all of the inventory objects in the system. Because the

Administrators role contains all privileges, you should assign it to a limited set of users. Initially, members of the local

Administrators group on your View Connection Server host are given this role on the root access group.

I

MPORTANT

An administrator must have the Administrators role on the root access group to perform the following tasks: n

Add and delete access groups.

n n

Manage ThinApp applications and configuration settings in

View Administrator.

Use the vdmadmin , vdmimport, and lmvutil commands.

n n

View, but not modify, global settings and inventory objects.

View, but not modify, ThinApp applications and settings.

n

Run all PowerShell commands and command line utilities, including vdmexport but excluding vdmadmin, vdmimport and lmvutil.

In a Cloud Pod Architecture environment, administrators that have this role can view inventory objects and settings in the

Global Data Layer.

When administrators have this role on an access group, they can only view the inventory objects in that access group.

Register unmanaged machines such as physical systems, standalone virtual machines, and RDS hosts.

View and modify global policies and configuration settings except for administrator roles and permissions, and ThinApp applications and settings.

View, but not modify, global policies and configuration settings except for administrator roles and permissions, and ThinApp applications and settings.

n n

Perform all machine, session, and pool-related operations.

Manage persistent disks.

n

Resync, Refresh, and Rebalance linked-clone pools and change the default pool image.

When administrators have this role on an access group, they can only perform these operations on the inventory objects in that access group.

View, but not modify, inventory objects.

When administrators have this role on an access group, they can only view the inventory objects in that access group.

Applies to an

Access Group

Yes

Yes

No

No

No

Yes

Yes

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Chapter 6 Configuring Role-Based Delegated Administration

Table 6 ‑6. Predefined Roles in View Administrator (Continued)

Role

Local Administrators

Local Administrators (Read

Only)

User Capabilities

Perform all local administrator operations, except for creating additional administrator users and groups. In a Cloud Pod

Architecture environment, administrators that have this role cannot perform operations on the Global Data Layer or manage sessions on remote pods.

Same as the Administrators (Read Only) role, except for viewing inventory objects and settings in the Global Data Layer.

Administrators that have this role have read-only rights only on the local pod.

Applies to an

Access Group

Yes

Yes

Global Privileges

Global privileges control system-wide operations, such as viewing and changing global settings. Roles that contain only global privileges cannot be applied to access groups.

Table 6-7 describes the global privileges and lists the predefined roles that contain each privilege.

Table 6 ‑7. Global Privileges

Privilege User Capabilities

Console Interaction Log in to and use View Administrator.

Direct Interaction

Predefined Roles

Administrators

Administrators (Read only)

Inventory Administrators

Inventory Administrators (Read only)

Global Configuration and Policy

Administrators

Global Configuration and Policy

Administrators (Read only)

Administrators

Administrators (Read only)

Manage Global

Configuration and

Policies

Run all PowerShell commands and command line utilities, except for vdmadmin and vdmimport.

Administrators must have the

Administrators role on the root access group to use the vdmadmin, vdmimport, and lmvutil commands.

View and modify global policies and configuration settings except for administrator roles and permissions.

Administrators

Global Configuration and Policy

Administrators

Administrators Manage Global

Sessions

Manage Roles and

Permissions

Register Agent

Manage global sessions in a Cloud Pod

Architecture environment.

Create, modify, and delete administrator roles and permissions.

Install Horizon Agent on unmanaged machines, such as physical systems, standalone virtual machines, and RDS hosts.

During Horizon Agent installation, you must provide your administrator login credentials to register the unmanaged machine with the View Connection Server instance.

Administrators

Administrators

Agent Registration Administrators

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Object-Specific Privileges

Object-specific privileges control operations on specific types of inventory objects. Roles that contain objectspecific privileges can be applied to access groups.

Table 6-8 describes the object-specific privileges. The predefined roles Administrators and Inventory

Administrators contain all of these privileges.

Table 6 ‑8. Object-Specific Privileges

Privilege User Capabilities

Enable and disable desktop pools.

Enable Farms and Desktop

Pools

Entitle Desktop and

Application Pools

Manage Composer Desktop

Pool Image

Manage Machine

Manage Persistent Disks

Manage Farms and

Desktop and Application

Pools

Manage Sessions

Manage Reboot Operation

Add and remove user entitlements.

Resync, Refresh, and Rebalance linked-clone pools and change the default pool image.

Perform all machine and session-related operations.

Perform all View Composer persistent disk operations, including attaching, detaching, and importing persistent disks.

Add, modify, and delete farms. Add, modify, delete, and entitle desktop and application pools. Add and remove machines.

Disconnect and log off sessions and send messages to users.

Reset machines.

Object

Desktop pool, farm

Desktop pool, application pool

Desktop pool

Machine

Persistent disk

Desktop pool, application pool, farm

Session

Machine

Internal Privileges

Some of the predefined administrator roles contain internal privileges. You cannot select internal privileges when you create custom roles.

Table 6-9 describes the internal privileges and lists the predefined roles that contain each privilege.

Table 6 ‑9. Internal Privileges

Privilege

Full (Read only)

Manage Inventory

(Read only)

Manage Global

Configuration and

Policies (Read only)

Description

Grants read-only access to configuration settings and global policies except for administrators and roles.

Predefined Roles

Grants read-only access to all settings.

Administrators (Read only)

Grants read-only access to inventory objects.

Inventory Administrators (Read only)

Global Configuration and Policy

Administrators (Read only)

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Required Privileges for Common Tasks

Many common administration tasks require a coordinated set of privileges. Some operations require permission at the root access group in addition to access to the object that is being manipulated.

Privileges for Managing Pools

An administrator must have certain privileges to manage pools in View Administrator.

Table 6-10 lists common pool management tasks and shows the privileges that are required to perform each

task.

Table 6 ‑10. Pool Management Tasks and Privileges

Task

Enable or disable a desktop pool

Entitle or unentitle users to a pool

Add a pool

Modify or delete a pool

Add or remove desktops from a pool

Refresh, Recompose, Rebalance, or change the default View

Composer image

Change access groups

Required Privileges

Enable Farms and Desktop Pools

Entitle Desktop and Application Pools

Manage Farms and Desktop and Application Pools

Manage Farms and Desktop and Application Pools

Manage Farms and Desktop and Application Pools

Manage Composer Desktop Pool Image

Manage Farms and Desktop and Application Pools on both the source and target access groups.

Privileges for Managing Machines

An administrator must have certain privileges to manage machines in View Administrator.

Table 6-11 lists common machine management tasks and shows the privileges that are required to perform

each task.

Table 6 ‑11. Machine Management Tasks and Privileges

Task Required Privileges

Remove a virtual machine

Reset a virtual machine

Assign or remove user ownership

Enter or exit maintenance mode

Disconnect or log off sessions

Manage Machine

Manage Reboot Operation

Manage Machine

Manage Machine

Manage Sessions

Privileges for Managing Persistent Disks

An administrator must have certain privileges to manage persistent disks in View Administrator.

Table 6-12 lists common persistent disk management tasks and shows the privileges that are required to

perform each task. You perform these tasks on the Persistent Disks page in View Administrator.

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Table 6 ‑12. Persistent Disk Management Tasks and Privileges

Task Required Privileges

Detach a disk

Attach a disk

Edit a disk

Change access groups

Recreate desktop

Import from vCenter

Delete a disk

Manage Persistent Disks on the disk and Manage Farms and Desktop and

Application Pools on the pool.

Manage Persistent Disks on the disk and Manage Farms and Desktop and

Application Pools on the machine.

Manage Persistent Disks on the disk and Manage Farms and Desktop and

Application Pools on the selected pool.

Manage Persistent Disks on the source and target access groups.

Manage Persistent Disks on the disk and Manage Farms and Desktop and

Application Pools on the last pool.

Manage Persistent Disks on the folder and Manage Pool on the pool.

Manage Persistent Disks on the disk.

Privileges for Managing Users and Administrators

An administrator must have certain privileges to manage users and administrators in View Administrator.

Table 6-13 lists common user and administrator management tasks and shows the privileges that are

required to perform each task. You manage users on the Users and Groups page in View Administrator.

You manage administrators on the Global Administrators View page in View Administrator.

Table 6 ‑13. User and Administrator Management Tasks and Privileges

Task Required Privileges

Update general user information

Send messages to users

Add an administrator user or group

Add, modify, or delete an administrator permission

Add, modify, or delete an administrator role

Manage Global Configuration and Policies

Manage Remote Sessions on the machine.

Manage Roles and Permissions

Manage Roles and Permissions

Manage Roles and Permissions

Privileges for General Administration Tasks and Commands

An administrator must have certain privileges to perform general administration tasks and run command line utilities.

Table 6-14 shows the privileges that are required to perform general administration tasks and run command

line utilities.

Table 6 ‑14. Privileges for General Administration Tasks and Commands

Task Required Privileges

Add or delete an access group

Manage ThinApp applications and settings in View

Administrator

Install Horizon Agent on an unmanaged machine, such as a physical system, standalone virtual machine, or RDS host

View or modify configuration settings (except for administrators) in View Administrator

Run all PowerShell commands and command line utilities except for vdmadmin and vdmimport.

Must have the Administrators role on the root access group.

Must have the Administrators role on the root access group.

Register Agent

Manage Global Configuration and Policies

Direct Interaction

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Table 6 ‑14. Privileges for General Administration Tasks and Commands (Continued)

Task

Use the vdmadmin and vdmimport commands

Use the vdmexport command

Required Privileges

Must have the Administrators role on the root access group.

Must have the Administrators role or the Administrators

(Read only) role on the root access group.

Best Practices for Administrator Users and Groups

To increase the security and manageability of your View environment, you should follow best practices when managing administrator users and groups.

n

Create new user groups in Active Directory and assign View administrative roles to these groups.

Avoid using Windows built-in groups or other existing groups that might contain users who do not need or should not have View privileges.

n n n n n

Keep the number of users with View administrative privileges to a minimum.

Because the Administrators role has every privilege, it should not be used for day-to-day administration.

Because it is highly visible and easily guessed, avoid using the name Administrator when creating administrator users and groups.

Create access groups to segregate sensitive desktops and farms. Delegate the administration of those access groups to a limited set of users.

Create separate administrators that can modify global policies and View configuration settings.

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Configuring Policies in View

Administrator and Active Directory

7

You can use View Administrator to set policies for client sessions. You can configure Active Directory group policy settings to control the behavior of View Connection Server, the PCoIP display protocol, and View logging and performance alarms.

You can also configure Active Directory group policy settings to control the behavior of Horizon Agent,

Horizon Client for Windows, View Persona Management, and certain features. For information about these policy settings, see the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document.

This chapter includes the following topics: n

“Setting Policies in View Administrator,” on page 107

n

“Using View Group Policy Administrative Template Files,” on page 109

Setting Policies in View Administrator

You use View Administrator to configure policies for client sessions.

You can set these policies to affect specific users, specific desktop pools, or all client sessions users. Policies that affect specific users and desktop pools are called user-level policies and desktop pool-level policies.

Policies that affect all sessions and users are called global policies.

User-level policies inherit settings from the equivalent desktop pool-level policy settings. Similarly, desktop pool-level policies inherit settings from the equivalent global policy settings. A desktop pool-level policy setting takes precedence over the equivalent global policy setting. A user-level policy setting takes precedence over the equivalent global and desktop pool-level policy settings.

Lower-level policy settings can be more or less restrictive than the equivalent higher-level settings. For example, you can set a global policy to Deny and the equivalent desktop pool-level policy to Allow, or vice versa.

N

OTE

Only global policies are available for RDS desktop and application pools. You cannot set user-level policies or pool-level policies for RDS desktop and application pools.

n n n

Configure Global Policy Settings on page 108

You can configure global policies to control the behavior of all client sessions users.

Configure Policies for Desktop Pools on page 108

You can configure desktop-level policies to affect specific desktop pools. Desktop-level policy settings take precedence over their equivalent global policy settings.

Configure Policies for Users on page 108

You can configure user-level policies to affect specific users. User-level policy settings always take precedence over their equivalent global and desktop pool-level policy settings.

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View Policies on page 109

You can configure View policies to affect all client sessions, or you can apply them to affect specific desktop pools or users.

Configure Global Policy Settings

You can configure global policies to control the behavior of all client sessions users.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the policy descriptions. See

“View Policies,” on page 109.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Policies > Global Policies.

2 Click Edit policies in the View Policies pane.

3 Click OK to save your changes.

Configure Policies for Desktop Pools

You can configure desktop-level policies to affect specific desktop pools. Desktop-level policy settings take precedence over their equivalent global policy settings.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the policy descriptions. See

“View Policies,” on page 109.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

2 Double-click the ID of the desktop pool and click the Policies tab.

The Policies tab shows the current policy settings. When a setting is inherited from the equivalent global policy, Inherit appears in the Desktop Pool Policy column.

3 Click Edit Policies in the View Policies pane.

4 Click OK to save your changes.

Configure Policies for Users

You can configure user-level policies to affect specific users. User-level policy settings always take precedence over their equivalent global and desktop pool-level policy settings.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the policy descriptions. See

“View Policies,” on page 109.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

2 Double-click the ID of the desktop pool and click the Policies tab.

The Policies tab shows the current policy settings. When a setting is inherited from the equivalent global policy, Inherit appears in the Desktop Pool Policy column.

3 Click User Overrides and then click Add User.

4 To find a user, click Add, type the name or description of the user, and then click Find.

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5 Select one or more users from the list, click OK, and then click Next.

The Add Individual Policy dialog box appears.

6 Configure the View policies and click Finish to save your changes.

View Policies

You can configure View policies to affect all client sessions, or you can apply them to affect specific desktop pools or users.

Table 7-1 describes each View policy setting.

Table 7 ‑1. View Policies

Policy

Multimedia redirection (MMR)

USB Access

PCoIP hardware acceleration

Description

Determines whether MMR is enabled for client systems.

MMR is a Windows Media Foundation filter that forwards multimedia data from specific codecs on remote desktops directly through a TCP socket to the client system. The data is then decoded directly on the client system, where it is played.

The default value is Deny.

If client systems have insufficient resources to handle local multimedia decoding, leave the setting as Deny.

Multimedia Redirection (MMR) data is sent across the network without application-based encryption and might contain sensitive data, depending on the content being redirected. To ensure that this data cannot be monitored on the network, use MMR only on a secure network.

Determines whether remote desktops can use USB devices connected to the client system.

The default value is Allow. To prevent the use of external devices for security reasons, change the setting to Deny.

Determines whether to enable hardware acceleration of the PCoIP display protocol and specifies the acceleration priority that is assigned to the PCoIP user session.

This setting has an effect only if a PCoIP hardware acceleration device is present on the physical computer that hosts the remote desktop.

The default value is Allow at Medium priority.

Using View Group Policy Administrative Template Files

View provides several component-specific Group Policy Administrative (ADM and ADMX) template files.

You can optimize and secure remote desktops and applications by adding the policy settings in these ADM and ADMX template files to a new or existing GPO in Active Directory.

All ADM and ADMX files that provide group policy settings for View are available in a bundled

.zip

file named

VMware-Horizon-Extras-Bundle-x.x.x-yyyyyyy.zip

, where x.x.x is the version and yyyyyyy is the build number. You can download the file from the VMware download site at https://my.vmware.com/web/vmware/downloads . Under Desktop & End-User Computing, select the

VMware Horizon 7 download, which includes the bundled

.zip

file.

The View ADM and ADMX template files contain both Computer Configuration and User Configuration group policies.

n

The Computer Configuration policies set policies that apply to all remote desktops, regardless of who connects to the desktop.

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The User Configuration policies set policies that apply to all users, regardless of the remote desktop or application they connect to. User Configuration policies override equivalent Computer Configuration policies.

Microsoft Windows applies policies at desktop startup and when users log in.

View ADM and ADMX Template Files

The View ADM and ADMX template files provide group policy settings that let you control and optimize

View components.

Table 7 ‑2. View ADM and ADMX Template Files

Template Name Template File

Horizon Agent Configuration vdm_agent.adm

Horizon Client Configuration

View PCoIP Client Session

Variables vdm_client.adm

VMware Horizon URL Redirection urlRedirection-enUS.adm

View Server Configuration

View Common Configuration

View PCoIP Session Variables vdm_server.adm

vdm_common.adm

pcoip.adm

pcoip.client.adm

Description

Contains policy settings related to the authentication and environmental components of Horizon Agent.

See the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in

View document.

Contains policy settings related to

Horizon Client for Windows.

Clients that connect from outside the View

Connection Server host domain are not affected by policies applied to Horizon Client.

See the Using VMware Horizon Client for Windows document.

Contains policy settings related to the URL

Content Redirection Feature. If you add this template to a GPO for a remote desktop pool or application pool, certain URL links clicked inside the remote desktops or app can be redirected to a Windows-based client and opened in a clientside browser.

If you add this template to a client-side GPO, when a user clicks certain URL links in a

Windows-based client system, the URL can be opened in a remote desktop or application.

See the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in

View document and see the Using VMware

Horizon Client for Windows document.

Contains policy settings related to View

Connection Server.

See “View Server Configuration ADM Template

Settings,” on page 111.

Contains policy settings that are common to all

View components.

See “View Common Configuration ADM

Template Settings,” on page 112.

Contains policy settings related to the PCoIP display protocol.

See the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in

View document.

Contains policy settings related to the PCoIP display protocol that affect Horizon Client for

Windows.

See the Using VMware Horizon Client for Windows document.

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Table 7 ‑2. View ADM and ADMX Template Files (Continued)

Template Name

View Persona Management

Configuration

Template File

ViewPM.adm

View Remote Desktop Services

Real-Time Audio-Video

Configuration

Scanner Redirection

Serial Port Redirection vmware_rdsh.admx

vmware_rdsh_server.admx

vdm_agent_rtav.adm

vdm_agent_scanner.adm

vdm_agent_serialport.adm

Description

Contains policy settings related to View Persona

Management.

See the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in

View document.

Contains policy settings related to Remote

Desktop Services.

See the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in

View document.

Contains policy settings related to webcams that are used with the Real-Time Audio-Video feature.

See the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in

View document.

Contains policy settings related to scanning devices that are redirected for use in remote desktops and applications.

See the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in

View document.

Contains policy settings related to serial (COM) ports that are redirected for use in remote VDI desktops.

See the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in

View document.

View Server Configuration ADM Template Settings

The View Server Configuration ADM template file ( vdm_server.adm) contains policy settings related to all

View Connection Server.

Table 7-3 describes each policy setting in the View Server Configuration ADM template file. The template

contains only Computer Configuration settings.

Table 7 ‑3. View Server Configuration Template Settings

Setting

Recursive Enumeration of Trusted

Domains

Properties

Determines whether every domain trusted by the domain in which the server resides is enumerated. To establish a complete chain of trust, the domains trusted by each trusted domain are also enumerated and the process continues recursively until all trusted domains are discovered.

This information is passed to View Connection Server so that all trusted domains are available to the client on login.

This setting is enabled by default. When it is disabled, only directly trusted domains are enumerated and connection to remote domain controllers does not take place.

In environments with complex domain relationships, such as those that use multiple forest structures with trust between domains in their forests, this process can take a few minutes to complete.

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View Common Configuration ADM Template Settings

The View Common Configuration ADM template file ( vdm_common.adm)

contains policy settings common to all View components. This template contains only Computer Configuration settings.

Log Configuration Settings

Table 7-4 describes the log configuration policy setting in the View Common Configuration ADM template

file.

Table 7 ‑4. View Common Configuration Template: Log Configuration Settings

Setting

Number of days to keep production logs

Maximum number of debug logs

Maximum debug log size in Megabytes

Log Directory

Send logs to a Syslog server

Properties

Specifies the number of days for which log files are retained on the system. If no value is set, the default applies and log files are kept for seven days.

Specifies the maximum number of debug log files to retain on the system. When a log file reaches its maximum size, no further entries are added and a new log file is created. When the number of previous log files reaches this value, the oldest log file is deleted.

Specifies the maximum size in megabytes that a debug log can reach before the log file is closed and a new log file is created.

Specifies the full path to the directory for log files. If the location is not writeable, the default location is used. For client log files, an extra directory with the client name is created.

Allows View server logs to be sent to a Syslog server such as VMware vCenter Log Insight. Logs are sent from all View servers in the OU or domain in which this GPO is configured.

You can send Horizon Agent logs to a Syslog server by enabling this setting in a GPO that is linked to an OU that contains your desktops.

To send log data to a Syslog server, enable this setting and specify the log level and the server's fully qualified domain name (FQDN) or IP address. You can specify an alternate port if you do not want to use default port 514. Separate each element in your specification with a vertical bar (|). Use the following syntax:

Log Level|Server FQDN or IP [|Port number(514 default)]

For example: Debug|192.0.2.2

I

MPORTANT

Syslog data is sent across the network without softwarebased encryption. Because View server logs might contain sensitive data, avoid sending Syslog data on an insecure network. If possible, use link-layer security such as IPsec to prevent the possibility of this data being monitored on the network.

Performance Alarm Settings

Table 7-5 describe the performance alarm settings in the View Common Configuration ADM template file.

Table 7 ‑5. View Common Configuration Template: Performance Alarm Settings

Setting Properties

CPU and Memory Sampling Interval in

Seconds

Overall CPU usage percentage to issue log info

Specifies the CPU and memory polling interval CPU. A low sampling interval can result in an high level of output to the log.

Specifies the threshold at which the overall CPU use of the system is logged. When multiple processors are available, this percentage represents the combined usage.

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Table 7 ‑5. View Common Configuration Template: Performance Alarm Settings (Continued)

Setting

Overall memory usage percentage to issue log info

Process CPU usage percentage to issue log info

Process memory usage percentage to issue log info

Process to check, comma separated name list allowing wild cards and exclusion

Properties

Specifies the threshold at which the overall committed system memory use is logged. Committed system memory is memory that has been allocated by processes and to which the operating system has committed physical memory or a page slot in the pagefile.

Specifies the threshold at which the CPU usage of any individual process is logged.

Specifies the threshold at which the memory usage of any individual process is logged.

Specifies a comma-separated list of queries that correspond to the name of one or more processes to be examined. You can filter the list by using wildcards within each query.

n n n

An asterisk (*) matches zero or more characters.

A question mark (?) matches exactly one character.

An exclamation mark (!) at the beginning of a query excludes any results produced by that query.

For example, the following query selects all processes starting with ws and excludes all processes ending with sys:

'!*sys,ws*'

N

OTE

Performance alarm settings apply to View Connection Server and Horizon Agent systems only. They do not apply to Horizon Client systems.

General Settings

Table 7-6 describes the general settings in the View Common Configuration ADM template file.

Table 7 ‑6. View Common Configuration Template: General Settings

Setting Properties

Disk threshold for log and events in

Megabytes

Enable extended logging

Specifies the minimum remaining disk space threshold for logs and events. If no value is specified, the default is 200. When the specified value is met, event logging stops.

Determines whether trace and debug events are included in the log files.

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Maintaining View Components

8

To keep your View components available and running, you can perform a variety of maintenance tasks.

This chapter includes the following topics: n n

“Backing Up and Restoring View Configuration Data,” on page 115

“Monitor View Components,” on page 123

n n n n

“Monitor Machine Status,” on page 123

“Understanding View Services,” on page 124

“Change the Product License Key,” on page 126

“Monitoring Product License Usage,” on page 126

n n n n

“Update General User Information from Active Directory,” on page 127

“Migrate View Composer to Another Machine,” on page 128

“Update the Certificates on a View Connection Server Instance, Security Server, or View Composer,” on page 133

“Information Collected by the Customer Experience Improvement Program,” on page 134

Backing Up and Restoring View Configuration Data

You can back up your View and View Composer configuration data by scheduling or running automatic backups in View Administrator. You can restore your View configuration by manually importing the backed-up View LDAP files and View Composer database files.

You can use the backup and restore features to preserve and migrate View configuration data.

Backing Up View Connection Server and View Composer Data

After you complete the initial configuration of View Connection Server, you should schedule regular backups of your View and View Composer configuration data. You can preserve your View and View

Composer data by using View Administrator.

View stores View Connection Server configuration data in the View LDAP repository. View Composer stores configuration data for linked-clone desktops in the View Composer database.

When you use View Administrator to perform backups, View backs up the View LDAP configuration data and View Composer database. Both sets of backup files are stored in the same location. The View LDAP data is exported in encrypted LDAP data interchange format (LDIF). For a description of View LDAP, see

“View LDAP Directory,” on page 38.

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You can perform backups in several ways.

n

Schedule automatic backups by using the View configuration backup feature.

n n

Initiate a backup immediately by using the Backup Now feature in View Administrator.

Manually export View LDAP data by using the vdmexport

utility. This utility is provided with each instance of View Connection Server.

The vdmexport

utility can export View LDAP data as encrypted LDIF data, plain text, or plain text with passwords and other sensitive data removed.

N

OTE

The vdmexport tool backs up the View LDAP data only. This tool does not back up View

Composer database information.

For more information about vdmexport

, see “Export Configuration Data from View Connection Server,” on page 117.

The following guidelines apply to backing up View configuration data: n

View can export configuration data from any View Connection Server instance.

n n n

If you have multiple View Connection Server instances in a replicated group, you only need to export the data from one instance. All replicated instances contain the same configuration data.

Do not rely on using replicated instances of View Connection Server to act as your backup mechanism.

When View synchronizes data in replicated instances of View Connection Server, any data lost in one instance might be lost in all members of the group.

If View Connection Server uses multiple vCenter Server instances with multiple View Composer services, View backs up all the View Composer databases associated with the vCenter Server instances.

Schedule View Configuration Backups

You can schedule your View configuration data to be backed up at regular intervals. View backs up the contents of the View LDAP repository in which your View Connection Server instances store their configuration data.

You can back up the configuration immediately by selecting the View Connection Server instance and clicking Backup Now.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the backup settings. See

“View Configuration Backup Settings,” on page 117.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Servers.

2 On the Connection Servers tab, select the View Connection Server instance to be backed up and click

Edit.

3 On the Backup tab, specify the View configuration backup settings to configure the backup frequency, maximum number of backups, and the folder location of the backup files.

4 (Optional) Change the data recovery password.

a Click Change data recovery password.

b Type and retype the new password.

c (Optional) Type a password reminder.

d Click OK.

5 Click OK.

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View Configuration Backup Settings

View can back up your View Connection Server and View Composer configuration data at regular intervals.

In View Administrator, you can set the frequency and other aspects of the backup operations.

Table 8 ‑1. View Configuration Backup Settings

Setting

Automatic backup frequency

Max number of backups

Folder location

Description

Every Hour. Backups take place every hour on the hour.

Every 6 Hours. Backups take place at midnight, 6 am, noon, and 6 pm.

Every 12 Hours. Backups take place at midnight and noon.

Every Day. Backups take place every day at midnight.

Every 2 Days. Backups occur at midnight on Saturday, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

Every Week. Backups take place weekly at midnight on Saturday.

Every 2 Weeks. Backups take place every other week at midnight on Saturday.

Never. Backups do not take place automatically.

Number of backup files that can be stored on the View Connection Server instance. The number must be an integer greater than 0.

When the maximum number is reached, View deletes the oldest backup file.

This setting also applies to backup files that are created when you use Backup Now.

Default location of the backup files on the computer where View Connection Server is running: C:\Programdata\VMWare\VDM\backups

When you use Backup Now, View also stores the backup files in this location.

Export Configuration Data from View Connection Server

You can back up configuration data of a View Connection Server instance by exporting the contents of its

View LDAP repository.

You use the vdmexport command to export the View LDAP configuration data to an encrypted LDIF file.

You can also use the vdmexport -v (verbatim) option to export the data to a plain text LDIF file, or the vdmexport -c (cleansed) option to export the data as plain text with passwords and other sensitive data removed.

You can run the vdmexport command on any View Connection Server instance. If you have multiple View

Connection Server instances in a replicated group, you only need to export the data from one instance. All replicated instances contain the same configuration data.

N

OTE

The vdmexport.exe

command backs up the View LDAP data only. This command does not back up

View Composer database information.

Prerequisites n

Locate the vdmexport.exe

command executable file installed with View Connection Server in the default path.

n

C:\Program Files\VMware\VMware View\Server\tools\bin

Log in to a View Connection Server instance as a user in the Administrators or Administrators (Read only) role.

Procedure

1 Select Start > Command Prompt.

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2 At the command prompt, type the vdmexport

command and redirect the output to a file. For example: vdmexport > Myexport.LDF

By default, the exported data is encrypted.

You can specify the output file name as an argument to the

-f

option. For example: vdmexport -f Myexport.LDF

You can export the data in plain text format (verbatim) by using the

-v

option. For example: vdmexport -f Myexport.LDF -v

You can export the data in plain text format with passwords and sensitive data removed (cleansed) by using the

-c

option. For example: vdmexport -f Myexport.LDF -c

N

OTE

Do not plan on using cleansed backup data to restore a View LDAP configuration. The cleansed configuration data is missing passwords and other critical information.

For more information about the vdmexport

command, see the View Integration document.

What to do next

You can restore or transfer the configuration information of View Connection Server by using the vdmimport command.

For details about importing the LDIF file, see

“Restoring View Connection Server and View Composer

Configuration Data,” on page 118.

Restoring View Connection Server and View Composer Configuration Data

You can manually restore the View Connection Server LDAP configuration files and View Composer database files that were backed up by View.

You manually run separate utilities to restore View Connection Server and View Composer configuration data.

Before you restore configuration data, verify that you backed up the configuration data in View

Administrator. See “Backing Up View Connection Server and View Composer Data,” on page 115.

You use the vdmimport utility to import the View Connection Server data from the LDIF backup files to the

View LDAP repository in the View Connection Server instance.

You can use the SviConfig utility to import the View Composer data from the .svi

backup files to the View

Composer SQL database.

N

OTE

In certain situations, you might have to install the current version of a View Connection Server instance and restore the existing View configuration by importing the View Connection Server LDAP configuration files. You might require this procedure as part of a business continuity and disaster recovery

(BC/DR) plan, as a step in setting up a second datacenter with the existing View configuration, or for other reasons. For more information, see "Reinstall View Connection Server with a Backup Configuration" in the

View Installation document.

Import Configuration Data into View Connection Server

You can restore configuration data of a View Connection Server instance by importing a backup copy of the data stored in an LDIF file.

You use the vdmimport

command to import the data from the LDIF file to the View LDAP repository in the

View Connection Server instance.

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If you backed up your View LDAP configuration by using View Administrator or the default vdmexport command, the exported LDIF file is encrypted. You must decrypt the LDIF file before you can import it.

If the exported LDIF file is in plain text format, you do not have to decrypt the file.

N

OTE

Do not import an LDIF file in cleansed format, which is plain text with passwords and other sensitive data removed. If you do, critical configuration information will be missing from the restored View LDAP repository.

For information about backing up the View LDAP repository, see “Backing Up View Connection Server and

View Composer Data,” on page 115.

Prerequisites n

Locate the vdmimport command executable file installed with View Connection Server in the default path.

n n

C:\Program Files\VMware\VMware View\Server\tools\bin

Log in to a View Connection Server instance as a user with the Administrators role.

Verify that you know the data recovery password. If a password reminder was configured, you can display the reminder by running the vdmimport command without the password option.

Procedure

1 Stop all instances of View Composer by stopping the Windows service VMware Horizon View

Composer on the servers where View Composer runs.

2 Stop all security server instances by stopping the Windows service VMware Horizon Security Server on all security servers.

3 Uninstall all instances of View Connection Server.

Uninstall both VMware Horizon View Connection Server and AD LDS Instance VMwareVDMDS.

4 Install one instance of View Connection Server.

5 Stop the View Connection Server instance by stopping the Windows service VMware Horizon

Connection Server.

6 Click Start > Command Prompt.

7 Decrypt the encrypted LDIF file.

At the command prompt, type the vdmimport

command. Specify the

-d

option, the

-p

option with the data recovery password, and the

-f

option with an existing encrypted LDIF file followed by a name for the decrypted LDIF file. For example: vdmimport -d -p mypassword

-f MyEncryptedexport.LDF > MyDecryptedexport.LDF

If you do not remember your data recovery password, type the command without the

-p

option. The utility displays the password reminder and prompts you to enter the password.

8 Import the decrypted LDIF file to restore the View LDAP configuration.

Specify the

-f

option with the decrypted LDIF file. For example: vdmimport -f MyDecryptedexport.LDF

9 Uninstall View Connection Server.

Uninstall only the package VMware Horizon View Connection Server.

10 Reinstall View Connection Server.

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11 Log in to View Administrator and validate that the configuration is correct.

12 Start the View Composer instances.

13 Reinstall the replica server instances.

14 Start the security server instances.

If there is a risk that the security servers have inconsistent configuration, they should also be uninstalled rather than stopped and then reinstalled at the end of the process.

The vdmimport

command updates the View LDAP repository in View Connection Server with the configuration data from the LDIF file. For more information about the vdmimport

command, see the View

Integration document.

N

OTE

Make sure that the configuration that is being restored matches the virtual machines that are known to vCenter Server, and to View Composer if it is in use. If necessary, restore the View Composer

configuration from backup. See “Restore a View Composer Database,” on page 120. After you restore the

View Composer configuration, you may need to manually resolve inconsistencies if the virtual machines in vCenter Server have changed since the backup of the View Composer configuration.

Restore a View Composer Database

You can import the backup files for your View Composer configuration into the View Composer database that stores linked-clone information.

You can use the SviConfig restoredata command to restore View Composer database data after a system failure or to revert your View Composer configuration to an earlier state.

I

MPORTANT

Only experienced View Composer administrators should use the SviConfig utility. This utility is intended to resolve issues relating to the View Composer service.

Prerequisites

Verify the location of the View Composer database backup files. By default, View stores the backup files on the

C:

drive of the View Connection Server computer, at

C:\Programdata\VMWare\VDM\backups

.

View Composer backup files use a naming convention with a date stamp and an

.svi

suffix.

Backup-YearMonthDayCount-vCenter Server Name_Domain Name.svi

For example:

Backup-20090304000010-foobar_test_org.svi

Familiarize yourself with the

SviConfig restoredata

parameters: n DsnName

- The DSN that is used to connect to the database. The

DsnName

parameter is mandatory and cannot be an empty string.

n Username

- The user name that is used to connect to the database. If this parameter is not specified,

Windows authentication is used.

n Password

- The password for the user that connects to the database. If this parameter is not specified and

Windows authentication is not used, you are prompted to enter the password later.

n BackupFilePath

- The path to the View Composer backup file.

The

DsnName

and

BackupFilePath

parameters are required and cannot be empty strings. The

Username

and

Password

parameters are optional.

Procedure

1 Copy the View Composer backup files from the View Connection Server computer to a location that is accessible from the computer where the VMware Horizon View Composer service is installed.

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2 On the computer where View Composer is installed, stop the VMware Horizon View Composer service.

3 Open a Windows command prompt and navigate to the

SviConfig

executable file.

The file is located with the View Composer application. The default path is

C:\Program Files

(x86)\VMware\VMware View Composer\sviconfig.exe

.

4 Run the

SviConfig restoredata

command.

sviconfig -operation=restoredata

-DsnName=target_database_source_name_(DSN)

-Username=database_administrator_username

-Password=database_administrator_password

-BackupFilePath=path_to_View_Composer_backup_file

For example: sviconfig -operation=restoredata -dsnname=LinkedClone

-username=Admin -password=Pass

-backupfilepath="C:\Program Files (x86)\VMware\VMware View

Composer\Backup-20090304000010-foobar_test_org.SVI"

5 Start the VMware Horizon View Composer service.

What to do next

For output result codes for the SviConfig restoredata

command, see “Result Codes for Restoring the View

Composer Database,” on page 121.

Result Codes for Restoring the View Composer Database

When you restore a View Composer database, the

SviConfig restoredata

command displays a result code.

3

4

14

0

1

2

Table 8 ‑2. Restoredata Result Codes

Code Description

15

The operation ended successfully.

The supplied DSN could not be found.

Invalid database administrator credentials were provided.

The driver for the database is not supported.

An unexpected problem occurred and the command failed to complete.

Another application is using the VMware Horizon View Composer service. Shut down the service before executing the command.

A problem occurred during the restore process. Details are provided in the onscreen log output.

Export Data in View Composer Database

You can export data from your View Composer database to file.

I

MPORTANT

Use the SviConfig utility only if you are an experienced View Composer administrator.

Prerequisites

By default, View stores the backup files on the

C:

drive of the View Connection Server computer, at

C:\Programdata\VMWare\VDM\backups

.

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Familiarize yourself with the

SviConfig exportdata

parameters: n DsnName

- The DSN that is used to connect to the database. If it is not specified, DSN name, user name and password will be retrieved from server configuration file.

n Username

- The user name that is used to connect to the database. If this parameter is not specified,

Windows authentication is used.

n Password

- The password for the user that connects to the database. If this parameter is not specified and

Windows authentication is not used, you are prompted to enter the password later.

n OutputFilePath

- The path to the output file.

Procedure

1 On the computer where View Composer is installed, stop the VMware Horizon View Composer service.

2 Open a Windows command prompt and navigate to the SviConfig executable file.

The file is located with the View Composer application.

View-Composer-installation-directory\sviconfig.exe

3 Run the SviConfig exportdata command.

sviconfig -operation=exportdata

-DsnName=target_database_source_name_(DSN)

-Username=database_administrator_username

-Password=database_administrator_password

-OutputFilePath=path_to_View_Composer_output_file

For example: sviconfig -operation=exportdata -dsnname=LinkedClone

-username=Admin -password=Pass

-outputfilepath="C:\Program Files\VMware\VMware View

Composer\Export-20090304000010-foobar_test_org.SVI"

What to do next

For export result codes for the

SviConfig exportdata

command, see

“Result Codes for Exporting the View

Composer Database,” on page 122.

Result Codes for Exporting the View Composer Database

When you export a View Composer database, the SviConfig exportdata command displays an exit code.

Table 8 ‑3. Exportdata ExitStatus Codes

Code

0

4

18

24

1

2

3

Description

Exporting data ended successfully.

The supplied DSN name can not be found.

The supplied credentials are invalid.

Unsupported driver for the provided database.

An unexpected problem has occurred.

Unable to connect to the database server.

Unable to open the output file.

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Monitor View Components

You can quickly survey the status of the View and vSphere components in your View deployment by using the View Administrator dashboard.

View Administrator displays monitoring information about View Connection Server instances, the event database, security servers, View Composer services, datastores, vCenter Server instances, and domains.

N

OTE

View cannot determine status information about Kerberos domains. View Administrator displays

Kerberos domain status as unknown, even when a domain is configured and working.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, click Dashboard.

2 In the System Health pane, expand View components, vSphere components, or Other components.

n

A green up arrow indicates that a component has no problems.

n n

A red down arrow indicates that a component is unavailable or not functioning.

A yellow double arrow indicates that a component is in a warning state.

n

A question mark indicates that the status of a component is unknown.

3 Click a component name.

A dialog displays the name, version, status, and other component information.

What to do next

Use vCenter Server to monitor any Virtual SAN clusters and the disks that participate in a Virtual SAN datastore. For more information about monitoring Virtual SAN in vSphere 5.5 Update 1, see the vSphere

Storage document and the vSphere Monitoring and Performance documentation. For more information about monitoring Virtual SAN in vSphere 6 or later, see the Administering VMware Virtual SAN document.

Monitor Machine Status

You can quickly survey the status of machines in your View deployment by using the View Administrator dashboard. For example, you can display all disconnected machines or machines that are in maintenance mode.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the virtual machine status values. See “Status of vCenter Server Virtual

Machines,” on page 176.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, click Dashboard.

2 In the Machine Status pane, expand a status folder.

Option Description

Preparing Lists the states while the machine is being provisioned, deleted, or in maintenance mode.

Lists the error states.

Problem Machines

Prepared for use Lists the states when the machine is ready for use.

3 Locate the machine status and click the hyperlinked number next to it.

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The Machines page displays all machines with the selected status.

What to do next

You can click a machine name to see details about the machine or click the View Administrator back arrow to return to the Dashboard page.

Understanding View Services

The operation of View Connection Server instances and security servers depends on several services that run on the system. These systems are started and stopped automatically, but you might sometimes find it necessary to adjust the operation of these services manually.

You use the Microsoft Windows Services tool to stop or start View services. If you stop View services on a

View Connection Server host or a security server, end users cannot connect to their remote desktops or applications until you restart the services. You might also need to restart a service if it has stopped running or if the View functionality that it controls appears to be unresponsive.

Stop and Start View Services

The operation of View Connection Server instances and security servers depends on several services that run on the system. You might sometimes find it necessary to stop and start these services manually when troubleshooting problems with the operation of View.

When you stop View services, end users cannot connect to their remote desktops and applications. You should perform such an action at a time that is already scheduled for system maintenance, or warn end users that their desktops and applications will be unavailable temporarily.

N

OTE

Stop only the VMware Horizon View Connection Server service on a View Connection Server host, or the VMware Horizon View Security Server service on a security server. Do not stop any other component services.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the services that run on View Connection Server hosts and security servers as described in

“Services on a View Connection Server Host,” on page 125 and “Services on a Security Server,” on page 125.

Procedure

1 Start the Windows Services tool by entering services.msc

at the command prompt.

2 Select the VMware Horizon View Connection Server service on a View Connection Server host, or the

VMware Horizon View Security Server service on a security server, and click Stop, Restart, or Start as appropriate.

3 Verify that the status of the listed service changes as expected.

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Services on a View Connection Server Host

The operation of View depends on several services that run on a View Connection Server host.

Table 8 ‑4. View Connection Server Host Services

Service Name

Startup

Type Description

VMware Horizon

View Blast Secure

Gateway

VMware Horizon

View Connection

Server

Automatic

Automatic

Manual

Provides secure HTML Access and Blast Extreme services. This service must be running if clients connect to View Connection Server through the Blast Secure

Gateway.

Provides connection broker services. This service must always be running. If you start or stop this service, it also starts or stops the Framework, Message Bus,

Security Gateway, and Web services. This service does not start or stop the

VMwareVDMDS service or the VMware Horizon View Script Host service.

Provides event logging, security, and COM+ framework services. This service must always be running.

VMware Horizon

View Framework

Component

VMware Horizon

View Message Bus

Component

VMware Horizon

View PCoIP Secure

Gateway

VMware Horizon

View Script Host

Manual

Manual

Disabled

Manual

Provides messaging services between the View components. This service must always be running.

Provides PCoIP Secure Gateway services. This service must be running if clients connect to View Connection Server through the PCoIP Secure Gateway.

Provides support for third-party scripts that run when you delete virtual machines.

This service is disabled by default. You should enable this service if you want to run scripts.

Provides common gateway services. This service must always be running.

VMware Horizon

View Security

Gateway

Component

VMware Horizon

View Web

Component

VMwareVDMDS

Manual

Automatic

Provides web services. This service must always be running.

Provides LDAP directory services. This service must always be running. During upgrades of View, this service ensures that existing data is migrated correctly.

Services on a Security Server

The operation of View depends on several services that run on a security server.

Table 8 ‑5. Security Server Services

Service Name

Startup

Type Description

VMware Horizon

View Blast Secure

Gateway

VMware Horizon

View Security

Server

VMware Horizon

View Framework

Component

Automatic

Automatic

Manual

Provides secure HTML Access and Blast Extreme services. This service must be running if clients connect to this security server through the Blast Secure Gateway.

Provides security server services. This service must always be running. If you start or stop this service, it also starts or stops the Framework and Security Gateway services.

Provides event logging, security, and COM+ framework services. This service must always be running.

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Table 8 ‑5. Security Server Services (Continued)

Service Name

VMware Horizon

View PCoIP Secure

Gateway

VMware Horizon

View Security

Gateway

Component

Startup

Type

Manual

Manual

Description

Provides PCoIP Secure Gateway services. This service must be running if clients connect to this security server through the PCoIP Secure Gateway.

Provides common gateway services. This service must always be running.

Change the Product License Key

If the current license on a system expires, or if you want to access View features that are currently unlicensed, you can use View Administrator to change the product license key.

You can add a license to View while View is running. You do not need to reboot the system, and access to desktops and applications is not interrupted.

Prerequisites

For the successful operation of View and add-on features such as View Composer and remote applications, obtain a valid product license key.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Product Licensing and Usage.

The first and last five characters of the current license key are displayed in the Licensing panel.

2 Click Edit License.

3 Enter the license serial number and click OK.

The Product Licensing window shows the updated licensing information.

4 Verify the license expiration date.

5 Verify that the Desktop, Application Remoting, and View Composer licenses are enabled or disabled, based on the edition of VMware Horizon 7 that your product license entitles you to use.

Not all features and capabilities of VMware Horizon 7 are available in all editions. For a comparison of feature sets in each edition, see http://www.vmware.com/files/pdf/products/horizon-view/VMware-Horizon-View-Pricing-Licensing-

FAQ.pdf

.

6 Verify that the licensing usage model matches the model that is used in your product license.

Usage is counted by the number of named users or concurrent users, depending on the edition and usage agreement for your product license.

Monitoring Product License Usage

In View Administrator, you can monitor the active users who are concurrently connected to View. The

Product Licensing and Usage page displays the current and highest historical usage numbers. You can use these numbers to keep track of your product license usage. You can also reset the historical usage data and start over with the current data.

View provides two licensing usage models, one for named users and one for concurrent users. View counts the named users and concurrent users in your environment, regardless of your product license edition or usage model agreement.

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For named users, View counts the number of unique users that have accessed the View environment. If a named user runs multiple single-user desktops, RDS desktops, and remote applications, the user is counted once.

For named users, the Current column on the Product Licensing and Usage page displays the number of users since your View deployment was first configured or since you last reset the Named Users Count. The

Highest column is not applicable to named users.

For concurrent users, View counts single-user desktop connections per session. If a concurrent user runs multiple single-user desktops, each connected desktop session is counted separately.

For concurrent users, RDS desktop and application connections are counted per user. If a concurrent user runs multiple RDS desktop sessions and applications, the user is counted only once, even if different RDS desktops or applications are hosted on different RDS hosts. If a concurrent user runs a single-user desktop and additional RDS desktops and applications, the user is counted only once.

For concurrent users, the Highest column on the Product Licensing and Usage page displays the highest number of concurrent desktop sessions and RDS desktop and application users since your View deployment was first configured or since you last reset the Highest Count.

Reset Product License Usage Data

In View Administrator, you can reset the historical product usage data and start over with the current data.

An administrator with the Manage Global Configuration and Policies privilege can select the Reset

Highest Count and Reset Named Users Count settings. To restrict access to these settings, give this privilege to designated administrators only.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with product license usage. See

“Monitoring Product License Usage,” on page 126.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Product Licensing and Usage.

2 (Optional) In the Usage pane, select Reset Highest Count.

The highest historical number of concurrent connections is reset to the current number.

3 (Optional) In the Usage pane, select Reset Named Users Count.

The highest historical number of named users is reset to 0.

N

OTE

Selecting Update General User Information on the Users and Groups page also resets the highest historical number of named users to 0.

Update General User Information from Active Directory

You can update View with the current user information that is stored in Active Directory. This feature updates the name, phone, email, user name, and default Windows domain of View users. The trusted external domains are also updated.

Use this feature if you modify the list of trusted external domains in Active Directory, especially if the altered trust relationships between domains affect user permissions in View.

This feature scans Active Directory for the latest user information and refreshes the View configuration.

Updating the general user information also resets the number of named users to 0. This number appears on the Product Licensing and Usage page in View Administrator. See

“Reset Product License Usage Data,” on page 127.

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You can also use the vdmadmin

command to update user and domain information. See “Updating Foreign

Security Principals Using the -F Option,” on page 246.

Prerequisites

Verify that you can log in to View Administrator as an administrator with the Manage Global

Configuration and Policies privilege.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, click Users and Groups.

2 Choose whether to update information for all users or an individual user.

Option

For all users

For an individual user

Action

Click Update General User Information.

Updating all users and groups can take a long time.

a Click the user name to update.

b Click Update General User Information.

Migrate View Composer to Another Machine

In some situations, you might need to migrate a VMware Horizon View Composer service to a new

Windows Server virtual or physical machine. For example, you might migrate View Composer and vCenter Server to a new ESXi host or cluster to expand your View deployment. In addition, View Composer and vCenter Server do not have to be installed on the same Windows Server machine.

You can migrate View Composer from the vCenter Server machine to a standalone machine or from a standalone machine to the vCenter Server machine.

n n n

Guidelines for Migrating View Composer on page 129

The steps you take to migrate the VMware Horizon View Composer service depend on whether you intend to preserve existing linked-clone virtual machines.

Migrate View Composer with an Existing Database on page 129

When you migrate View Composer to another physical or virtual machine, if you intend to preserve your current linked-clone virtual machines, the new VMware Horizon View Composer service must continue to use the existing View Composer database.

Migrate View Composer Without Linked-Clone Virtual Machines on page 131

If the current VMware Horizon View Composer service does not manage any linked-clone virtual machines, you can migrate View Composer to a new physical or virtual machine without migrating the RSA keys to the new machine. The migrated VMware Horizon View Composer service can connect to the original View Composer database, or you can prepare a new database for View

Composer.

n n

Prepare a Microsoft .NET Framework for Migrating RSA Keys on page 132

To use an existing View Composer database, you must migrate the RSA key container between machines. You migrate the RSA key container by using the ASP.NET IIS registration tool provided with the Microsoft .NET Framework.

Migrate the RSA Key Container to the New View Composer Service on page 132

To use an existing View Composer database, you must migrate the RSA key container from the source physical or virtual machine on which the existing VMware Horizon View Composer service resides to the machine on which you want to install the new VMware Horizon View Composer service.

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Guidelines for Migrating View Composer

The steps you take to migrate the VMware Horizon View Composer service depend on whether you intend to preserve existing linked-clone virtual machines.

To preserve the linked-clone virtual machines in your deployment, the VMware Horizon View Composer service that you install on the new virtual or physical machine must continue to use the existing View

Composer database. The View Composer database contains data that is required to create, provision, maintain, and delete the linked clones.

When you migrate the VMware Horizon View Composer service, you can also migrate the View Composer database to a new machine.

Whether or not you migrate the View Composer database, the database must be configured on an available machine in the same domain as the new machine on which you install the VMware Horizon View

Composer service, or on a trusted domain.

View Composer creates RSA key pairs to encrypt and decrypt authentication information stored in the View

Composer database. To make this data source compatible with the new VMware Horizon View Composer service, you must migrate the RSA key container that was created by the original VMware Horizon View

Composer service. You must import the RSA key container to the machine on which you install the new service.

If the current VMware Horizon View Composer service does not manage any linked-clone virtual machines, you can migrate the service without using the existing View Composer database. You do not have to migrate the RSA keys, whether or not you use the existing database.

N

OTE

Each instance of the VMware Horizon View Composer service must have its own View Composer database. Multiple VMware Horizon View Composer services cannot share a View Composer database.

Migrate View Composer with an Existing Database

When you migrate View Composer to another physical or virtual machine, if you intend to preserve your current linked-clone virtual machines, the new VMware Horizon View Composer service must continue to use the existing View Composer database.

Follow the steps in this procedure when you migrate View Composer in any of the following directions: n

From a vCenter Server machine to a standalone machine n n

From a standalone machine to a vCenter Server machine

From a standalone machine to another standalone machine n

From a vCenter Server machine to another vCenter Server machine

When you migrate the VMware Horizon View Composer service, you can also migrate the View Composer database to a new location. For example, you might need to migrate the View Composer database if the current database is located on a vCenter Server machine that you are migrating as well.

When you install the VMware Horizon View Composer service on the new machine, you must configure the service to connect to the View Composer database.

Prerequisites n

Familiarize yourself with the View Composer migration requirements. See “Guidelines for Migrating

View Composer,” on page 129.

n

Familiarize yourself with the steps for migrating the RSA key container to the new VMware Horizon

View Composer service. See “Prepare a Microsoft .NET Framework for Migrating RSA Keys,” on page 132 and “Migrate the RSA Key Container to the New View Composer Service,” on page 132.

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View Administration n n n

Familiarize yourself with installing the VMware Horizon View Composer service. See "Installing View

Composer" in the View Installation document.

Familiarize yourself with configuring an SSL certificate for View Composer. See "Configuring SSL

Certificates for View Servers" in the View Installation document.

Familiarize yourself with configuring View Composer in View Administrator. See “Configure View

Composer Settings,” on page 16 and

“Configure View Composer Domains,” on page 17.

Procedure

1 Disable virtual machine provisioning in the vCenter Server instance that is associated with the VMware

Horizon View Composer service.

a In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Servers.

b On the vCenter Servers tab, select the vCenter Server instance and click Disable Provisioning.

2 (Optional) Migrate the View Composer database to a new location.

If you need to take this step, consult your database administrator for migration instructions.

3 Uninstall the VMware Horizon View Composer service from the current machine.

4 (Optional) Migrate the RSA key container to the new machine.

5 Install the VMware Horizon View Composer service on the new machine.

During the installation, specify the DSN of the database that was used by the original VMware Horizon

View Composer service. Also specify the domain administrator user name and password that were provided for the ODBC data source for that database.

If you migrated the database, the DSN and data source information must point to the new location of the database. Whether or not you migrated the database, the new VMware Horizon View Composer service must have access to the original database information about the linked clones.

6 Configure an SSL server certificate for View Composer on the new machine.

You might be able to copy the certificate that was installed for View Composer on the original machine, or you can install a new certificate.

7 In View Administrator, configure the new View Composer settings.

a In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Servers.

b On the vCenter Servers tab, select the vCenter Server instance that is associated with this View

Composer service and click Edit.

c In the View Composer Server Settings pane, click Edit and provide the new View Composer settings.

If you are installing View Composer with vCenter Server on the new machine, select View

Composer co-installed with the vCenter Server.

If you are installing View Composer on a standalone machine, select Standalone View Composer

Server and provide the FQDN of the View Composer machine and the user name and password of the View Composer user.

d In the Domains pane, click Verify Server Information and add or edit the View Composer domains as needed.

e Click OK.

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Migrate View Composer Without Linked-Clone Virtual Machines

If the current VMware Horizon View Composer service does not manage any linked-clone virtual machines, you can migrate View Composer to a new physical or virtual machine without migrating the RSA keys to the new machine. The migrated VMware Horizon View Composer service can connect to the original View

Composer database, or you can prepare a new database for View Composer.

Prerequisites n

Familiarize yourself with installing the VMware Horizon View Composer service. See "Installing View

Composer" in the View Installation document.

n n

Familiarize yourself with configuring an SSL certificate for View Composer. See "Configuring SSL

Certificates for View Servers" in the View Installation document.

Familiarize yourself with the steps for removing View Composer from View Administrator. See

“Remove View Composer from View,” on page 23.

n

Before you can remove View Composer, verify that it no longer manages any linked-clone desktops. If any linked clones remain, you must delete them.

Familiarize yourself with configuring View Composer in View Administrator. See “Configure View

Composer Settings,” on page 16 and

“Configure View Composer Domains,” on page 17.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, remove View Composer from View Administrator.

a Select View Configuration > Servers.

b On the vCenter Servers tab, select the vCenter Server instance that is associated with the View

Composer service and click Edit.

c In the View Composer Server Settings pane, click Edit.

d Select Do not use View Composer and click OK.

2 Uninstall the VMware Horizon View Composer service from the current machine.

3 Install the VMware Horizon View Composer service on the new machine.

During the installation, configure View Composer to connect to the DSN of the original or new View

Composer database.

4 Configure an SSL server certificate for View Composer on the new machine.

You might be able to copy the certificate that was installed for View Composer on the original machine, or you can install a new certificate.

5 In View Administrator, configure the new View Composer settings.

a In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Servers.

b On the vCenter Servers tab, select the vCenter Server instance that is associated with this View

Composer service and click Edit.

c In the View Composer Server Settings pane, click Edit.

d Provide the new View Composer settings.

If you are installing View Composer with vCenter Server on the new machine, select View

Composer co-installed with the vCenter Server.

If you are installing View Composer on a standalone machine, select Standalone View Composer

Server and provide the FQDN of the View Composer machine and the user name and password of the View Composer user.

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View Administration e In the Domains pane, click Verify Server Information and add or edit the View Composer domains as needed.

f Click OK.

Prepare a Microsoft .NET Framework for Migrating RSA Keys

To use an existing View Composer database, you must migrate the RSA key container between machines.

You migrate the RSA key container by using the ASP.NET IIS registration tool provided with the

Microsoft .NET Framework.

Prerequisites

Download the .NET Framework and read about the ASP.NET IIS registration tool. Go to http://www.microsoft.com/net .

Procedure

1 Install the .NET Framework on the physical or virtual machine on which the VMware Horizon View

Composer service associated with the existing database is installed.

2 Install the .NET Framework on the destination machine on which you want to want to install the new

VMware Horizon View Composer service.

What to do next

Migrate the RSA key container to the destination machine. See

“Migrate the RSA Key Container to the New

View Composer Service,” on page 132.

Migrate the RSA Key Container to the New View Composer Service

To use an existing View Composer database, you must migrate the RSA key container from the source physical or virtual machine on which the existing VMware Horizon View Composer service resides to the machine on which you want to install the new VMware Horizon View Composer service.

You must perform this procedure before you install the new VMware Horizon View Composer service.

Prerequisites

Verify that the Microsoft .NET Framework and the ASP.NET IIS registration tool are installed on the source and destination machines. See

“Prepare a Microsoft .NET Framework for Migrating RSA Keys,” on page 132.

Procedure

1 On the source machine on which the existing VMware Horizon View Composer service resides, open a command prompt and navigate to the %windir%\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v2.0xxxxx directory.

2 Type the aspnet_regiis command to save the RSA key pair in a local file.

aspnet_regiis -px "SviKeyContainer" "keys.xml" -pri

The ASP.NET IIS registration tool exports the RSA public-private key pair from the SviKeyContainer container to the keys.xml

file and saves the file locally.

3 Copy the keys.xml

file to the destination machine on which you want to install the new VMware

Horizon View Composer service.

4 On the destination machine, open a command prompt and navigate to the %windir

%\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v2.0xxxxx directory.

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Chapter 8 Maintaining View Components

5 Type the aspnet_regiis

command to migrate the RSA key pair data.

aspnet_regiis -pi "SviKeyContainer" "path\keys.xml" -exp where path is the path to the exported file.

The

-exp

option creates an exportable key pair. If a future migration is required, the keys can be exported from this machine and imported to another machine. If you previously migrated the keys to this machine without using the

-exp

option, you can import the keys again using the

-exp

option so that you can export the keys in the future.

The registration tool imports the key pair data into the local key container.

What to do next

Install the new VMware Horizon View Composer service on the destination machine. Provide the DSN and

ODBC data source information that allows View Composer to connect to the same database information that was used by the original VMware Horizon View Composer service. For installation instructions, see

"Installing View Composer" in the View Installation document.

Complete the steps to migrate View Composer to a new machine and use the same database. See “Migrate

View Composer with an Existing Database,” on page 129.

Update the Certificates on a View Connection Server Instance,

Security Server, or View Composer

When you receive updated server SSL certificates or intermediate certificates, you import the certificates into the Windows local computer certificate store on each View Connection Server, security server, or View

Composer host.

Typically, server certificates expire after 12 months. Root and intermediate certificates expire after 5 or 10 years.

For detailed information about importing server and intermediate certificates, see "Configure View

Connection Server, Security Server, or View Composer to Use a New SSL Certificate" in the View Installation document.

Prerequisites n n

Obtain updated server and intermediate certificates from the CA before the currently valid certificates expire.

Verify that the Certificate snap-in was added to MMC on the Windows Server on which the View

Connection Server instance, security server, or VMware Horizon View Composer service was installed.

Procedure

1 Import the signed SSL server certificate into the Windows local computer certificate store on the

Windows Server host.

a In the Certificate snap-in, import the server certificate into the Certificates (Local Computer) >

Personal > Certificates folder.

b Select Mark this key as exportable.

c Click Next and click Finish.

2 For View Connection Server or security server, delete the certificate Friendly name, vdm, from the old certificate that was issued to the View server.

a Right-click the old certificate and click Properties b On the General tab, delete the Friendly name text, vdm.

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3 For View Connection Server or security server, add the certificate Friendly name, vdm, to the new certificate that is replacing the previous certificate.

a Right-click the new certificate and click Properties b On the General tab, in the Friendly name field, type vdm.

c Click Apply and click OK.

4 For a server certificate that is issued to View Composer, run the

SviConfig ReplaceCertificate

utility to bind the new certificate to the port used by View Composer.

This utility replaces the old certificate binding with the new certificate binding.

a Stop the VMware Horizon View Composer service.

b Open a Windows command prompt and navigate to the

SviConfig

executable file.

The file is located with the View Composer application. The default path is

C:\Program Files

(x86)\VMware\VMware View Composer\sviconfig.exe

.

c Type the

SviConfig ReplaceCertificate

command. For example: sviconfig -operation=ReplaceCertificate

-delete=false

The utility displays a numbered list of SSL certificates that are available in the Windows local computer certificate store.

d To select a certificate, type the number of the certificate and press Enter.

5 If intermediate certificates are issued to a View Connection Server, security server, or View Composer host, import the most recent update to the intermediate certificates into the Certificates (Local

Computer) > Intermediate Certification Authorities > Certificates folder in the Windows certificate store.

6 Restart the VMware Horizon View Connection Server service, VMware Horizon View Security Server service, or VMware Horizon View Composer service to make your changes take effect.

Information Collected by the Customer Experience Improvement

Program

You can participate in a customer experience improvement program (CEIP). If you participate in the program, VMware collects anonymous data about your deployment in order to improve VMware's response to customer requirements. VMware uses this information to improve the quality, reliability, and performance of our products. No data that identifies your organization is collected.

Participation in this program is optional. You can choose not to participate by deselecting the option when you install View Connection Server with a new configuration. If you change your mind about participating at any time after the installation, you can either join or withdraw from the program by editing the Product

Licensing and Usage page in View Administrator.

Before collecting the data, VMware makes anonymous all fields that contain information that is specific to your organization. The sanitized fields identify computers, data storage, networking features, applications, and users. For example, IP addresses and virtual machine customization specifications are made anonymous.

VMware sanitizes a field by generating a hash of the actual value. When a hash value is collected, VMware cannot identify the actual value but can detect changes in the value when you change your environment.

To help you determine whether to join the program, you can review the fields from which VMware gathers

data. You can also examine all the sanitized fields. The fields are organized by View component. See “Global

View Data Collected by VMware,” on page 136 and the related topics that follow.

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Chapter 8 Maintaining View Components

How VMware Ensures Your Privacy

VMware is committed to protecting your privacy and takes several steps to ensure that no data collected by the customer experience improvement program (CEIP) includes sensitive information that could uniquely identify a particular customer or user. The program does not collect any information that can be used to identify you or contact you. No data that identifies your organization or users is collected.

When the CEIP feature is enabled, View Connection Server gathers information from your deployment and performs the following actions on the data:

1 Data that could uniquely identify your deployment such as users, server names, IP addresses, and network server paths is made anonymous by executing a one-way hash function on the data. This approach allows VMware to gather useful information about how many unique servers, machines, and users are included in your deployment without collecting any specific server names, user names, or addresses.

2 The entire data set is encrypted using a public key. The private key that is required to decrypt the data set is available only to VMware.

3 The encrypted, anonymized information is transmitted to VMware using HTTPS.

You can review the complete list of fields from which data is collected, including which fields are made

anonymous. See “Global View Data Collected by VMware,” on page 136 and the related topics that follow.

Preview Data Collected by the Customer Experience Improvement Program

You can preview the data that VMware would receive before the data is encrypted and transmitted. When you enable this option, View Connection Server writes the data set to disk instead of encrypting and sending the data to VMware.

You configure the option to write CEIP data to disk instead of transmitting the data to VMware as a global option in the View LDAP directory. You use the ADSI Edit utility to modify View LDAP. The ADSI Edit utility is installed with View Connection Server. When you change View LDAP on a View Connection

Server instance, the change is propagated to all replicated View Connection Server instances.

Procedure

1 Start the ADSI Edit utility on your View Connection Server host.

2 In the Connection Settings dialog box, select or connect to DC=vdi, DC=vmware, DC=int.

3 In the Computer pane, select or type localhost:389 or the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the

View Connection Server host followed by port 389.

For example: localhost:389 or mycomputer.mydomain.com:389

4 On the object CN=Common, OU=Global, OU=Properties, set the pae-ceipDumpOnly attribute value to 1.

5 Restart View Connection Server.

The CEIP data files are written in plain-text JSON format to the %PROGRAMFILES%\VMware\VMware

View\Server\broker\temp\spool directory on the View Connection Server instance.

What to do next

To revert the setting and begin sending data to VMware, change pae-ceipDumpOnly attribute value to 0 and restart View Connection Server.

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Additional Information About the Customer Experience Improvement Program

After you choose to participate in the CEIP, data is collected on the first View Connection Server instance that starts in a View deployment. Configuration data is collected on a weekly basis. Performance and usage data is collected on an hourly basis. If your View Connection Server instance does not have access to the

Internet, the information is saved on disk until the next time Internet connectivity is available.

If you choose to participate, you can opt out later. You can join or end your participation at any time by editing the Send anonymous data to VMware setting in the Product Licensing and Usage page in View

Administrator. In order for the change to take effect, restart each View Connection Server instance in the environment.

Data collection by the CEIP does not have any negative performance or disk consumption impact on your

View deployment. The information that is collected and sent to VMware is sent to the View Connection

Server instance whether or not the CEIP feature is enabled. By default, enabling the feature can consume a maximum of 100MB of disk space on the View Connection Server instance to store data before it is sent to

VMware. By default, unsent data that is more than eight days old is discarded.

If your View Connection Server instances are blocked by a firewall from accessing the Internet, you can still use the CEIP. When the CEIP is enabled, your View Connection Server instances periodically attempt to connect using HTTPS to the data collection URL at https://ceip.vmware.com

. If the connection is blocked or inaccessible due to a proxy server or firewall restriction, View Connection Server caches your CEIP data until the records exceed the configured maximum age, eight days by default, or the total collected data exceeds the configured maximum spool size, 100MB by default.

You can change the location, maximum size, and maximum age of the CEIP data spool. The spool location and size are governed by the following settings in the View LDAP database: pae-ceipSpoolDirectory pae-ceipMaxSpoolSize pae-ceipMaxSpoolAge

Directory where CEIP data is cached before being sent to Vmware.

Default: Program Files\VMware\VMware View\Server\broker\temp\spool

Maximum size, in bytes, of temporary spool data.

Default: 100 MB

Maximum age of records in the temporary local spool.

Default: 8 days

You will not be contacted or receive spam if you participate in the CEIP. The CEIP does not collect contact information such as your name, home address, email address, or phone number. The CEIP will not ask you to participate in surveys or to read junk e-mail, and you will not be contacted in any other way.

Global View Data Collected by VMware

If you join the customer experience improvement program, VMware collects global data about the View environment. Fields containing sensitive information are made anonymous.

Table 8 ‑6. Information About Global Configuration Settings

Description

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

Maximum lifespan, in seconds, for a View Connection

Server session

Amount of time, in seconds, before the View Connection

Server forcibly disconnects users if no data is sent from the client

No

No

Example Value

180,000

36,000

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Table 8 ‑6. Information About Global Configuration Settings (Continued)

Description

Amount of time in seconds, that a user can be idle before

View Connection Server locks the user's single sign-on (SSO) credentials

Amount of time, in minutes, before SSO credentials are cleared for desktop launches

Amount of time, in minutes, before SSO credentials are cleared for application launches

View Administrator console session timeout, in seconds

Show a pre-login message when users connect to View

Connection Server instances in this pod

Remote desktop can run a server operating system

Mirage server is enabled

URL of the Mirage server, including port number

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

Yes

Example Value

900

-1 (which means never)

-1 (which means never)

3,000

0 or 1

True or false

True or false

None

Table 8 ‑7. Global Status Information

Description

View servers can contact the domain controller.

The DNS of the Active Directory domain

The domain is an NT4-style domain.

The name of the domain

The status of the domain

The type of trust relationship with the domain

Yes

No

Yes

No

No

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

No

Example Value

True or false

None

True or false

None

OK

Primary domain, two-way, two-way forest, and so on

View Connection Server Data Collected by VMware

If you join the customer experience improvement program, VMware collects data from certain View

Connection Server fields. Fields containing sensitive information are made anonymous.

Table 8 ‑8. Configuration Information Collected from View Connection Server

Description

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

Example Value

Yes None The common name (CN) for the View Connection Server entry in View LDAP

View Connection Server is disabled

SecureID authentication is configured and active

RADIUS authentication is configured and active

SAML server authentication is allowed, disabled, or required

No

No

No

No

True or false

True or false

True or false

0 = Disabled

1 = Allowed

2 = Required

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Table 8 ‑8. Configuration Information Collected from View Connection Server (Continued)

Description

Type of View Connection Server installation

Must the SecureID authentication name match the Active

Directory name?

Are clients allowed to bypass the secure tunnel?

Are clients allowed to bypass the PCoIP Secure Gateway?

Configuration of smart card authentication

Should users be automatically logged off when their smart card is removed?

Folder in which View LDAP backups are stored

Units of time for setting the View LDAP backup frequency

Frequency of View LDAP backups

Time of View LDAP backup

Maximum number of View LDAP backups to store

Time of last View LDAP backup

Status of the last View LDAP backup

Pending immediate View LDAP backup

Tags associated with the View Connection Server instance

Whether the View Connection Server instance is paired with a security server

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

No

No

No

No

No

Yes

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

Yes

No

Example Value

0 = View Connection Server

1 = security server

True = SecureID authentication name is mapped

False = SecureID authentication name is not mapped

True or false

True or false

Off, Optional, or Required

True or false

None

Hour, Day, or Week

Integer

Integer

Integer

Feb 21, 2014 12:00:10 AM

OK

True or false

None

0 = Not paired

1 = Paired

None The distinguished name (DN) of the View Connection

Server instance in LDAP

Yes

Length of time the security server pairing password is valid No

The host/node name of the View Connection Server instance Yes

The version number only of the View Connection Server instance

No

No The full build and version of the View Connection Server instance

Auto-reconnect to the secure gateway

Tunnel client protocol

Protocol the View Connection Server instance or security server listens on

No

No

No

None

6.0.0

6.0.0-123455

True or false

Table 8 ‑9. Status Information Collected from View Connection Server

Description

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

The View Connection Server instance's build number

Name of the View Connection Server replicated group, typically the first View Connection Server instance's node name

No

Yes

Example Value

123456

None

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Table 8 ‑9. Status Information Collected from View Connection Server (Continued)

Description

DNS name of the View Connection Server instance

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

Yes

IP address of the View Connection Server instance Yes

NetBIOS host name of the View Connection Server instance Yes

The current number of sessions on this View Connection

Server instance

No

No The maximum number of sessions on this View Connection

Server instance

The current number of View Composer sessions on this

View Connection Server instance

The maximum number of View Composer sessions on this

View Connection Server instance

The version of the View Connection Server instance

No

No

No

Example Value

None

None

None

Integer

Integer

Integer

Integer

6.0.0

Table 8 ‑10. Dynamic Usage Data Collected from View Connection Server

Description

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

Example Value

No List of integers Number of times individual PowerShell cmdlets have been invoked

Number of times individual View API methods have been invoked in the previous minute

Login rate, using passwords, over time

Login rate, using the SSL server certificate, over time

Login rate, using delegated authentication such as SAML, over time

Average percent CPU utilization

Average percent memory utilization

Average logins with and without passwords available for

SSO

Number of times desktop connections have been launched with each type of display protocol (PCoIP, RDP, and

VMware Blast)

Number of times a new client connection has been made to a remote application, for each type of display protocol (PCoIP,

RDP, and VMware Blast)

Number of times launching a remote application results in a new connection, a reused connection, a new session connection, and a reused session connection

Number of times desktop connections have been launched for a user who is entitled to n number of desktops

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

List of integers

Float

Float

Float

Integer

Integer

Float

List of integers

List of integers

List of integers

List of integers, such as a list of how many users are entitled to 1 desktop,

2 desktops, 3 desktops, and so on

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Table 8 ‑10. Dynamic Usage Data Collected from View Connection Server (Continued)

Description

Number of times application connections have been launched for a user who is entitled to n number of applications

Number of times n protocol (such as PCoIP) sessions have been in existence when a user launches another application.

For example, a user launches a fifth application but because all the applications are in the same server farm, only one session is in existence.

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

No

No

Example Value

List of integers

List of integers, such as a list of how many users have one session, how many have two sessions, and so on

Security Server Data Collected by VMware

If you join the customer experience improvement program, VMware collects data from security server fields. Fields containing sensitive information are made anonymous.

Table 8 ‑11. Security Server Information

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

No

Example Value

Integer

Description

The number of PCoIP sessions that are running on the security server secure gateway

The number of sessions of any type that are running on the security server secure gateway

The security server build number

The host name of the security server

IPsec is active

The secure gateway is down

The current number of sessions

The URL of the secure gateway

The security server version number

No

No

Yes

No

No

No

Yes

No

Integer

123456

None

True or false

True or false

Integer

None

6.0.0

Desktop Pool Data Collected by VMware

If you join the customer experience improvement program, VMware collects data from certain desktop pool fields. Fields containing sensitive information are made anonymous.

Table 8 ‑12. Configuration Information Collected from Desktop Pools

Description

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

The common name (CN) for the desktop pool entry in View

LDAP

The descriptive, display name of the desktop pool

The desktop pool is disabled

Yes

Yes

No

Example Value

None

None

True or false

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Table 8 ‑12. Configuration Information Collected from Desktop Pools (Continued)

Description

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

Example Value

Type of desktop pool No

Yes

One of the following:

IndividualVC,

IndividualUnmanaged,

Persistent, NonPersistent,

SviPersistent,

SviNonPersistent,

ManualVCPersistent, Manual,

ManualUnmanagedPersistent,

ManualUnmanagedNonPersistent,

TerminalService,

OnRequestVcPersistent,

OnRequestVcNonPersistent,

OnRequestSviPersistent,

OnRequestSviNonPersistent

None The View Administrator folder under which this desktop pool is grouped

The list of virtual machine Distinguished Names (DNs) that belong to the desktop pool

No

Are multiple sessions allowed in the desktop pool?

Are users of this desktop pool allowed to reset their virtual machines?

Time after which a forced logoff message is displayed

The Distinguished Name (DN) of the vCenter Server instance that manages the virtual machines in the pool

Minimum number of virtual machines in the desktop pool

Maximum number of virtual machines in the desktop pool

Number of spare, provisioned virtual machines in the desktop pool

Deletion policy for the desktop pool

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

An example list item:

["CN=8f11d7cfb0ef-43ad-92ce-691aa929d3c4,O

U=Servers,DC=vdi,DC=vmware,DC

=int"]

True or false

Off, Optional, or Required

True or false

"CN=e7a718ded0f7-444a-9452-156dce289028,O

U=VirtualCenter,OU=Properties

,DC=vdi,DC=vmware,DC=int"

Integer

Integer

Integer

DNS suffix used in provisioning

The naming pattern (prefix) to use for auto-deployed virtual machine names

The template from which to clone virtual machines

The folder in vCenter Server in which deployed virtual machines are stored

The resource pool used for the virtual machines

A list of datastores

The customization specification used to deploy virtual machines

Enable auto-provisioning for the desktop pool

Errors encountered while provisioning

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

No

Default, DeleteOnUse, or

RefreshOnUse

None

None

None

None

None

None

None

True or false

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Table 8 ‑12. Configuration Information Collected from Desktop Pools (Continued)

Description

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

Example Value

Stop provisioning when an error is encountered

Start provisioning

Pool values have been calculated

The parent virtual machine used to provision linked clones

The snapshot name used for linked-clone provisioning

The snapshot ID used for linked-clone provisioning

Deployment group ID used by the VMware Horizon View

Composer service

View Composer persistent disk datastore path

Type of View Composer disk

Yes

No

Create the persistent disk as a sparse disk

The drive mount letter for the persistent disk or disposable data disk

Target size of the persistent disk

Type of refresh policy

No

No

No

No

Usage threshold for refresh operations

Time threshold for refresh operations

No

No

Level of overcommit for a datastore that stores linked clones No

Datastore path for a datastore that stores linked clones

List of IDs this datastore is used for

Virtual machine state

No

No

No

Yes

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

True or false

True or false

True or false

None

None

"snapshot-38685"

"7119316f-00a8-463d-bbbac3000f105aeb"

None

"SystemDisposable" ,

UserProfile , and so on

True or false

"*" , "C", and so on

Integer

Always, Never, or Conditional

Integer

Integer

None, Conservative, Moderate,

Aggressive

None

List of GUIDs, such as the following:

["7119316f-00a8-463d-bbbac3000f105aeb"]

Ready, Pre-provisioned, Cloning,

Cloning Error, Customizing,

Deleting, Maintenance, Error, or

Logout

True or false Assign a virtual machine to a user when the user first logs in No

Flags for the desktop pool No

Multimonitor configuration settings No

No svga.maxWidth:int , svga.vramSize:int , svga.maxHeight:int , svga.enable3d:bool , svga.numDisplays:int

True or false An individual virtual machine was converted to a manual pool

The linked-clone pool uses native snapshot cloning with

VAAI

View Storage Accelerator (CBRC) is enabled

Frequency that the CBRC cache is refreshed

CBRC cache refresh blackout periods

No

No

No

No

True or false

True or false

Integer

List

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Table 8 ‑12. Configuration Information Collected from Desktop Pools (Continued)

Description

The disk types that are cached for CBRC (OS disks, persistent disks)

Virtual machine disk space reclamation (SE Sparse format) is enabled

Disk space reclamation threshold, in bytes

Minimum number of virtual machines that are ready during a refit operation

No

No

No

The desktop pool uses a Virtual SAN datastore No

Number of remote desktop entitlements for this server pool No

Number of remote application entitlements for this pool

Default display protocol

The user can chose the display protocol used

No

No

No

HTML Access is enabled

Flash quality level

Flash throttling level

No

No

No

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

No

Example Value

List

True or false

Pool is disabled

Pool is marked for deletion

Tags associated with the View Connection Server instance

Use a different Mirage server than what is specified in the global settings

Mirage server is enabled

URL of the Mirage server, including port number

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

True or false

0 or 1

0 or 1

PCoIP, RDP, or Blast

True or false

True or false

None used, low, medium, high

None used, conservative, moderate, aggressive

True or false

True or false

None

True or false

True or false

None

Machine Data Collected by VMware

If you join the customer experience improvement program, VMware collects data from View and vCenter

Server fields that describe virtual machines. Fields containing sensitive information are made anonymous.

Table 8 ‑13. Machine Data Collected from View

Description

The machine was marked as dirty. The virtual machine was used when useonce=true, and therefore should not accept new sessions

Mapping of devices to change IDs

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

No

No

Example Value

True or false

An identifier for the machine that is used to correlate data

Sysprep customization is used for the guest operating system

Timeout value. The period of time before the machine is disconnected.

No

No

No

A set of IDs such as the following:

2000=01874583;01874583&2016=3

910f513;3910f513 vm-10

True or false

Time

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Table 8 ‑13. Machine Data Collected from View (Continued)

Description

A random ID for View Agent or Horizon Agent for this machine

Miscellaneous configuration values

View LDAP identifier for the previous View Composer persistent disk

Thinapps that are entitled to the machine

Thinapps that are pending an uninstallation

Thinapps that are installed in the machine

The state of the machine

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

No

No

No

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

Timestamp of when customization started

The machine is powered on for customization

The machine is powered on

The machine is suspended

The machine state is in transition

The machine is configured

The path to the virtual machine in vCenter Server

Customization template used to customize the machine

View Composer linked clone ID for the machine

The virtual machine missing in vCenter Server

Number of times View tried to power off the machine

Status of CBRC (View Storage Accelerator)

Time of the latest CBRC refresh

Time of the latest CBRC error

Time of the latest incomplete attempt to configure CBRC

The version of View Agent or Horizon Agent installed on the machine

View Persona Management is enabled on the machine

Last amount, in bytes, of machine disk space reclaimed (if using SE Sparse format)

Time of last space reclamation No

Table 8 ‑14. Virtual Machine Data Collected from vCenter Server

Description

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

The virtual machine hardware version No

The amount of RAM that is allocated to the virtual machine No

No

No

No

No

No

No

Yes

No

No

No

No

No

No

Yes

No

No

No

No

Timestamp

Example Value v8

1024

Example Value

GUID

Integers and booleans (true or false)

LDAP entry

None

None

None

Undefined, Pre-provisioned,

Cloning, Cloning error,

Customizing, Ready, Deleting,

Maintenance, Error, or Logout

Integer

Integer. The values are 0 or 1.

True or false

True or false

True or false

True or false

None

None

GUID of the linked clone

True or false

Integer

Off, Current, Out of date, or Error

Date

Integer

Integer

6.0.0-551711

True or false

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Table 8 ‑14. Virtual Machine Data Collected from vCenter Server (Continued)

Description

The number of virtual CPUs that are configured in the virtual machine

The operating system installed on the virtual machine

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

No

No

Example Value

Integer

Microsoft Windows 7 (32-bit),

Microsoft Windows 8 (32-bit),

Microsoft Windows Server 2008 R2

(64-bit), Microsoft Windows Server

2012 R2 (64-bit),and so on

vCenter Server Data Collected by VMware

If you join the customer experience improvement program, VMware collects data from certain vCenter

Server fields. Fields containing sensitive information are made anonymous.

Table 8 ‑15. Host System Information Collected from vCenter Server

Description

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

No The time that View last communicated with this vCenter

Server host

The URL of the vCenter Server instance

The API version of the vCenter Server instance

The build number of the vCenter Server instance

The version number of the vCenter Server instance

Yes

No

No

No

Example Value

Integer

None

5.0

456789

5.0.0

Table 8 ‑16. Host Status Information Collected from vCenter Server

Description

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

No The internal status code of the connection status between vCenter Server and View Connection Server

Description of the connection status code

The vCenter Server SSL certificate is valid

The reason that the SSL certificate is not valid

No

No

No

Example Value

Status_Up

Connected

True or false

Name mismatch, not trusted, cannot check revocation, and so on

Table 8 ‑17. Datastore Data Collected from vCenter Server

Description

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

Disk capacity of this datastore

Free disk space on this datastore

The type of storage

Multiple hosts can access this datastore concurrently.

No

No

No

No

Example Value

Integer

Integer

NFS, VMFS

True or false

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Table 8 ‑18. ESX Node Information

Description

Identifier of the vCenter Server that manages a particular

ESXi host, along with an identifier for the ESXi host

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

No

Example Value

1234-ADEE-BECF-41AA-4950BCDAhost-14

Table 8 ‑19. Information About Direct-Attached Storage for an ESXi Host

Description

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

Hardware vendor of the physical disk

Model of the physical disk

SSD

Capacity, in bytes

Identifier for the ESXi host

Identifier of the vCenter Server that manages a particular

ESXi host

No

No

No

No

No

No

Example Value

SEAGATE

ST9300653SS

True or false host-123

1234-ADEE-BECF-41AA-4950BCDA

ThinApp Data Collected by VMware

If you join the customer experience improvement program, VMware collects data from certain ThinApp fields. Fields containing sensitive information are made anonymous.

Table 8 ‑20. ThinApp Information

Description

Display name of the ThinApp package

Number of MSI packages associated with ThinApp

Assignment count for full installation

List of pools set to use full installation

Remote desktops set to use full installation

Assignment count for streaming the ThinApp

List of pools set to stream ThinApp

Remote desktops set to stream the ThinApp

ThinApps in a group for pools set to use full installation

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

No

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Value Type

Integer

Integer

List with hash of CN (common name)

List with CN (GUID) of desktops

Integer

List with hash of CN (common name)

List with CN (GUID) of desktops

List with ID of ThinApps

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Chapter 8 Maintaining View Components

Cloud Pod Architecture Information Collected by VMware

If you join the customer experience improvement program, VMware collects data from certain Cloud Pod

Architecture fields. Fields containing sensitive information are made anonymous.

Table 8 ‑21. Information Collected About Cloud Pod Architecture

Description

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous?

The Cloud Pod Architecture feature is enabled

Local pod ID

Frequency, in seconds, that the system will perform a crosspod health check

Maximum allowed time difference between the pods, in seconds

Common name of the site that the pod belongs to

List of global entitlement IDs (for example, a pod has desktop pools that support the global entitlements)

Common name of the pod endpoint, which is a View

Connection Server instance

Common name of the pod that contains this endpoint

The pod endpoint is disabled

Weighting to apply when randomly selecting endpoints

(View Connection Server instances) for remote sessions

The global entitlement is disabled

Desktop lookup starts from the user's home site (If set to false, the lookup starts from the local pod)

Global entitlement is for a dedicate desktop

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

Yes

No

No

No

Scope for which the existing session lookup is to be done

Scope for which the new session placement is to be done

User's home site is required for this global entitlement

Automatic session cleanup is enabled

No

No

No

No

Example or type

True or false

Integer

Integer

List of strings

True or false

Integer

True or false

True or false

0 = No

1 = Yes

ANY, SITE, or LOCAL

ANY, SITE, or LOCAL

True or false

True or false

Horizon Client Data Collected by VMware

If your company participates in the customer experience improvement program, VMware collects data from certain Horizon Client fields. Fields containing sensitive information are made anonymous.

Although the information is encrypted while in transit to Connection Server, the information on the client system is logged unencrypted in a user-specific directory. The logs do not contain any personally identifiable information.

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Table 8 ‑22. Data Collected from Horizon Clients for the Customer Experience Improvement Program

Description

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous

?

Example Value

No VMware Company that produced the

Horizon Client application

Product name

Client product version

No

No

Client binary architecture

Client build name

Host operating system

Host operating system kernel

Host operating system architecture

Host system model

Host system CPU

Number of cores in the host system's processor

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

No

VMware Horizon Client

(The format is x.x.x-yyyyyy, where x.x.x is the client version number and yyyyyy is the build number.)

Examples include the following: n i386 n n x86_64 arm

Examples include the following: n

VMware-Horizon-Client-Win32-Windows n n

VMware-Horizon-Client-Linux

VMware-Horizon-Client-iOS n n n

VMware-Horizon-Client-Mac

VMware-Horizon-Client-Android

VMware-Horizon-Client-WinStore

Examples include the following: n

Windows 8.1

n n

Windows 7, 64-bit Service Pack 1 (Build 7601 ) iPhone OS 5.1.1 (9B206) n n

Ubuntu 12.04.4 LTS

Mac OS X 10.8.5 (12F45)

Examples include the following: n

Windows 6.1.7601 SP1 n n

Darwin Kernel Version 11.0.0: Sun Apr 8 21:52:26 PDT

2012; root:xnu-1878.11.10~1/RELEASE_ARM_S5L8945X

Darwin 11.4.2

n n

Linux 2.6.32-44-generic #98-Ubuntu SMP Mon Sep 24

17:27:10 UTC 2012 unknown (for Windows Store)

Examples include the following: n x86_64 n n n i386 armv71

ARM

Examples include the following: n

Dell Inc. OptiPlex 960 n n n iPad3,3

MacBookPro8,2

Dell Inc. Precision WorkStation T3400 (A04 03/21/2008)

Examples include the following: n

Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU E8400 @ 3.00GH

n n

Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Quad CPU Q6600 @ 2.40GH

unknown (for iPad)

For example: 4

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Table 8 ‑22. Data Collected from Horizon Clients for the Customer Experience Improvement Program

(Continued)

Description

MB of memory on the host system

Number of USB devices connected

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous

?

No

No

No

Example Value

Examples include the following: n

4096 n unknown (for Windows Store)

2 (USB device redirection is supported only for Linux,

Windows, and Mac OS X clients.)

2 Maximum concurrent USB device connections

USB device vendor ID No

USB device product ID

USB device family

USB device usage count

No

No

No

Examples include the following: n

Kingston n n n

NEC

Nokia

Wacom

Examples include the following: n

DataTraveler n n n

Gamepad

Storage Drive

Wireless Mouse

Examples include the following: n

Security n n

Human Interface Device

Imaging

(Number of times the device was shared)

Data Collected by VMware

If your company participates in the customer experience improvement program, VMware collects data from certain client fields. Fields containing sensitive information are made anonymous.

Table 8 ‑23. Client Data Collected for the Customer Experience Improvement Program

Description Field name

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous

?

Example Value

<client-vendor> No VMware Company that produced the application

Product name

Client product version

Client binary architecture

<client-product>

<client-version>

<client-arch>

No

No

No

4.0.0-build_number

Examples include the following values: n n browser arm

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Table 8 ‑23. Client Data Collected for the Customer Experience Improvement Program (Continued)

Description

Native architecture of the browser

Browser user agent string

Browser's internal version string

Browser's core implementation

Whether the browser is running on a handheld device

Field name

<browser-arch>

<browser-version>

<browser-core>

<browser-ishandheld>

Is This Field

Made

Anonymous

?

No

<browser-user-agent> No

No

No

No

Example Value

Examples include the following values: n n

Win32

Win64 n n

MacIntel iPad

Examples include the following values: n

Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1;

WOW64) n n n n

AppleWebKit/703.00 (KHTML, like Gecko)

Chrome/3.0.1750

Safari/703.00

Edge/13.10586

Examples include the following values: n n n

7.0.3 (for Safari),

44.0 (for Firefox)

13.10586 (for Edge)

Examples include the following values: n n

Chrome

Safari n n n

Firefox

Internet Explorer

Edge true

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Managing View Composer Linked-

Clone Desktop Virtual Machines

9

You can update View Composer linked-clone desktop machines, reduce the size of their operating system data, and rebalance the machines among datastores. You also can manage the persistent disks associated with linked clones.

This chapter includes the following topics: n

“Reduce Linked-Clone Size with Machine Refresh,” on page 151

n n n

“Update Linked-Clone Desktops,” on page 153

“Rebalance Linked-Clone Virtual Machines,” on page 157

“Manage View Composer Persistent Disks,” on page 160

Reduce Linked-Clone Size with Machine Refresh

A machine refresh operation restores the operating system disk of each linked clone to its original state and size, reducing storage costs.

If possible, schedule refresh operations during off-peak hours.

For guidelines, see “Machine Refresh Operations,” on page 152.

Prerequisites n n n

Decide when to schedule the refresh operation. By default, View Composer starts the operation immediately.

You can schedule only one refresh operation at a time for a given set of linked clones. You can schedule multiple refresh operations if they affect different linked clones.

Decide whether to force all users to log off as soon as the operation begins or wait for each user to log off before refreshing that user's linked-clone desktop.

If you force users to log off, View notifies users before they are disconnected and allows them to close their applications and log off.

If you force users to log off, the maximum number of concurrent refresh operations on remote desktops that require logoffs is half the value of the Max concurrent View Composer maintenance operations setting. For example, if this setting is configured as 24 and you force users to log off, the maximum number of concurrent refresh operations on remote desktops that require logoffs is 12.

If your deployment includes replicated View Connection Server instances, verify that all instances are the same version.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

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2 Select the desktop pool to refresh by double-clicking the pool ID in the left column.

3 Choose whether to refresh multiple virtual machines or a single virtual machine.

Option

To refresh all virtual machines in the desktop pool

To refresh a single virtual machine

Action a In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

b Select the desktop pool to refresh by double-clicking the pool ID in the left column.

c On the Inventory tab, click Machines.

d Use the Ctrl or Shift key to select all the machine IDs in the left column.

e Select Refresh from the View Composer drop-down menu.

a In View Administrator, select Resources > Machines.

b Select the machine to refresh by double-clicking the machine ID in the left column.

c On the Summary tab, select Refresh from the View Composer dropdown menu.

4 Follow the wizard instructions.

The OS disks are reduced to their original size.

In vCenter Server, you can monitor the progress of the refresh operation on the linked-clone virtual machines.

In View Administrator, you can monitor the operation by selecting Catalog > Desktop Pools, doubleclicking the pool ID, and clicking the Tasks tab. You can click Cancel task, Pause task, or Resume task to terminate a task, suspend a task, or resume a suspended task.

Machine Refresh Operations

As users interact with linked clones, the clones' OS disks grow. A machine refresh operation restores the OS disks to their original state and size, reducing storage costs.

A refresh operation does not affect View Composer persistent disks.

A linked clone uses less storage space than the parent virtual machine, which contains the complete OS data. However, a clone's OS disk expands each time data is written to it from within the guest operating system.

When View Composer creates a linked clone, it takes a snapshot of the clone's OS disk. The snapshot uniquely identifies the linked-clone virtual machine. A refresh operation reverts the OS disk to the snapshot.

View Composer can refresh a linked clone in as little as half the time it takes to delete and recreate the clone.

Apply these guidelines to refresh operations: n

You can refresh a desktop pool on demand, as a scheduled event, or when the OS data reaches a specified size.

You can schedule only one refresh operation at a time for a given set of linked clones. If you start a refresh operation immediately, the operation overwrites any previously scheduled task.

n n

You can schedule multiple refresh operations if they affect different linked clones.

Before you schedule a new refresh operation, you must cancel any previously scheduled task.

You can refresh dedicated-assignment and floating-assignment pools.

A refresh can only occur when users are disconnected from their linked-clone desktops.

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A refresh preserves the unique computer information set up by QuickPrep or Sysprep. You do not need to rerun Sysprep after a refresh to restore the SID or the GUIDs of third-party software installed in the system drive.

After you recompose a linked clone, View takes a new snapshot of the linked clone's OS disk. Future refresh operations restore the OS data to that snapshot, not the one originally taken when the linked clone was first created.

If you use native NFS snapshot (VAAI) technology to generate linked clones, certain vendors' NAS devices take snapshots of the replica disk when they refresh the linked clones' OS disks. These NAS devices do not support taking direct snapshots of each clone's OS disk.

You can set a minimum number of ready, provisioned desktops that remain available for users to connect to during the refresh operation. See "Keeping Linked-Clone Desktops Provisioned and Ready

During View Composer Operations" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document.

N

OTE

You can slow the growth of linked clones by redirecting their paging files and system temp files to a temporary disk. When a linked clone is powered off, View replaces the temporary disk with a copy of the original temporary disk that View Composer created with the linked-clone pool. This operation shrinks the temporary disk to its original size.

You can configure this option when you create a linked-clone desktop pool.

Update Linked-Clone Desktops

You can update linked-clone virtual machines by creating a new base image on the parent virtual machine and using the recompose feature to distribute the updated image to the linked clones.

n n n n

Prepare a Parent Virtual Machine to Recompose Linked Clones on page 153

Before you recompose a linked-clone desktop pool, you must update the parent virtual machine that you used as a base image for the linked clones.

Recompose Linked-Clone Virtual Machines on page 154

Machine recomposition simultaneously updates all the linked-clone virtual machines anchored to a parent virtual machine.

Updating Linked Clones with Recomposition on page 155

In a recomposition, you can provide operating system patches, install or update applications, or modify the virtual machine hardware settings in all the linked clones in a desktop pool.

Correcting an Unsuccessful Recomposition on page 156

You can correct a recomposition that failed. You can also take action if you accidentally recompose linked clones using a different base image than the one you intended to use.

Prepare a Parent Virtual Machine to Recompose Linked Clones

Before you recompose a linked-clone desktop pool, you must update the parent virtual machine that you used as a base image for the linked clones.

View Composer does not support recomposing linked clones that use one operating system to a parent virtual machine that uses a different operating system. For example, you cannot use a snapshot of a

Windows 8 parent virtual machine to recompose a Windows 7 linked clone.

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Procedure

1 In vCenter Server, update the parent virtual machine for the recomposition.

n n

Install OS patches or service packs, new applications, application updates, or make other changes in the parent virtual machine.

Alternatively, prepare another virtual machine to be selected as the new parent during the recomposition.

2 In vCenter Server, power off the updated or new parent virtual machine.

3 In vCenter Server, take a snapshot of the parent virtual machine.

What to do next

Recompose the linked-clone desktop pool.

Recompose Linked-Clone Virtual Machines

Machine recomposition simultaneously updates all the linked-clone virtual machines anchored to a parent virtual machine.

If possible, schedule recompositions during off-peak hours.

Prerequisites n

Verify that you have a snapshot of the parent virtual machine. See

“Prepare a Parent Virtual Machine to

Recompose Linked Clones,” on page 153.

n n

Familiarize yourself with the recomposition guidelines. See

“Updating Linked Clones with

Recomposition,” on page 155.

Decide when to schedule the recomposition. By default, View Composer starts the recomposition immediately.

n n n n

You can schedule only one recomposition at a time for a given set of linked clones. You can schedule multiple recompositions if they affect different linked clones.

Decide whether to force all users to log off as soon as the recomposition begins or wait for each user to log off before recomposing that user's linked-clone desktop.

If you force users to log off, View notifies users before they are disconnected and allows them to close their applications and log off.

Decide whether to stop provisioning at first error. If you select this option and an error occurs when

View Composer provisions a linked clone, provisioning stops for all clones in the desktop pool. You can select this option to ensure that resources such as storage are not consumed unnecessarily.

Selecting the Stop at first error option does not affect customization. If a customization error occurs on a linked clone, other clones continue to be provisioned and customized.

Verify that provisioning for the desktop pool is enabled. When desktop pool provisioning is disabled,

View stops the desktops from being customized after they are recomposed.

If your deployment includes replicated View Connection Server instances, verify that all instances are the same version.

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Procedure

1 Choose whether to recompose the whole desktop pool or a single machine.

Option

To recompose all virtual machines in the desktop pool

To recompose selected virtual machines

Action a In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

b Select the desktop pool to recompose by double-clicking the pool ID in the left column.

c On the Inventory tab, click Machines.

d Use the Ctrl or Shift keys to select all the machine IDs in the left column.

e Select Recompose from the View Composer drop-down menu.

a In View Administrator, select Resources > Machines.

b Select the machine to recompose by double-clicking the machine ID in the left column.

c On the Summary tab, select Recompose from the View Composer drop-down menu.

2 Follow the wizard instructions.

You can select a new virtual machine to be used as the parent virtual machine for the desktop pool.

On the Ready to Complete page, you can click Show Details to display the linked-clone desktops that will be recomposed.

The linked-clone virtual machines are refreshed and updated. The OS disks are reduced to their original size.

In a dedicated-assignment pool, unassigned linked clones are deleted and recreated. The specified number of spare virtual machines is maintained.

In a floating-assignment pool, all selected linked clones are recomposed.

In vCenter Server, you can monitor the progress of the recomposition on the linked-clone virtual machines.

In View Administrator, you can monitor the operation by clicking Catalog > Desktop Pools, double-clicking the pool ID, and clicking the Tasks tab. You can click Cancel task, Pause task, or Resume task to terminate a task, suspend a task, or resume a suspended task.

N

OTE

If you used a Sysprep customization specification to customize the linked clones when you created the desktop pool, new SIDs might be generated for the recomposed virtual machines. For details, see

"Recomposing Linked Clones Customized with Sysprep" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in

View document.

Updating Linked Clones with Recomposition

In a recomposition, you can provide operating system patches, install or update applications, or modify the virtual machine hardware settings in all the linked clones in a desktop pool.

To recompose linked-clone virtual machines, you update the parent virtual machine in vCenter Server or select a different virtual machine to become the new parent. Next, you take a snapshot of the new parent virtual machine configuration.

You can change the parent virtual machine without affecting the linked clones because they are linked to the replica, not directly to the parent.

You then initiate the recomposition, selecting the snapshot to be used as the new base image for the desktop pool. View Composer creates a new replica, copies the reconfigured OS disk to the linked clones, and anchors the linked clones to the new replica.

The recomposition also refreshes the linked clones, reducing the size of their OS disks.

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Desktop recompositions do not affect View Composer persistent disks.

Apply these guidelines to recompositions: n n

You can recompose dedicated-assignment and floating-assignment desktop pools.

You can recompose a desktop pool on demand or as a scheduled event.

You can schedule only one recomposition at a time for a given set of linked clones. Before you can schedule a new recomposition, you must cancel any previously scheduled task or wait until the previous operation is completed. Before you can start a new recomposition immediately, you must cancel any previously scheduled task.

n n n

You can schedule multiple recompositions if they affect different linked clones.

You can recompose selected linked clones or all linked clones in a desktop pool.

When different linked clones in a desktop pool are derived from different snapshots of the base image or from different base images, the desktop pool includes more than one replica.

A recomposition can only occur when users are logged off of their linked-clone desktops.

n n n

You cannot recompose linked clones that use one operating system to a new or updated parent virtual machine that uses a different operating system.

You cannot recompose linked clones to a lower hardware version than their current version. For example, you cannot recompose hardware version 8 clones to a parent virtual machine that is hardware version 7.

You can set a minimum number of ready, provisioned desktops that remain available for users to connect to during the recompose operation. See "Keeping Linked-Clone Desktops Provisioned and

Ready During View Composer Operations" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document.

N

OTE

If you used a Sysprep customization specification to customize the linked clones when you created the desktop pool, new SIDs might be generated for the recomposed virtual machines. For details, see

"Recomposing Linked Clones Customized with Sysprep" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in

View document.

Correcting an Unsuccessful Recomposition

You can correct a recomposition that failed. You can also take action if you accidentally recompose linked clones using a different base image than the one you intended to use.

Problem

The virtual machines are in an erroneous or outdated state as a result of an unsuccessful recomposition.

Cause

A system failure or problem might have occurred on the vCenter Server host, in vCenter Server, or on a datastore during the recomposition.

Alternatively, the recomposition might have used a virtual-machine snapshot with a different operating system than the operating system of the original parent virtual machine. For example, you might have used a Windows 8 snapshot to recompose Windows 7 linked clones.

Solution

1 Select the snapshot that was used in the last successful recomposition.

You can also select a new snapshot to update the linked clones to a new state.

The snapshot must use the same operating system as the original parent virtual machine's snapshot.

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2 Recompose the desktop pool again.

View Composer creates a base image from the snapshot and recreates the linked-clone OS disks.

View Composer persistent disks that contain user data and settings are preserved during the recomposition.

Depending on the conditions of the incorrect recomposition, you might refresh or rebalance the linked clones instead of or in addition to recomposing them.

N

OTE

If you do not configure View Composer persistent disks, all recompositions delete usergenerated changes in the linked-clone virtual machines.

Rebalance Linked-Clone Virtual Machines

A rebalance operation evenly redistributes linked-clone virtual machines among available datastores.

You can also use the rebalance operation to migrate linked-clone virtual machines to another datastore. Do

not use vSphere Client or vCenter Server to migrate or manage linked-clone virtual machines. See “Migrate

Linked-Clone Virtual Machines to Another Datastore,” on page 159.

If possible, schedule rebalance operations during off-peak hours.

For guidelines, see “Rebalancing Linked Clones Among Logical Drives,” on page 158.

Prerequisites n

Familiarize yourself with the rebalance operation. See “Rebalancing Linked Clones Among Logical

Drives,” on page 158.

n

Decide when to schedule the rebalance operation. By default, View Composer starts the operation immediately.

You can schedule only one rebalance operation at a time for a given set of linked clones. You can schedule multiple rebalance operations if they affect different linked clones.

n n n

Decide whether to force all users to log off as soon as the operation begins or wait for each user to log off before rebalancing that user's linked-clone desktop.

If you force users to log off, View notifies users before they are disconnected and allows them to close their applications and log off.

If you force users to log off, the maximum number of concurrent rebalance operations on remote desktops that require logoffs is half the value of the Max concurrent View Composer maintenance

operations setting. For example, if this setting is configured as 24 and you force users to log off, the maximum number of concurrent rebalance operations on remote desktops that require logoffs is 12.

Verify that provisioning for the desktop pool is enabled. When pool provisioning is disabled, View stops the virtual machines from being customized after they are rebalanced.

If your deployment includes replicated View Connection Server instances, verify that all instances are the same version.

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Procedure

1 Choose whether to rebalance the whole pool or a single virtual machine.

Option

To rebalance all virtual machines in the pool

To rebalance a single virtual machine

Action a In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

b Select the pool to rebalance by double-clicking the pool ID in the left column.

c On the Inventory tab, click Machines.

d Use the Ctrl or Shift keys to select multiple all the machine IDs in the left column.

e Select Rebalance from the View Composer drop-down menu.

a In View Administrator, select Resources > Machines.

b Select the machine to rebalance by double-clicking the machine ID in the left column.

c On the Summary tab, select Rebalance from the View Composer dropdown menu.

2 Follow the wizard instructions.

The linked-clone virtual machines are refreshed and rebalanced. The OS disks are reduced to their original size.

In View Administrator, you can monitor the operation by selecting Catalog > Desktop Pools, doubleclicking the pool ID, and clicking the Tasks tab. You can click Cancel task, Pause task, or Resume task to terminate a task, suspend a task, or resume a suspended task.

Rebalancing Linked Clones Among Logical Drives

A rebalance operation evenly redistributes linked-clone virtual machines among available logical drives. It saves storage space on overloaded drives and ensures that no drives are underused.

When you create large linked-clone desktop pools and use multiple Logical Unit Numbers (LUNs), the space might not be used efficiently if the initial sizing was inaccurate. If you set an aggressive storage overcommit level, the linked clones can grow quickly and consume all the free space on the datastore.

When the virtual machines use 95% of the space on the datastore, View generates a warning log entry.

The rebalance also refreshes the linked clones, reducing the size of their OS disks. It does not affect View

Composer persistent disks.

Apply these guidelines to rebalances: n

You can rebalance dedicated-assignment and floating-assignment desktop pools.

n n

You can rebalance selected linked clones or all clones in a pool.

You can rebalance a desktop pool on demand or as a scheduled event.

You can schedule only one rebalance operation at a time for a given set of linked clones. If you start a rebalance operation immediately, the operation overwrites any previously scheduled task.

n n

You can schedule multiple rebalance operations if they affect different linked clones.

Before you schedule a new rebalance operation, you must cancel any previously scheduled task.

You can only rebalance virtual machines in the Available, Error, or Customizing state with no schedules or pending cancellations.

As a best practice, do not mix linked-clone virtual machines with other types of virtual machines on the same datastore. This way View Composer can rebalance all the virtual machines on the datastore.

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Chapter 9 Managing View Composer Linked-Clone Desktop Virtual Machines n n

If you edit a pool and change the host or cluster and the datastores on which linked clones are stored, you can only rebalance the linked clones if the newly selected host or cluster has full access to both the original and the new datastores. All hosts in the new cluster must have access to the original and new datastores.

For example, you might create a linked-clone desktop pool on a standalone host and select a local datastore to store the clones. If you edit the desktop pool and select a cluster and a shared datastore, a rebalance operation will fail because the hosts in the cluster cannot access the original, local datastore.

You can set a minimum number of ready, provisioned virtual machines that remain available for users to connect to during the rebalance operation. See "Keeping Linked-Clone Desktops Provisioned and

Ready During View Composer Operations" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document.

I

MPORTANT

If you use a Virtual SAN datastore, you can use the rebalance operation only to migrate all the virtual machines in a desktop pool from a Virtual SAN datastore to some other type of datastore, or the reverse. If a desktop pool uses a Virtual SAN datastore, Virtual SAN provides the load balancing functionality and optimizes the use of resources across the ESXi cluster.

Migrate Linked-Clone Virtual Machines to Another Datastore

To migrate linked-clone virtual machines from one set of datastores to another, use the rebalance operation.

When you use rebalance, View Composer manages the movement of the linked clones between datastores.

View Composer ensures that the linked clones' access to the replica is maintained during and after the rebalance operation. If necessary, View Composer creates an instance of the replica on the destination datastore.

N

OTE

Do not use vSphere Client or vCenter Server to migrate or manage linked-clone virtual machines. Do not use Storage vMotion to migrate linked-clone virtual machines to other datastores.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the rebalance operation. See “Rebalance Linked-Clone Virtual Machines,” on page 157 and

“Rebalancing Linked Clones Among Logical Drives,” on page 158.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools, select the desktop pool that you want to migrate, and click Edit.

2 On the vCenter Settings tab, scroll down to Datastores and click Browse.

3 On the Select Linked Clone Datastores page, deselect the datastores that currently store the linked clones, select the destination datastores, and click OK.

4 In the Edit window, click OK.

5 On the Desktop Pools page, select the pool by double-clicking the pool ID in the left column.

6 Select Rebalance from the View Composer drop-down menu and follow the wizard instructions to rebalance the linked-clone virtual machines.

The linked-clone virtual machines are refreshed and migrated to the destination datastores.

Filenames of Linked-Clone Disks After a Rebalance Operation

When you rebalance linked-clone virtual machines, vCenter Server changes the filenames of View

Composer persistent disks and disposable-data disks in linked clones that are moved to a new datastore.

The original filenames identify the disk type. The renamed disks do not include the identifying labels.

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An original persistent disk has a filename with a user-disk

label:

desktop_name-vdm-user-disk-D-ID.vmdk

.

An original disposable-data disk has a filename with a disposable

label:

desktop_name-vdm-disposable-

ID.vmdk

.

After a rebalance operation moves a linked clone to a new datastore, vCenter Server uses a common filename syntax for both types of disks:

desktop_name_n.vmdk

.

Manage View Composer Persistent Disks

You can detach a View Composer persistent disk from a linked-clone virtual machine and attach it to another linked clone. This feature lets you manage user information separately from linked-clone virtual machines.

View Composer Persistent Disks

With View Composer, you can configure OS data and user information on separate disks in linked-clone virtual machines. View Composer preserves the user information on the persistent disk when the OS data is updated, refreshed, or rebalanced.

A View Composer persistent disk contains user settings and other user-generated data. You create persistent disks when you create a linked-clone desktop pool. See "Worksheet for Creating a Linked-Clone

Desktop Pool" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document.

You can detach a persistent disk from its linked-clone virtual machine and store the disk on its original datastore or another datastore. After you detach the disk, the linked-clone virtual machine is deleted. A detached persistent disk is no longer associated with any virtual machine.

You can use several methods to attach a detached persistent disk to another linked-clone virtual machine.

This flexibility has several uses: n

When a linked clone is deleted, you can preserve the user data.

n n n

When an employee leaves the company, another employee can access the departing employee's user data.

A user who has multiple remote desktops can consolidate the user data on a single remote desktop.

If a virtual machine becomes inaccessible in vCenter Server, but the persistent disk is intact, you can import the persistent disk and create a new linked clone using the disk.

N

OTE

Persistent disks must be reconnected to the operating system that was used when they were created.

For example, you cannot detach a persistent disk from a Windows 7 linked clone and recreate or attach the persistent disk to a Windows 8 linked clone.

View can manage persistent disks from linked-clone pools that were created in View 4.5 or later. Persistent disks that were created in earlier versions of View cannot be managed and do not appear on the Persistent

Disks page in View Administrator.

Detach a View Composer Persistent Disk

When you detach a View Composer persistent disk from a linked-clone virtual machine, the disk is stored and the linked clone is deleted. By detaching a persistent disk, you can store and reuse user-specific information with another virtual machine.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Persistent Disks.

2 Select the persistent disk to detach and click Detach.

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3 Choose where to store the persistent disk.

Option

Use current datastore

Use the following datastore

Description

Store the persistent disk on the datastore where it is currently located.

Select a new datastore on which to store the persistent disk. Click Browse, click the down arrow, and select a new datastore from the Choose a

Datastore menu.

You cannot select a local datastore to store a detached persistent disk. You must use a shared datastore or Virtual SAN datastore.

If the persistent disk was originally stored on a Virtual SAN datastore, you can select a Virtual SAN or non-Virtual SAN datastore to store the detached persistent disk. Similarly, if the persistent disk was stored on non-Virtual SAN, you can detach the disk on a non-Virtual SAN or Virtual

SAN datastore.

The View Composer persistent disk is saved on the datastore. The linked-clone virtual machine is deleted and does not appear in View Administrator.

Attach a View Composer Persistent Disk to Another Linked Clone

You can attach a detached persistent disk to another linked-clone virtual machine. Attaching a persistent disk makes the user settings and information in the disk available to the user of the other virtual machine.

You attach a detached persistent disk as a secondary disk on the selected linked-clone virtual machine. The new user of the linked clone has access to the secondary disk and to the existing user information and settings.

You cannot attach a persistent disk that is stored on a non-Virtual SAN datastore to a virtual machine that is stored on a Virtual SAN datastore. Similarly, you cannot attach a disk that is stored on Virtual SAN to a virtual machine that is stored on non-Virtual SAN. View Administrator prevents you from selecting virtual machines that span Virtual SAN and non-Virtual SAN datastores.

To move a detached persistent disk from non-Virtual SAN to Virtual SAN, you can recreate the disk on a virtual machine that is stored on a non-Virtual SAN datastore and rebalance the virtual machine's desktop

pool to a Virtual SAN datastore. See “Recreate a Linked Clone With a Detached Persistent Disk,” on page 162.

Prerequisites n

Verify that the selected virtual machine uses the same operating system as the linked clone in which the persistent disk was created.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Persistent Disks.

2 On the Detached tab, select the persistent disk and click Attach.

3 Select a linked-clone virtual machine to which to attach the persistent disk.

4 Select Attach as a secondary disk.

5 Click Finish.

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What to do next

Make sure that the user of the linked clone has sufficient privileges to use the attached secondary disk. For example, if the original user had certain access permissions on the persistent disk, and the persistent disk is attached as drive

D

on the new linked clone, the new user of the linked clone must have the original user's access permissions on drive

D

.

Log in to the linked clone's guest operating system as an administrator and assign appropriate privileges to the new user.

Edit a View Composer Persistent Disk's Pool or User

You can assign a detached View Composer persistent disk to a new desktoop pool or user if the original desktop pool or user was deleted from View.

A detached persistent disk is still associated with its original desktop pool and user. If the desktop pool or user is deleted from View, you cannot use the persistent disk to recreate a linked-clone virtual machine.

By editing the desktop pool and user, you can use the detached persistent disk to recreate a virtual machine in the new desktop pool. The virtual machine is assigned to the new user.

You can select a new desktop pool, a new user, or both.

Prerequisites n

Verify that the persistent disk's desktop pool or user was deleted from View.

n

Verify that the new desktop pool uses the same operating system as the desktop pool in which persistent disk was created.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Persistent Disks

2 Select the persistent disk for which the user or desktop pool has been deleted and click Edit.

3 (Optional) Select a linked-cloned desktop pool from the list.

4 (Optional) Select a user for the persistent disk.

You can browse your Active Directory for the domain and username.

What to do next

Recreate a linked-clone virtual machine with the detached persistent disk.

Recreate a Linked Clone With a Detached Persistent Disk

When you detach a View Composer persistent disk, the linked clone is deleted. You can give the original user access to the detached user settings and information by recreating the linked-clone virtual machine from the detached disk.

N

OTE

If you recreate a linked-clone virtual machine in a desktop pool that has reached its maximum size, the recreated virtual machine is still added to the desktop pool. The desktop pool grows larger than the specified maximum size.

If a persistent disk's original desktop pool or user was deleted from View, you can assign a new one to the persistent disk. See

“Edit a View Composer Persistent Disk's Pool or User,” on page 162.

View does not support recreating a virtual machine with a persistent disk that is stored on a non-Virtual

SAN datastore if the new virtual machine is stored on a Virtual SAN datastore. Similarly, if the persistent disk is stored on Virtual SAN, View does not support recreating a virtual machine on non-Virtual SAN.

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To move a detached persistent disk from non-Virtual SAN to Virtual SAN, you can recreate the disk on a virtual machine that is stored on a non-Virtual SAN datastore and rebalance the virtual machine's desktop pool to a Virtual SAN datastore.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Persistent Disks.

2 On the Detached tab, select the persistent disk and click Recreate Machine.

You can select multiple persistent disks to recreate a linked-clone virtual machine for each disk.

3 Click OK.

View creates a linked-clone virtual machine for each persistent disk you select and adds the virtual machine to the original desktop pool.

The persistent disks remain on the datastore where they were stored.

Restore a Linked Clone by Importing a Persistent Disk from vSphere

If a linked-clone virtual machine becomes inaccessible in View, you can restore the virtual machine if it was configured with a View Composer persistent disk. You can import the persistent disk from a vSphere datastore into View.

You import the persistent disk file as a detached persistent disk in View. You can either attach the detached disk to an existing virtual machine or recreate the original linked clone in View.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Persistent Disks.

2 On the Detached tab, click Import from vCenter.

3 Select a vCenter Server instance.

4 Select the datacenter where the disk file is located.

5 Select a linked-clone desktop pool in which to create a new linked clone virtual machine with the persistent disk.

6 In the Persistent Disk File text box, click Browse, click the down arrow, and select a datastore from the

Choose a Datastore menu.

You cannot import a persistent disk from a local datastore. Only shared datastores are available.

7 Click the datastore name to display its disk storage files and virtual-machine files.

8 Select the persistent-disk file you want to import.

9 In the User text box, click Browse, select a user to assign to the virtual machine, and click OK.

The disk file is imported into View as a detached persistent disk.

What to do next

To restore the linked-clone virtual machine, you can recreate the original virtual machine or attach the detached persistent disk to another virtual machine.

For details, see “Recreate a Linked Clone With a Detached Persistent Disk,” on page 162 and

“Attach a View

Composer Persistent Disk to Another Linked Clone,” on page 161.

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Delete a Detached View Composer Persistent Disk

When you delete a detached persistent disk, you can remove the disk from View and leave it on the datastore or delete the disk from View and the datastore.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Persistent Disks.

2 On the Detached tab, select the persistent disk and click Delete.

3 Choose whether to delete the disk from the datastore or let it remain on the datastore after it is removed from View.

Option

Delete from disk

Delete from View only

4 Click OK.

Description

After the deletion, the persistent disk no longer exists.

After the deletion, the persistent disk is no longer accessible in View but remains on the datastore.

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Managing Desktop Pools, Machines, and Sessions

10

In View Administrator, you can manage desktop pools, virtual machine-based desktops, physical machinebased desktops, desktop sessions, and application sessions.

This chapter includes the following topics: n

“Change the Image of an Instant-Clone Desktop Pool,” on page 165

n n n n n

“Managing Desktop Pools,” on page 166

“Managing Virtual Machine-Based Desktops,” on page 174

“Managing Unmanaged Machines,” on page 179

“Manage Remote Desktop and Application Sessions,” on page 182

“Export View Information to External Files,” on page 183

Change the Image of an Instant-Clone Desktop Pool

You can change the image of an instant-clone desktop pool to push out changes or to revert to a previous snapshot. You can select any snapshot from any VM, not just the current parent VM.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools

2 Double-clicking the pool ID of the pool that you want to change.

3 Select Push Image > Schedule.

4 Follow the wizard instructions.

You can schedule the task to start immediately or sometime in the future. Clones with no user sessions will be recreated at the scheduled time. For clones with user sessions, you can specify whether to force the users to log off or wait. When the users log off, their clones are recreated. On the Ready to Complete page, you can click Show Details to see the list of desktops.

After you initiate this operation, publishing of the new image happens immediately. For more information about publishing, see "Instant-Clone Desktop Pools" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document. Recreating the clones will happen at the time that you specified in the push image wizard.

In View Administrator, you can monitor the operation by clicking Catalog > Desktop Pools, and doubleclicking the pool ID. The Summary tab shows the current image and pending image information. You can see the tasks that push image triggers in the Tasks tab, where you can click Cancel task, Pause task, or

Resume task to terminate a task, suspend a task, or resume a suspended task, respectively.

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After you schedule a push image and before the operation is started, you can reschedule the operation by clicking Push Image > Reschedule, or cancel the operation by clicking Push Image > Cancel. If you cancel the operation while clone recreation is in progress, the clones that have the new image remain in the pool, which means that the pool will have a mix of clones, some with the new image and the others with the old image. The clones with the old image will be recreated with the new image when users log off or if you manually remove them. To ensure that all the clones have the same image, you can remove them all and they will be recreated with the same image.

Managing Desktop Pools

In View Administrator you can perform administrative tasks on a desktop pool such as editing its properties, enabling, disabling, or deleting the pool.

Edit a Desktop Pool

You can edit an existing desktop pool to configure settings such as the number of spare machines, datastores, and customization specifications.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the desktop pool settings that you can and cannot change after a desktop pool is

created. See “Modifying Settings in an Existing Desktop Pool,” on page 166 and

“Fixed Settings in an

Existing Desktop Pool,” on page 168.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

2 Select a desktop pool and click Edit.

3 Click a tab in the Edit dialog box and reconfigure desktop pool options.

4 Click OK.

If you change the image of an instant-clone desktop pool, the image publishing operation starts immediately. In View Administrator, the summary page for the desktop pool shows the state for the pending image as

Publishing - Infrastructure Change

.

If you change the cluster of an instant-clone desktop pool, new replica and parent VMs are created in the new cluster. You can initiate a push image using the same image to have new clones created in the new cluster. However, the template VM, which is used in the cloning process, remains in the old cluster. You can put the ESXi host that the template VM is on in maintenance mode but you cannot migrate the template VM.

To completely remove all infrastructure VMs, including the template VM, from the old cluster, you can initiate a push image using a new image.

Modifying Settings in an Existing Desktop Pool

After you create a desktop pool, you can change certain configuration settings.

Table 10 ‑1. Editable Settings in an Existing Desktop Pool

Configuration Tab Description

General

Desktop Pool

Settings

Edit desktop pool-naming options and storage policy management settings. Storage policy management settings determine whether to use a Virtual SAN datastore. If you do not use

Virtual SAN, you can select separate datastores for replica and OS disks.

N

OTE

For View Composer linked clones, if you change to using Virtual SAN, you must use a rebalance operation to migrate all virtual machines in the desktop pool to the Virtual SAN datastore.

Edit machine settings such as the power policy, display protocol, and Adobe Flash settings. In

Horizon 7.0, power policy is not supported for instant clones.

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Table 10 ‑1. Editable Settings in an Existing Desktop Pool (Continued)

Configuration Tab Description

Provisioning

Settings vCenter Settings

Edit desktop pool provisioning options and add machines to the desktop pool.

This tab is available for automated desktop pools only.

Edit the virtual machine template or default base image. Add or change the vCenter Server instance, ESXi host or cluster, datastores, and other vCenter features.

The new values only affect virtual machines that are created after the settings are changed. The new settings do not affect existing virtual machines.

This tab is available for automated desktop pools only.

Guest Customization If Sysprep was selected, you can change the customization specification. In Horizon 7.0, Sysprep is not available to instant clones.

If QuickPrep was selected, you can change the Active Directory domain and container and specify the power-off and post-synchronization scripts.

If ClonePrep was selected, you can change the Active Directory container and specify the poweroff and post-synchronization scripts. You cannot change the domain.

N

OTE

For instant clones, if you change the power-off or post-synchronization script name, or their parameters, and the new script exists in the current image, the new script is executed and the new parameters are used when a new clone is created. If the new script does not exist in the current image, you must select or create an image that has the new script and do a push image.

For View Composer linked clones, if you change the power-off or post-synchronization script name, the change applies at the next recompose operation. However, changes to the power-off script parameters or the post-synchronization script parameters do apply to the clones that are created with the current snapshot.

This tab is available for automated desktop pools only.

Advanced Storage >

Use View Storage

Accelerator

Advanced Storage >

Reclaim VM disk space

If you select or deselect Use View Storage Accelerator, or reschedule when the View Storage

Accelerator digest files are regenerated, the new settings do affect existing virtual machines. See

"Configure View Storage Accelerator for Desktop Pools" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application

Pools in View document.

N

OTE

If you select Use View Storage Accelerator on an existing linked-clone desktop pool, and the replica was not previously enabled for View Storage Accelerator, this feature might not take effect right away. View Storage Accelerator cannot be enabled while the replica is in use. You can force View Storage Accelerator to be enabled by recomposing the desktop pool to a new parent virtual machine.

This option is automatically enabled on instant clones.

If you select or deselect Reclaim VM disk space, or reschedule when the virtual machine disk space reclamation occurs, the new settings do affect existing virtual machines if they were created with space-efficient disks. See "Reclaim Disk Space on Linked-Clone Virtual Machines" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document.

This option does not apply to instant clones.

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Table 10 ‑1. Editable Settings in an Existing Desktop Pool (Continued)

Configuration Tab

Advanced Storage >

Use native NFS snapshots (VAAI)

Advanced Storage >

Transparent Page

Sharing Scope

Description

If you select or deselect Use native NFS snapshots (VAAI), the new setting only affects virtual machines that are created after the settings are changed. You can change existing virtual machines to become native NFS snapshot clones by recomposing and, if needed, rebalancing the desktop pool. See "Using View Composer Array Integration with Native NFS Snapshot

Technology" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document.

This option is not supported for instant clones.

If you change the Transparent Page Sharing Scope setting, the new setting takes effect the next time the virtual machine is powered on.

Select the level at which to allow transparent page sharing (TPS). The choices are Virtual

Machine (the default), Pool, Pod, or Global. If you turn on TPS for all the machines in the pool, pod, or globally, the ESXi host eliminates redundant copies of memory pages that result if the machines use the same guest operating system or applications.

Page sharing happens on the ESXi host. For example, if you enable TPS at the pool level but the pool is spread across multiple ESXi hosts, only virtual machines on the same host and within the same pool will share pages. At the global level, all machines managed by View on the same ESXi host can share memory pages, regardless of which pool the machines reside in.

N

OTE

The default setting is not to share memory pages among machines because TPS can pose a security risk. Research indicates that TPS could possibly be abused to gain unauthorized access to data in very limited configuration scenarios.

This option is automatically enabled on instant clones.

If you edit a instant-clone desktop pool to add or remove datastores, rebalancing of the VMs happens automatically when a new clone must be created, for example, when a user logs off or when you increase the size of the pool. If you want rebalancing to happen faster, take the following actions: n

If you remove a datastore, manually remove the desktops on that datastore so that the new desktops will be created on the remaining datastores.

n

If you add a datastore, manually remove some desktops from the original datastores so that the new desktops will be created on the new datastore. You can also remove all desktops so that when they are recreated, they will be evenly distributed across the datastores.

Fixed Settings in an Existing Desktop Pool

After you create a desktop pool, you cannot change certain configuration settings.

Table 10 ‑2. Fixed Settings in an Existing Desktop Pool

Setting Description

Pool type

User assignment

Type of virtual machine

Pool ID

Machine-naming and provisioning method vCenter settings

After you create an automated, manual, or RDS desktop pool, you cannot change the pool type.

You cannot switch between dedicated assignments and floating assignments.

You cannot switch between full virtual machines and linked-clone virtual machines.

You cannot change the pool ID.

To add virtual machines to a desktop pool, you must use the provisioning method that was used to create the pool. You cannot switch between specifying machine names manually and using a naming pattern.

If you specify names manually, you can add names to the list of machine names.

If you use a naming pattern, you can increase the maximum number of machines.

You cannot change vCenter settings for existing virtual machines.

You can change vCenter settings in the Edit dialog box, but the values affect only new virtual machines that are created after the settings are changed.

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Table 10 ‑2. Fixed Settings in an Existing Desktop Pool (Continued)

Setting

View Composer persistent disks

View Composer customization method

Description

You cannot configure persistent disks after a linked-clone desktop pool is created without persistent disks.

After you customize a linked-clone desktop pool with QuickPrep or Sysprep, you cannot switch to the other customization method when you create or recompose virtual machines in the pool.

Change the Size of an Automated Pool Provisioned by a Naming Pattern

When you provision an automated desktop pool by using a naming pattern, you can increase or decrease the size of the pool by changing the maximum number of machines.

Prerequisites n n

Verify that you provisioned the desktop pool by using a naming pattern. If you specify machine names

manually, see “Add Machines to an Automated Pool Provisioned by a List of Names,” on page 169.

Verify that the desktop pool is automated.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

2 Select the desktop pool and click Edit.

3 On the Provisioning Settings tab, type the new number of machines in the desktop pool in the Max

number of machines text box.

If you increase the desktop pool size, new machines can be added to the pool up to the maximum number.

If you decrease the size of a floating-assignment pool, unused machines are deleted. If more users are logged into the pool than the new maximum, the pool size decreases after users log off.

If you decrease the size of a dedicated-assignment pool, unassigned machines are deleted. If more users are assigned to machines than the new maximum, the pool size decreases after you unassign users.

N

OTE

When you decrease the size of a desktop pool, the actual number of machines might be larger than

Max number of machines if more users are currently logged in or assigned to machines than the value that is specified in Max number of machines.

Add Machines to an Automated Pool Provisioned by a List of Names

To add machines to an automated desktop pool provisioned by manually specifying machine names, you provide another list of new machine names. This feature lets you expand a desktop pool and continue to use your company's naming conventions.

In Horizon 7.0, this feature is not supported for instant clones.

Follow these guidelines for manually adding machine names: n n n

Type each machine name on a separate line.

A machine name can have up to 15 alphanumeric characters.

You can add a user name to each machine entry. Use a comma to separate the user name from the machine name.

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In this example, two machines are added. The second machine is associated with a user:

Desktop-001

Desktop-002,abccorp.com/jdoe

N

OTE

In a floating-assignment pool, you cannot associate user names with machine names. The machines are not dedicated to the associated users. In a floating-assignment pool, all machines that are not currently in use remain accessible to any user who logs in.

Prerequisites

Verify that you created the desktop pool by manually specifying machine names. You cannot add machines by providing new machine names if you created the pool by providing a naming pattern.

Procedure

1 Create a text file that contains the list of additional machine names.

If you intend to add only a few machines, you can type the machine names directly in the Add Desktop

Pool wizard. You do not have to create a separate text file.

2 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

3 Select the desktop pool to be expanded.

4 Click Edit.

5 Click the Provisioning Settings tab.

6 Click Add Machines.

7 Copy your list of machine names in the Enter Machine Names page and click Next.

The Enter Machine Names wizard displays the machine list and indicates validation errors with a red

X.

8 Correct invalid machine names.

a Place your cursor over an invalid name to display the related error message at the bottom of the page.

b Click Back.

c Edit the incorrect names and click Next.

9 Click Finish.

10 Click OK.

In vCenter Server, you can monitor the creation of the new virtual machines.

In View Administrator, you can view the machines as they are added to the desktop pool by selecting

Catalog > Desktop Pools.

Disable or Enable a Desktop Pool

When you disable a desktop pool, the pool is no longer presented to users and pool provisioning is stopped.

Users have no access to the pool. After you disable a pool, you can enable it again.

You can disable a desktop pool to prevent users from accessing their remote desktops while you prepare the desktops for use. If a desktop pool is no longer needed, you can use the disable feature to withdraw the pool from active use without having to delete the desktop pool definition from View.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

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2 Select a desktop pool and change the status of the pool.

Option

Disable the pool

Enable the pool

3 Click OK.

Action

Select Disable Desktop Pool from the Status drop-down menu.

Select Enable Desktop Pool from the Status drop-down menu.

Disable or Enable Provisioning in an Automated Desktop Pool

When you disable provisioning in an automated desktop pool, View stops provisioning new virtual machines for the pool. After you disable provisioning, you can enable provisioning again.

Before you change a desktop pool's configuration, you can disable provisioning to ensure that no new machines are created with the old configuration. You also can disable provisioning to prevent View from using additional storage when a pool is close to filling up the available space.

When provisioning is disabled in a linked-clone pool, View stops new machines from being provisioned and stops machines from being customized after they are recomposed or rebalanced.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

2 Select a desktop pool and change the status of the pool.

Option

Disable provisioning

Enable provisioning

3 Click OK.

Action

Select Disable Provisioning from the Status drop-down menu.

Select Enable Provisioning from the Status drop-down menu.

Configure Adobe Flash Quality and Throttling

You can set Adobe Flash quality and throttling modes to reduce the amount of bandwidth that is used by

Adobe Flash content in remote desktops. This reduction can improve the overall browsing experience and make other applications that run in the remote desktop more responsive.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with Adobe Flash quality and throttling settings. See “Adobe Flash Quality and

Throttling,” on page 172.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

2 Select a desktop pool and click Edit.

3 On the Desktop Pool Settings tab, select a quality mode from the Adobe Flash quality menu and a throttling mode from the Adobe Flash throttling menu.

4 Click OK.

N

OTE

Adobe Flash bandwidth-reduction settings do not take effect until Horizon Client reconnects with the remote desktop.

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Adobe Flash Quality and Throttling

You can specify a maximum allowable level of quality for Adobe Flash content that overrides Web page settings. If Adobe Flash quality for a Web page is higher than the maximum level allowed, quality is reduced to the specified maximum. Lower quality results in more bandwidth savings.

To make use of Adobe Flash bandwidth-reduction settings, Adobe Flash must not be running in full screen mode.

Table 10-3 shows the available Adobe Flash render-quality settings.

Table 10 ‑3. Adobe Flash Quality Settings

Quality Setting Description

Do not control

Low

Medium

High

Quality is determined by Web page settings.

This setting results in the most bandwidth savings.

This setting results in moderate bandwidth savings.

This setting results in the least bandwidth savings.

If no maximum level of quality is specified, the system defaults to a value of Low.

Adobe Flash uses timer services to update what is shown on the screen at a given time. A typical Adobe

Flash timer interval value is between 4 and 50 milliseconds. By throttling, or prolonging, the interval, you can reduce the frame rate and thereby reduce bandwidth.

Table 10-4 shows the available Adobe Flash throttling settings.

Table 10 ‑4. Adobe Flash Throttling Settings

Throttling Setting

Disabled

Conservative

Moderate

Aggressive

Description

No throttling is performed. The timer interval is not modified.

Timer interval is 100 milliseconds. This setting results in the lowest number of dropped frames.

Timer interval is 500 milliseconds.

Timer interval is 2500 milliseconds. This setting results in the highest number of dropped frames.

Audio speed remains constant regardless of which throttling setting you select.

Delete a Desktop Pool

When you delete a desktop pool, users can no longer launch new remote desktops in the pool.

Depending on the type of desktop pool, you have various options regarding how View handles persistent disks, vCenter Server full virtual machines, and users' active sessions.

By default, you can delete a desktop pool even if desktop machines exist in the pool. View does not give you a warning. You can configure View to not allow the deletion of a pool that contains desktop machines. For details, see

“Configure View to Disallow the Deletion of a Desktop Pool That Contains Desktop Machines,” on page 173. If you configure the setting, you must delete all the machines in a desktop pool before you can

delete the pool.

With an automated desktop pool of instant clones or View Composer linked clones, View always deletes the virtual machines from disk.

I

MPORTANT

Do not delete the virtual machines in vCenter Server before you delete a desktop pool with

View Administrator. This action could put View components into an inconsistent state.

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Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

2 Select a desktop pool and click Delete.

3 Choose how to delete the desktop pool.

Pool

Automated desktop pool of instant clones or linked clones without persistent disks.

Automated desktop pool of linked clones with persistent disks.

Options

No available options. View deletes all virtual machines from disk. Users' sessions to their remote desktops are terminated.

Choose whether to detach or delete the persistent disks when the linkedclone virtual machines are deleted.

In both cases, View deletes all virtual machines from disk, and users' sessions to their remote desktops are terminated.

If you detach a persistent disk, the linked-clone virtual machine that contained the persistent disk can be recreated, or the persistent disk can be attached to another virtual machine. You can store detached persistent disks in the same datastore or a different one. If you select a different datastore, you cannot store detached persistent disks on a local datastore.

You must use a shared datastore.

You can only detach persistent disks that were created in View 4.5 or later releases.

Choose whether to keep or delete the virtual machines in vCenter Server.

Automated desktop pool of full virtual machines.

Manual desktop pool of vCenter

Server virtual machines.

RDS desktop pool.

Automated desktop pool of full virtual machines.

Manual desktop pool.

If there are users who are connected to their remote desktops, choose whether to keep users' sessions active or terminate them. Note that View

Connection Server does not keep track of sessions that are kept active.

When you delete a desktop pool, linked-clone virtual machines' computer accounts are removed from

Active Directory. Full virtual machines' computer accounts remain in Active Directory. To remove these accounts, you must manually delete them from Active Directory.

If you delete an instant-clone desktop pool, it can take some time for View to delete the internal VMs from vCenter Server. Do not remove vCenter Server from View Administrator until you verify that all the internal VMs are deleted.

Configure View to Disallow the Deletion of a Desktop Pool That Contains

Desktop Machines

You can configure View to disallow the deletion of a desktop pool that contains desktop machines. By default, View allows the deletion of such a pool.

If you configure this setting, you must delete all the machines in a desktop pool before you can delete the pool.

Prerequisites

See the Microsoft TechNet Web site for information on how to use the ADSI Edit utility on your Windows server.

Procedure

1 Start the ADSI Edit utility on the View Connection Server host.

2 In the Connection Settings dialog box, select or connect to DC=vdi,DC=vmware,DC=int.

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3 In the Computer pane, select or type localhost:389 or the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of the

View Connection Server host followed by port 389.

For example: localhost:389 or mycomputer.mydomain.com:389

4 On the object CN=Common, OU=Global, OU=Properties, edit the pae-NameValuePair attribute and add the value cs-disableNonEmptyPoolDelete=1.

The new setting takes effect immediately. You do not need to restart the View Connection Server service.

Managing Virtual Machine-Based Desktops

A virtual machine-based desktop is a desktop that is from an automated desktop pool or a manual desktop pool that contains vCenter Server virtual machines.

Assign a Machine to a User

In a dedicated-assignment pool, you can assign a user to be the owner of the virtual machine that hosts a remote desktop. Only the assigned user can log in and connect to the remote desktop.

View assigns machines to users in these situations.

n

When you create a desktop pool and select the Enable automatic assignment setting.

N

OTE

If you select the Enable automatic assignment setting, you can still manually assign machines to users.

n

When you create an automated pool, select the Specify names manually setting, and provide user names with the machine names.

If you do not select either setting in a dedicated-assignment pool, users do not have access to remote desktops. You must manually assign a machine to each user.

You can also use the vdmadmin

command to assign machines to users. See

“Assigning Dedicated Machines

Using the -L Option,” on page 250.

Prerequisites n

Verify that the remote desktop virtual machine belongs to a dedicated-assignment pool. In View

Administrator, the desktop pool assignment appears in the Desktop Pool column the Machines page.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Machines, or select Catalog > Desktop Pools, double-click a pool ID, and click the Inventory tab.

2 Select the machine.

3 Select Assign User from the More Commands drop-down menu.

4 Choose whether to find users or groups, select a domain, and type a search string in the Name or

Description text box.

5 Select the user or group name and click OK.

Unassign a User from a Dedicated Machine

In a dedicated-assignment pool, you can remove a machine assignment to a user.

You can also use the vdmadmin

command to remove a machine assignment to a user. See

“Assigning

Dedicated Machines Using the -L Option,” on page 250.

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Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Machines or select Catalog > Desktop Pools, double-click a pool ID, and click the Inventory tab.

2 Select the machine.

3 Select Unassign User from the More Commands drop-down menu.

4 Click OK.

The machine is available and can be assigned to another user.

Customize Existing Machines in Maintenance Mode

After a desktop pool is created, you can customize, modify, or test individual machines by placing them in maintenance mode. When a machine is in maintenance mode, users cannot access the virtual-machine desktop.

You place existing machines in maintenance mode one at a time. You can remove multiple machines from maintenance mode in one operation.

When you create a desktop pool, you can start all the machines in the pool in maintenance mode if you specify machine names manually. For details, see "Customizing Desktops in Maintenance Mode" in the

Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document.

In Horizon 7.0, this feature is not supported for instant clones.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Machines or select Catalog > Desktop Pools, double-click a pool ID, and select the Inventory tab.

2 Select a machine.

3 Select Enter Maintenance Mode from the More Commands drop-down menu.

4 Customize, modify, or test the virtual-machine desktop.

5

Repeat Step 2

through

Step 4 for all virtual machines that you want to customize.

6 Select the customized machines and select Exit Maintenance Mode from the More Commands dropdown menu.

The modified virtual-machine desktops are available to users.

Monitor Virtual-Machine Desktop Status

You can quickly survey the status of virtual-machine desktops in your View deployment by using the View

Administrator dashboard. For example, you can display all disconnected virtual machines or virtual machines that are in maintenance mode.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the virtual machine states. See

“Status of vCenter Server Virtual Machines,” on page 176.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, click Dashboard.

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2 In the Machine Status pane, expand a status folder.

Option Description

Preparing Lists the machine states while the virtual machine is being provisioned, deleted, or in maintenance mode.

Lists the machine error states.

Problem Machines

Prepared for use Lists the machine states when the virtual machine is ready for use.

3 Locate the machine status and click the hyperlinked number next to it.

The Machines page displays all virtual machines with the selected status.

What to do next

You can click a machine name to see details about the virtual machine or click the View Administrator back arrow to return to the dashboard page.

Status of vCenter Server Virtual Machines

Virtual machines that are managed by vCenter Server can be in various states of operation and availability.

In View Administrator, you can track the status of machines in the right-hand column of the Machines page.

Table 10-5 shows the operational state of virtual-machine desktops that are displayed in View

Administrator. A desktop can be in only one state at a time.

Table 10 ‑5. Status of Virtual Machines That Are Managed by vCenter Server

Status Description

Provisioning

Customizing

Deleting

Waiting for Agent

Maintenance mode

Startup

Agent disabled

Agent unreachable

Invalid IP

Agent needs reboot

The virtual machine is being provisioned.

The virtual machine in an automated pool is being customized.

The virtual machine is marked for deletion. View will delete the virtual machine soon.

View Connection Server is waiting to establish communication with View Agent or

Horizon Agent on a virtual machine in a manual pool.

The virtual machine is in maintenance mode. Users cannot log in or use the virtual machine.

View Agent or Horizon Agent has started on the virtual machine, but other required services such as the display protocol are still starting. For example, View Agent cannot establish an RDP connection with client computers until RDP has finished starting.

The agent startup period allows other processes such as protocol services to start up as well.

This state can occur in two cases. First, in a desktop pool with the Delete or refresh

machine on logoff or Delete machine after logoff setting enabled, a desktop session is logged out, but the virtual machine is not yet refreshed or deleted. Second, View

Connection Server disables View Agent or Horizon Agent just before sending a request to power off the virtual machine.

This state ensures that a new desktop session cannot be started on the virtual machine.

View Connection Server cannot establish communication with View Agent or

Horizon Agent on a virtual machine.

The subnet mask registry setting is configured on the virtual machine, and no active network adapters have an IP address within the configured range.

A View component was upgraded, and the virtual machine must be restarted to allow

View Agent or Horizon Agent to operate with the upgraded component.

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Table 10 ‑5. Status of Virtual Machines That Are Managed by vCenter Server (Continued)

Status

Protocol failure

Domain failure

Already used

Configuration error

Provisioning error

Error

Unassigned user connected

Unassigned user disconnected

Unknown

Provisioned

Available

Connected

Disconnected

In progress

Description

A display protocol did not start before the View Agent or Horizon Agent startup period expired.

N

OTE

View Administrator can display machines in a Protocol failure state when one protocol failed but other protocols started successfully. For example, the Protocol

failure state might be displayed when HTML Access failed but PCoIP and RDP are working. In this case, the machines are available and Horizon Client devices can access them through PCoIP or RDP.

The virtual machine encountered a problem reaching the domain. The domain server was not accessible, or the domain authentication failed.

In a desktop pool with the Delete or refresh machine on logoff or Delete machine

after logoff setting enabled, there is no session on the virtual machine, but the session was not logged off.

This condition might occur if a virtual machine shuts down unexpectedly or the user resets the machine during a session. By default, when a virtual machine is in this state,

View prevents any other Horizon Client devices from accessing the desktop.

The display protocol such as RDP or PCoIP is not enabled.

An error occurred during provisioning.

An unknown error occurred in the virtual machine.

A user other than the assigned user is logged in to a virtual machine in a dedicated pool.

For example, this state can occur if an administrator starts vSphere Client, opens a console on the virtual machine, and logs in.

A user other than the assigned user is logged in and disconnected from a virtual machine in a dedicated-assignment pool.

The virtual machine is in an unknown state.

The virtual machine is powered off or suspended.

The virtual machine is powered on and ready for a connection. In a dedicated pool, the virtual machine is assigned to a user and will start when the user logs in.

The virtual machine is in a session and has a remote connection to the Horizon Client device.

The virtual machine is in a session, but it is disconnected from the Horizon Client device.

The virtual machine is in a transitional state during a maintenance operation.

While a machine is in a particular state, it can be subject to further conditions. View Administrator displays these conditions as suffixes to the machine state. For example, View Administrator might display the

Customizing (missing) state.

Table 10-6 shows these additional conditions.

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Table 10 ‑6. Machine Status Conditions

Condition Description

Missing

Task halted

The virtual machine is missing in vCenter Server.

Typically, the virtual machine was deleted in vCenter Server, but the View LDAP configuration still has a record of the machine.

An instant clone task such as push image or a View Composer operation such as refresh, recompose, or rebalance was stopped.

For details about troubleshooting a recompose operation, see “Correcting an

Unsuccessful Recomposition,” on page 156.

For details about View Composer error states, see "View Composer Provisioning

Errors" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document.

The Task halted condition applies to all virtual machines that were selected for the operation, but on which the operation has not yet started. Virtual machines in the pool that are not selected for the operation are not placed in the Task halted condition.

A machine state can be subject to both conditions, (missing, task halted) , if a View Composer task was stopped and the virtual machine is missing in vCenter Server.

Delete Virtual-Machine Desktops

When you delete a virtual-machine desktop, users can no longer access the desktop. A virtual-machine desktop is either a vCenter Server virtual machine or an unmanaged virtual machine.

Users in currently active sessions can continue to use full virtual-machine desktops if you keep the virtual machines in vCenter Server. After the users log off, they cannot access the deleted virtual-machine desktops.

With instant clones and linked-clone virtual machines, vCenter Server always deletes the virtual machines from disk.

N

OTE

Do not delete the virtual machines in vCenter Server before you delete virtual-machine desktops with View Administrator. This action could put View components into an inconsistent state.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Machines.

2 Select the vCenter VMs tab or the Others tab.

3 Select one or more machines and click Remove.

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4 Choose how to delete the virtual-machine desktop.

Option

Pool that contains full virtualmachine desktops

View Composer linked-clone pool with persistent disks

Description

Choose whether to keep or delete the virtual machines in vCenter Server.

If you delete the virtual machines from disk, users in active sessions are disconnected from their desktops.

If you keep the virtual machines in vCenter Server, choose whether to let users in active sessions stay connected to their desktops or disconnect them.

Choose whether to detach or delete the persistent disks when the virtualmachine desktops are deleted.

In both cases, vCenter Server deletes the linked-clone virtual machines from disk. Users in currently active sessions are disconnected from their remote desktops.

If you detach a persistent disk, the linked-clone virtual machine that contained the persistent disk can be recreated, or the persistent disk can be attached to another virtual machine. You can store detached persistent disks in the same datastore or a different one. If you select a different datastore, you cannot store detached persistent disks on a local datastore.

You must use a shared datastore.

You can only detach persistent disks that were created in View 4.5 or later releases.

vCenter Server deletes the linked-clone virtual machines from disk. Users in currently active sessions are disconnected from their remote desktops.

Instant-clone pool and View

Composer linked-clone pool without persistent disks

When you delete virtual-machine desktops, linked-clone virtual machine computer accounts are removed from Active Directory. Full virtual machine accounts remain in Active Directory. To remove these accounts, you must manually delete them from Active Directory.

Recover Instant-Clone Desktops

When an instant-clone desktop is in an error state, you have the option to recover it. The desktop is recreated from the current base image.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools, double-click a pool's ID, and click the

Inventory tab.

2 Select one or more machines and click Recover.

Managing Unmanaged Machines

In View Administrator, you can add and remove unmanaged machines from manual desktop pools and remove registered machines from View. Unmanaged machines include physical computers and virtual machines that are not managed by vCenter Server.

For information about deleting a desktop pool that contains unmanaged machines, see “Delete a Desktop

Pool,” on page 172.

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When you reconfigure a setting that affects an unmanaged machine, it can take up to 10 minutes for the new setting to take effect. For example, if you change the Message security mode in Global Settings or change the

Automatically logoff after disconnect setting for a pool, View might take up to 10 minutes to reconfigure the affected unmanaged machines.

N

OTE

RDS hosts are also unmanaged machines, since they are not generated from a parent virtual machine or template and managed by vCenter Server. RDS hosts support session-based desktops and applications and are treated as a separate category. See

“Managing RDS Hosts,” on page 189.

Add an Unmanaged Machine to a Manual Pool

You can increase the size of a manual desktop pool by adding unmanaged machines to the pool.

Prerequisites

Verify that Horizon Agent is installed on the unmanaged machine. For information about preparing an unmanaged machine, see "Install Horizon Agent on an Unmanaged Machine" in the Setting up Desktop and

Application Pools in View document.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

2 Double-click the pool ID of the manual pool.

3 In the Inventory tab, click Add.

4 Select unmanaged machines from the Add Desktops window and click OK.

The unmanaged machines are added to the pool.

Remove an Unmanaged Machine from a Manual Desktop Pool

You can reduce the size of a manual desktop pool by removing unmanaged machines from the pool.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.

2 Double-click the pool ID of the manual pool.

3 Select the Inventory tab.

4 Select the unmanaged machines to remove.

5 Click Remove.

6 If users are logged in to the unmanaged machine-based desktops, choose whether to terminate the sessions or let the sessions remain active.

Option

Leave active

Description

Active sessions remain until the user logs off. View Connection Server does not keep track of these sessions.

Active sessions end immediately.

Terminate

7 Click OK.

The unmanaged machines are removed from the pool.

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Remove Registered Machines from View

If you do not plan to use a registered machine again, you can remove it from View.

There are two types of registered machines in View: RDS Hosts and Others. Unmanaged machines are in the

Others category. Unmanaged machines include physical computers and virtual machines that are not managed by vCenter Server. They are used to form manual desktop pools that do not contain vCenter

Server virtual machines.

After you remove a registered machine, it becomes unavailable in View. To make the machine available again, you must reinstall Horizon Agent.

Prerequisites

Verify that the registered machines that you want to remove are not being used in any desktop pool.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Registered Machines.

2 Click the Others tab.

3 Select one or more machines and click Remove.

You can select only machines that are not being used by a desktop pool.

4 Click OK to confirm.

Status of Unmanaged Machines

Unmanaged machines, which are physical computers or virtual machines that are not managed by vCenter

Server, can be in various states of operation and availability. In View Administrator, you can track the status of unmanaged machines in the right-hand column of the Machines page under the Others tab.

Table 10-7 shows the operational state of unmanaged machines that are displayed in View Administrator. A

machine can be in only one state at a time.

Table 10 ‑7. Status of Unmanaged Machines

Status Description

Startup

Validating

Agent disabled

Agent unreachable

Invalid IP

Agent needs reboot

View Agent or Horizon Agent has started on the machine, but other required services such as the display protocol are still starting. The agent startup period allows other processes such as protocol services to start up as well.

This state occurs after View Connection Server first becomes aware of the machine, typically after View Connection Server is started or restarted, and before the first successful communication with View Agent or Horizon Agent on the machine.

Typically, this state is transient. It is not the same as the Agent unreachable state, which indicates a communication problem.

This state can occur if View Connection Server disables View Agent or Horizon Agent.

This state ensures that a new desktop session cannot be started on the machine.

View Connection Server cannot establish communication with View Agent or

Horizon Agent on the machine. The machine might be powered off.

The subnet mask registry setting is configured on the machine, and no active network adapters have an IP address within the configured range.

A View component was upgraded, and the machine must be restarted to allow View

Agent or Horizon Agent to operate with the upgraded component.

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Table 10 ‑7. Status of Unmanaged Machines (Continued)

Status

Protocol failure

Domain failure

Configuration error

Unassigned user connected

Description

A display protocol did not start before the View Agent or Horizon Agent startup period expired.

N

OTE

View Administrator can display machines in a Protocol failure state when one protocol failed but other protocols started successfully. For example, the Protocol

failure state might be displayed when HTML Access failed but PCoIP and RDP are working. In this case, the machines are available and Horizon Client devices can access them through PCoIP or RDP.

The machine encountered a problem reaching the domain. The domain server was not accessible, or the domain authentication failed.

The display protocol such as RDP or another protocol is not enabled.

A user other than the assigned user is logged in to a machine in a dedicatedassignment pool.

For example, this state can occur if an administrator logs in to the unmanaged machine without using Horizon Client.

Unassigned user disconnected A user other than the assigned user is logged in and disconnected from a machine in a dedicated-assignment pool.

Unknown The machine is in an unknown state.

Available

Connected

Disconnected

The desktop-source computer is powered on and the desktop is ready for a connection.

In a dedicated pool, the desktop is assigned to a user. The desktop starts when the user logs in.

The desktop is in a session and has a remote connection to a Horizon Client device.

The desktop is in a session, but it is disconnected from the Horizon Client device.

Manage Remote Desktop and Application Sessions

When a user launches a remote desktop or application, a session is created. You can disconnect and log off sessions, send messages to clients, and reset virtual machines.

In Horizon 7.0, these operations are not supported for instant clones.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, navigate to where session information is displayed.

Session Type

Remote desktop sessions

Navigation

Select Catalog > Desktop Pools, double-click a pool's ID, and click the

Sessions tab.

Select Monitoring > Sessions.

Remote desktop and application sessions

Sessions associated with a user or user group n n n

Select Users and Groups.

Double-click a user's name or a user group's name.

Click on the Sessions tab.

2 Select a session.

To send a message to users, you can select multiple sessions. You can perform the other operations on only one session at a time.

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3 Choose whether to disconnect, log off, send a message, or reset a virtual machine.

Option

Disconnect Session

Logoff Session

Reset Virtual Machine

Send Message

4 Click OK.

Description

Disconnects the user from the session.

Logs the user off the session. Data that is not saved is lost.

Restarts the virtual machine without a graceful shutdown. This action applies only to a desktop session in an automated pool or a manual pool that contains vCenter Server virtual machines.

Send a message to Horizon Client. You can label the message as Info,

Warning, or Error.

Export View Information to External Files

In View Administrator, you can export View table information to external files. You can export the tables that list users and groups, pools, machines, View Composer persistent disks, ThinApp applications, events, and VDI sessions. You can view and manage the information in a spreadsheet or another tool.

For example, you might collect information about machines that are managed by more than one View

Connection Server instance or group of replicated View Connection Server instances. You can export the

Machines table from each View Administrator interface and view it in a spreadsheet.

When you export a View Administrator table, it is saved as a comma-separated value (CSV) file. This feature exports the entire table, not individual pages.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, display the table you want to export.

For example, click Resources > Machines to display the machines table.

2 Click the export icon in the upper right corner of the table.

When you point to the icon, the Export table contents tooltip appears.

3 Type a filename for the CSV file in the Select location for download dialog box.

The default filename is global_table_data_export.csv

.

4 Browse to a location to store the file.

5 Click Save.

What to do next

Open a spreadsheet or another tool to view the CSV file.

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Managing Application Pools, Farms, and RDS Hosts

11

In View Administrator, you can perform management operations such as configuring or deleting desktop pools, farms, or RDS hosts.

This chapter includes the following topics: n

“Managing Application Pools,” on page 185

n n n n

“Managing Farms,” on page 186

“Managing RDS Hosts,” on page 189

“Configuring Load Balancing for RDS Hosts,” on page 193

“Configure an Anti-Affinity Rule for an Application Pool,” on page 199

Managing Application Pools

You can add, edit, delete, or entitle application pools in View Administrator.

To add an application pool, see "Creating Application Pools" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools

in View document. To entitle an application pool, see "Entitling Users and Groups" in the Setting Up Desktop

and Application Pools in View document.

Edit an Application Pool

You can edit an existing application pool to configure settings such as display name, version, publisher, path, start folder, parameters, and description. You cannot change the ID or access group of an application pool.

If you need to ensure that View Connection Server launches the application only on RDS hosts that have

sufficient resources to run the application, see “Configure an Anti-Affinity Rule for an Application Pool,” on page 199.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the settings of an application pool. See “Creating Application Pools” in the Setting

Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Application Pools.

2 Select a pool and click Edit.

3 Make changes to the pool settings.

4 Click OK.

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Delete an Application Pool

When you delete an application pool, users can no longer launch the application in the pool.

You can delete an application pool even if users are currently accessing the application. After the users close the application, they can no longer access the application.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Application Pools.

2 Select one or more application pools and click Delete.

3 Click OK to confirm.

Managing Farms

In View Administrator, you can add, edit, delete, enable, and disable farms.

To add a farm, see "Creating Farms" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document. For information on access groups, see

Chapter 6, “Configuring Role-Based Delegated Administration,” on page 89.

After you create a farm, you can add or remove RDS hosts to support more or fewer users.

Edit a Farm

For an existing farm, you can make changes to the configuration settings.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the settings of a farm. See “Creating Farms” in the Setting Up Desktop and

Application Pools in View document.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Farms.

2 Select a farm and click Edit.

3 Make changes to the farm settings.

4 Click OK.

Delete a Farm

You can delete a farm if you no longer need it or if you want to create a new one with different RDS hosts.

You can only delete a farm that is not associated with an RDS desktop pool or an application pool.

Prerequisites

Verify that the farm is not associated with any RDS desktop pool or application pool.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Farms.

2 Select one or more farms and click Delete.

3 Click OK to confirm.

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Disable or Enable a Farm

When you disable a farm, users can no longer launch RDS desktops or applications from the RDS desktop pools and the application pools that are associated with the farm. Users can continue to use RDS desktops and applications that are currently open.

You can disable a farm if you plan to do maintenance on the RDS hosts in the farm or on the RDS desktop and application pools that are associated with the farm. After you disable a farm, some users might still be using RDS desktops or applications that they opened before you disable the farm.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Farms.

2 Select one or more farms and click More Commands.

3 Click Enable or Disable.

4 Click OK to confirm.

The status of the RDS desktop pools and application pools that are associated with the farm are now

Unavailable. You can view the status of the pools by selecting Catalog > Desktop Pools or Catalog >

Application Pools.

Recompose an Automated Farm

With the View Composer recompose operation, you can update the machine image of all the RDS hosts in an automated farm. You can update the hardware settings or the software of the parent virtual machine and run the recompose operation to have the changes propagated to all the RDS hosts in the farm.

You can make changes to the parent virtual machine without affecting the RDS host linked clones because the clones are linked to a replica of the parent. The recompose operation deletes the old replica and creates a new one for the clones to link to. The recompose creates new linked clones, which typically use less storage because the disk files of linked clones usually grow in size over time.

You can recompose an automated farm but not individual RDS hosts in the farm. You cannot recompose linked clones to a lower hardware version than their current hardware version.

If possible, schedule recompose operations during off-peak hours because the operation can be time consuming.

Prerequisites n

Verify that you have a snapshot of a parent virtual machine. You must specify a snapshot when you recompose. The snapshot can be on the current parent virtual machine or a different one.

n

Decide when to schedule the recompose operation. By default, View Composer starts the operation immediately.

You can schedule only one recompose operation at a time for a farm. You can recompose multiple farms concurrently.

n n

Decide whether to force all users to log off as soon as the recompose operation begins or wait for each user to log off before recomposing that user's machine.

If you force users to log off, View notifies users before they are disconnected and allows them to close their applications and log off.

Decide whether to stop provisioning at first error. If you select this option and an error occurs when

View Composer provisions a linked clone, provisioning stops. You can select this option to ensure that resources such as storage are not consumed unnecessarily.

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Selecting the Stop at first error option does not affect customization. If a customization error occurs on a linked clone, other clones continue to be provisioned and customized.

Verify that provisioning is enabled. When provisioning is disabled, View stops the machines from being customized after they are recomposed.

If your deployment includes replicated View Connection Server instances, verify that all instances are the same version.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Farms.

2 Double-click the pool ID of the farm that you want to recompose.

3 Click Recompose.

4 (Optional) Click Change to change the parent virtual machine.

The new parent virtual machine must run the same version of the operating system as the current parent virtual machine.

5 Select a snapshot.

6 (Optional) Click Snapshot Details to display details about the snapshot.

7 Click Next.

8 (Optional) Schedule a start time.

The current time is filled in by default.

9 (Optional) Specify whether to force users to log off or wait for users to log off.

The option to force users to log off is selected by default.

10 (Optional) Specify whether to stop provisioning at first error.

This option is selected by default.

11 Click Next.

The Ready to Complete page is displayed.

12 (Optional) Click Show Details to display details of the recompose operation.

13 Click Finish.

In vCenter Server, you can monitor the progress of the recompose operation on the linked-clone virtual machines.

N

OTE

During the recompose operation, View Composer runs Sysprep again on the linked clones. New SIDs and third-party GUIDs might be generated for the recomposed virtual machines. For details, see

"Recomposing Linked Clones Customized with Sysprep" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in

View document.

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Managing RDS Hosts

You can manage RDS hosts that you set up manually and RDS hosts that are created automatically when you add an automated farm.

When you manually set up an RDS host, it automatically registers with View Connection Server. You cannot manually register an RDS host with View Connection Server. See "Setting Up Remote Desktop Session

Hosts" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document. For an RDS host that you set up manually, you can perform the following management tasks: n n

Edit the RDS host.

Add the RDS host to a manual farm.

n n

Remove the RDS host from a farm.

Enable the RDS host.

n

Disable the RDS host.

For an RDS host that is created automatically when you add an automated farm, you can perform the following management tasks: n n n

Remove the RDS host from a farm.

Enable the RDS host.

Disable the RDS host.

Edit an RDS Host

You can change the number of connections that an RDS host can support. This setting is the only one that you can change. The default value is 150. You can set it to any positive number, or to unlimited.

You can only edit an RDS host that you set up manually, but not an RDS host that is in an automated farm.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Registered Machines.

2 Select an RDS host and click Edit.

3 Specify a value for the setting Number of connections.

4 Click OK.

Add an RDS Host to a Manual Farm

You can add an RDS host that you set up manually to a manual farm to increase the scale of the farm or for other reasons. You can only add RDS hosts to a manual farm.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Farms.

2 Double-click the pool ID of the farm.

3 Select the RDS Hosts tab.

4 Select one or more RDS hosts.

5 Click OK.

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190

Remove an RDS Host from a Farm

You can remove an RDS host from a manual farm to reduce the scale of the farm, to perform maintenance on the RDS host, or for other reasons. As a best practice, disable the RDS host and ensure that users are logged off from active sessions before you remove a host from a farm.

If users have application or desktop sessions on hosts that you remove, the sessions remain active, but View no longer keeps track of them. A user who disconnects from a session will be unable to reconnect to it, and any unsaved data might be lost.

You can also remove an RDS host from an automated farm. One possible reason might be that the RDS host is in an unrecoverable error state. View Composer automatically creates a new RDS host to replace the one that you remove.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Farms.

2 Double-click the pool ID.

3 Select the RDS Hosts tab.

4 Select one or more RDS hosts.

5 Click Remove from farm.

6 Click OK.

Remove an RDS Host from View

You can remove from View an RDS host that you set up manually and that you no longer plan to use. The

RDS host must not currently be in a manual farm.

Prerequisites

Verify that the RDS host does not belong to a farm.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Registered Machines.

2 Select an RDS host and click Remove.

3 Click OK.

After you remove an RDS host, to use it again, you must reinstall Horizon Agent. See “Setting Up Remote

Desktop Session Hosts” in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document.

Disable or Enable an RDS Host

When you disable an RDS host, View no longer uses it to host new RDS desktops or applications. Users can continue to use RDS desktops and applications that are currently open.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Farms.

2 Double-click the pool ID of a farm.

3 Select the RDS Hosts tab.

4 Select an RDS host and click More Commands.

5 Click Enable or Disable.

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6 Click OK.

If you enable the RDS host, a check mark appears in the Enabled column, and Available appears in the

Status column. If you disable the RDS host, the Enabled column is empty and Disabled appears in the Status column.

Monitor RDS Hosts

You can monitor the status and view the properties of RDS hosts in View Administrator.

Procedure u

In View Administrator, navigate to the page that displays the properties that you want to view.

Properties

RDS Host, Farm, Desktop Pool,

Agent Version, Sessions, Status

DNS Name, Type, RDS Farm, Max

Number of Connections, Agent

Version, Enabled, Status n n

Action

In View Administrator, select Resources > Machines.

Click the RDS Hosts tab. Both linked-clone RDS hosts and RDS hosts that are set up manually are displayed.

n n

In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Registered

Machines.

Click the RDS Hosts tab. Only RDS hosts that are set up manually are displayed.

The properties are displayed and have the following meanings:

Property

RDS Host

Farm

Desktop Pool

Agent Version

Sessions

DNS Name

Type

RDS Farm

Max Number of Connections

Enabled

Status

Description

Name of the RDS host.

Farm to which the RDS host belongs.

RDS desktop pool associated with the farm.

Version of View Agent or Horizon Agent that runs on the RDS host.

Number of client sessions.

DNS name of the RDS host.

Version of Windows Server that runs on the RDS host.

Farm to which the RDS host belongs.

Maximum number of connections that the RDS host can support.

Whether the RDS host is enabled.

State of the RDS host. See

“Status of RDS Hosts,” on page 191 for a description

of the possible states.

Status of RDS Hosts

An RDS host can be in various states from the time that it is initialized. As a best practice, check that RDS hosts are in the state that you expect them to be in before and after you perform tasks or operations on them.

Table 11 ‑1. Status of an RDS Host

Status Description

Startup

Disable in progress

View Agent or Horizon Agent has started on the RDS host, but other required services such as the display protocol are still starting. The agent startup period also allows other processes such as protocol services to start up.

RDS host is in the process of being disabled while sessions are still running on the host.

When the sessions end, the status changes to Disabled.

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Table 11 ‑1. Status of an RDS Host (Continued)

Status

Disabled

Validating

Agent disabled

Agent unreachable

Invalid IP

Agent needs reboot

Protocol failure

Domain failure

Configuration error

Unknown

Available

Provisioning

Customizing

Deleting

Waiting for Agent

Maintenance Mode

Provisioned

Provisioning Error

Error

Description

Process of disabling the RDS host is complete.

Occurs after View Connection Server first becomes aware of the RDS host, typically after

View Connection Server is started or restarted, and before the first successful communication with View Agent or Horizon Agent on the RDS host. Typically, this state is transient. This state is not the same as the Agent unreachable state, which indicates a communication problem.

Occurs if View Connection Server disables View Agent or Horizon Agent. This state ensures that a new desktop or application session cannot be started on the RDS host.

View Connection Server cannot establish communication with View Agent or

Horizon Agent on an RDS host.

Subnet mask registry setting is configured on the RDS host, and no active network adapters have an IP address within the configured range.

View component was upgraded, and the RDS host must be restarted to allow View Agent or Horizon Agent to operate with the upgraded component.

The RDP display protocol is not running correctly. If RDP is not running and PCoIP is running, clients cannot connect using either RDP or PCoIP. However, if RDP is running and PCoIP is not running, clients can connect using RDP.

RDS host encountered a problem reaching the domain. The domain server was not accessible, or the domain authentication failed.

RDS role is not enabled on the server.

RDS host is in an unknown state.

RDS host is available. If the host is in a farm, and the farm is associated with an RDS or application pool, it will be used to deliver RDS desktops or applications to users.

(For linked-clone RDS hosts only) Provisioning of the virtual machine is in progress.

(For linked-clone RDS hosts only) Customization of the virtual machine is in progress.

(For linked-clone RDS hosts only) Deletion of the virtual machine is in progress.

(For linked-clone RDS hosts only) View Connection Server is waiting to establish communication with View Agent or Horizon Agent.

(For linked-clone RDS hosts only) The virtual machine is in maintenance mode and is not available to users.

(For linked-clone RDS hosts only) Provisioning of the virtual machine is complete.

(For linked-clone RDS hosts only) An error occurred during provisioning.

(For linked-clone RDS hosts only) An unknown error occurred in the virtual machine.

Configure Adobe Flash Throttling with Internet Explorer in RDS Desktops

To ensure that Adobe Flash throttling works with Internet Explorer in RDS desktops, users must enable third-party browser extensions.

Procedure

1 Start Horizon Client and log in to a user's remote desktop.

2 In Internet Explorer, click Tools > Internet Options.

3 Click the Advanced tab, select Enable third-party browser extensions, and click OK.

4 Restart Internet Explorer.

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Configuring Load Balancing for RDS Hosts

By default, View Connection Server uses the current session count and limit to balance the placement of new application sessions on RDS hosts. You can override this default behavior and control the placement of new application sessions by writing and configuring load balancing scripts.

A load balancing script returns a load value. The load value can be based on any host metric, such as CPU utilization or memory utilization. Horizon Agent maps the load value to a load preference, and reports the load preference to View Connection Server. View Connection Server uses reported load preferences to determine where to place new application sessions.

You can write your own load balancing scripts, or you can use one of the sample load balancing scripts provided with Horizon Agent.

Configuring load balancing scripts involves enabling the VMware Horizon View Script Host service and setting a registry key on each RDS host in a farm.

Load Values and Mapped Load Preferences

Horizon Agent maps the load value that a load balancing script returns to a load preference. View

Connection server uses reported load preferences to determine where to place new application sessions.

The following table lists the valid load values that a load balancing script can return and describes the associated load preferences.

0

1

2

3

Table 11 ‑2. Valid Load Values and Mapped Load Preferences

Valid Load Value

Load Preference

Reported by

Horizon Agent Description

BLOCK

LOW

MED

HIGH

Do not choose this RDS host.

Low preference/high load.

Medium preference/normal load.

High preference/light load.

Load Balancing Feature Constraints

The RDS host load balancing feature has certain constraints.

n

Anti-infinity rules can prevent an application from being placed on an RDS host, regardless of the

reported load preference. For more information, see “Configure an Anti-Affinity Rule for an

Application Pool,” on page 199.

n n n

Load balancing affects new application sessions only. An RDS host that contains sessions in which a user has previously run an application is always reused for the same application. This behavior overrides reported load preferences and anti-affinity rules.

Applications are launched on an RDS host where a user already has an existing session, even if the RDS host reports a BLOCK load preference.

RDS session limits prevent application sessions from being created, regardless of the reported load preference.

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Writing a Load Balancing Script for an RDS Host

You can write a load balancing script to generate a load value based on any RDS host metric that you want to use for load balancing. You can also write a simple load balancing script that returns a fixed load value.

Your load balancing script must return a single number from 0 to 3. For descriptions of the valid load values, see

“Load Values and Mapped Load Preferences,” on page 193.

If at least one RDS host in the farm returns a valid load value, View Connection Server assumes a load value of 2 (mapped load preference of MED) for the other RDS hosts in farm until their load balancing scripts return valid values. If no RDS host in the farm returns a valid load value, the load balancing feature is disabled for the farm.

If your load balancing script returns an invalid load value or does not finish running within 10 seconds,

Horizon Agent sets the load preference to BLOCK and the RDS host state to configuration error. These values effectively remove the RDS host from the list of RDS hosts available for new sessions.

Copy your load balancing script to the Horizon Agent scripts

directory (

C:\Program Files\VMware\VMware

View\Agent\scripts

) on each RDS host in the farm. You must copy the same script to every RDS host in the farm.

For an example how to write a load balancing script, see the sample scripts in the Horizon Agent scripts directory. For more information, see

“Sample Load Balancing Scripts for RDS Hosts,” on page 194.

Sample Load Balancing Scripts for RDS Hosts

When you install Horizon Agent on an RDS host, the installer places sample load balancing scripts in the

Horizon Agent scripts directory ( C:\Program Files\VMware\VMware View\Agent\scripts ).

Table 11 ‑3. Sample Load Balancing Scripts

Name cpuutilisation.vbs

memoryutilisation.vbs

Description

Reads the percentage of CPU that has been utilized from the registry and returns the following load values: n n

0, if CPU utilization is greater than 90 percent

1, if CPU utilization is greater than 75 percent n n

2, if CPU utlization is greater than 25 percent

3, if CPU utilization is less or equal to 25 percent

Calculates the percentage of memory that has been utilized and returns the following load values: n n

0, if memory utilization is greater than 90 percent

1, if memory utilization is greater than 75 percent n n

2, if memory utlization is greater than 25 percent

3, if memory utilization is less or equal to 25 percent

N

OTE

Because the cpuutilisation.vbs

script uses rolling average data that is sampled every five minutes, short-term high-utilization events might not be reflected in reported load preferences. You can reduce the sampling period to a minimum of two minutes, but performance might be affected on the RDS host. The sampling interval is controlled by the registry entry HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\VMware, Inc.\VMware

VDM\Performance Stats\SamplingIntervalSeconds . The default is 300 seconds.

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Enable the VMware Horizon View Script Host Service on an RDS Host

You must enable the VMware Horizon View Script Host service on an RDS host before you configure a load balancing script. The VMware Horizon View Script Host service is disabled by default.

Procedure

1 Log in to the RDS host as an administrator.

2 Start Server Manager.

3 Select Tools > Services and navigate to the VMware Horizon View Script Host service.

4 Right-click VMware Horizon View Script Host and select Properties.

5 In the Properties dialog box, select Automatic from the Startup type drop-down menu and click OK to save your changes.

6 Right-click VMware Horizon View Script Host and select Start to start the VMware Horizon View

Script Host service.

The VMware Horizon View Script Host service restarts automatically each time the RDS host starts.

What to do next

Configure your load balancing script on each RDS host in the farm. See

“Configure a Load Balancing Script on an RDS Host,” on page 195.

Configure a Load Balancing Script on an RDS Host

You must configure the same load balancing script on every RDS host in the farm. Configuring a load balancing script involves setting a registry key on the RDS host.

If you are using an automated farm, you perform this procedure on the parent virtual machine for the automated farm.

I

MPORTANT

You must configure the load balancing script on all of the RDS hosts in a farm or on none of the

RDS hosts in a farm. If you configure a load balancing script on only some of the RDS hosts in a farm, View

Administrator sets the health of the farm to yellow.

Prerequisites n

Write a load balancing script and copy the same script to the Horizon Agent scripts directory on each

RDS host in the farm. See “Writing a Load Balancing Script for an RDS Host,” on page 194.

n

Enable the VMware Horizon View Script Host service on the RDS host. See

“Enable the VMware

Horizon View Script Host Service on an RDS Host,” on page 195

Procedure

1 Log in to the RDS host as an administrator.

2 Start Server Manager.

3 Select Tools > System Configuration, click the Tools tab, and launch the Registry Editor.

4 In the registry, navigate to

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\VMware, Inc.\VMware VDM\ScriptEvents

.

5 In the navigation area, select the RdshLoad key.

The values for the RdshLoad key, if any, appear in the topic area (the right pane).

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6 Right-click in the topic area for the RdshLoad key, select New > String Value, and create a new string value.

As a best practice, use a name that represents the load balancing script to be run, for example, cpuutilisationScript for the cpuutilisation.vbs

script.

7 Right-click the entry for the new string value you created and select Modify.

8 In the Value data text box, type the command line that invokes your load balancing script and click

OK.

Type the full path to your load balancing script.

For example: cscript.exe "C:\Program Files\VMware\VMware View

Agent\scripts\cpuutilisation.vbs"

9 Restart the Horizon Agent service on the RDS host to make your changes take effect.

Your load balancing script begins to run on the RDS host.

What to do next

Repeat this procedure on each RDS host in the farm. If you performed this procedure on the parent virtual machine for an automated farm, provision the automated farm.

To verify that your load balancing script is working correctly, see

“Verify a Load Balancing Script,” on page 196.

Verify a Load Balancing Script

You can verify that your load balancing script is working correctly by viewing RDS farm and RDS host information in View Administrator.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, click Dashboard and expand RDS Farms in the System Health pane.

2 View the health of the farm that contains the RDS hosts.

The health of the farm should be green. If a load balancing script is configured on only some of the RDS hosts in a farm, View Administrator sets the health of the farm to yellow. You must configure the load balancing script on all of the RDS hosts in a farm or on none of the RDS hosts in a farm.

3 Expand the farm and click the name of each RDS host to view its load preference.

The Server load field in the details dialog box shows the load preference reported by Horizon Agent, for example,

Light load, new sessions okay

. If Horizon Agent did not report a load preference, the Server load field shows

Load not reported

.

What to do next

If load balancing is not working as you expected, verify the content of your load balancing script. If the script is written correctly, verify that the VMware Horizon View Script Host service is running and that the same load balancing script is configured on each RDS host in the farm.

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Load Balancing Session Placement Examples

These examples illustrate two load balancing session placement scenarios.

Example 1: No Existing User Session

This example illustrates how session placement might occur for a farm that contains six RDS hosts when a user session does not currently exist on any of the RDS hosts.

1 Horizon Agent reports the following load preferences for each RDS host in the farm.

RDS Host Load Preference

3

4

5

1

2

6

HIGH

LOW

HIGH

MED

BLOCK

LOW

2 View sorts the RDS hosts into three buckets according to load preference. View discards RDS host 5 because Horizon Agent reported a load preference of BLOCK.

Bucket Load Preference RDS Host

1

2

3

HIGH

HIGH

MED

LOW

LOW

1

3

4

2

6

3 Because bucket 2 has only one RDS host, View combines bucket 2 and bucket 3

Bucket Load Preference RDS Host

1 HIGH

HIGH

MED

1

3

4

2 LOW

LOW

2

6

4 View randomizes the bucket order.

Bucket Load Preference RDS Host

1

2

MED

HIGH

MED

LOW

LOW

4

3

1

6

2

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5 View Connection Server attempts to place a new application session on RDS host 4 first, followed by

RDS host 3, and so on.

6

2

3

1

RDS Host Session Placement Order

4

N

OTE

Anti-infinity rules can prevent an application from being placed on an RDS host, regardless of

the reported load preference. For more information, see “Configure an Anti-Affinity Rule for an

Application Pool,” on page 199.

Example 2: Existing User Session

This example illustrates how session placement might occur for a farm that contains six RDS hosts when a user session currently exists on one of the RDS hosts. An RDS host that contains a session in which a user has previously run an application is always reused for the same application.

1 A user session already exists on RDS host 3. RDS host 3 has a load preference of MED. The remaining

RDS in the hosts in the farm (the spare list) have the following load preferences.

5

6

2

4

RDS Host Load Preference

1 MED

LOW

HIGH

LOW

BLOCK

2 View sorts the RDS hosts in the spare list into two buckets according to load preference. View discards

RDS host 6 because Horizon Agent reported a load preference of BLOCK.

Bucket Load Preference RDS Host

1

2

HIGH

MED

LOW

LOW

4

1

2

5

3 View randomizes the bucket order.

Bucket Load Preference RDS Host

1

2

HIGH

MED

LOW

LOW

4

1

5

2

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4 View adds the RDS host that contains the existing session to the top of the new bucket ordered list.

5

2

4

1

RDS Host Session Placement Order

3

Configure an Anti-Affinity Rule for an Application Pool

When you configure an anti-affinity rule for an application pool, View Connection Server attempts to launch the application only on RDS hosts that have sufficient resources to run the application. This feature can be useful for controlling applications that consume large amounts of CPU or memory resources.

An anti-affinity rule consists of an application matching pattern and a maximum count. For example, the application matching pattern might be autocad.exe

and the maximum count might be 2.

View Connection Server sends the anti-affinity rule to Horizon Agent on an RDS host. If any applications running on the RDS host have process names that match the application matching pattern, Horizon Agent counts the current number of instances of those applications and compares the number to the maximum count. If the maximum count is exceeded, View Connection Server skips that RDS host when it selects an

RDS host to run new sessions of the application.

Prerequisites n

Create the application pool. See "Creating Application Pools" section in the Setting Up Desktop and

Application Pools in View document.

n

Become familiar with the constraints of the anti-affinity feature. See “Anti-Affinity Feature

Constraints,” on page 200.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Application Pools.

2 Select the pool to modify and click Edit.

3 In the Anti-Affinity Patterns text box, type a comma-separated list of patterns to match against the process names of other applications running on RDS hosts.

The pattern string can include the asterisk (*) and question mark (?) wildcard characters. An asterisk matches zero or more characters and a question mark matches any single character.

For example, *pad.exe,*notepad.???

matches wordpad.exe

, notepad.exe

, and notepad.bat

, but it does not match wordpad.bat

or notepad.script

.

N

OTE

View counts multiple patterns that match for an application in a single session as a single match.

4 In the Anti-Affinity Count text box, type the maximum number of other applications that can be running on the RDS host before the RDS host is rejected for new application sessions.

The maximum count can be an integer from 1 to 20.

5 Click OK to save your changes.

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Anti-Affinity Feature Constraints

The anti-affinity feature has certain constraints.

n n n n n n

Anti-affinity rules affect new application sessions only. An RDS host that contains sessions in which a user has previously run an application is always reused for the same application. This behavior overrides reported load preferences and anti-affinity rules.

Aniti-affinity rules do not affect application launches from within an RDS desktop session.

RDS session limits prevent application sessions from being created, regardless of anti-affinity rules.

In certain circumstances, the instances of applications on the RDS host might not be restricted to the maximum count that you specify. For example, View cannot determine the exact instance count if other applications for other pending sessions are in the process of being launched.

Inter-application anti-affinity rules are not supported. For example, large application classes, such as

Autocad and Visual Studio instances, cannot be counted in a single rule.

Do not use anti-affinity rules in environments where end-users use Horizon Client on mobile clients.

Anti-affinity rules can result in multiple sessions in the same farm for an end user. Reconnecting to multiple sessions on mobile clients can result in indeterminate behavior.

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View Administrator

12

You can use View Administrator to distribute and manage applications packaged with VMware ThinApp.

Managing ThinApp applications in View Administrator involves capturing and storing application packages, adding ThinApp applications to View Administrator, and assigning ThinApp applications to machines and desktop pools.

You must have a license to use the ThinApp management feature in View Administrator.

I

MPORTANT

If, instead of distributing ThinApps by assigning them to machines and desktop pools, you would rather assign ThinApps to Active Directory users and groups, you can use

VMware Identity Manager.

This chapter includes the following topics: n

“View Requirements for ThinApp Applications,” on page 201

n n

“Capturing and Storing Application Packages,” on page 202

“Assigning ThinApp Applications to Machines and Desktop Pools,” on page 205

n n n

“Maintaining ThinApp Applications in View Administrator,” on page 211

“Monitoring and Troubleshooting ThinApp Applications in View Administrator,” on page 214

“ThinApp Configuration Example,” on page 217

View Requirements for ThinApp Applications

When capturing and storing ThinApp applications that will be distributed to remote desktops in View

Administrator, you must meet certain requirements.

n n

You must package your applications as Microsoft Installation (MSI) packages.

You must use ThinApp version 4.6 or later to create or repackage the MSI packages.

n n n

You must store the MSI packages on a Windows network share that resides in an Active Directory domain that is accessible to your View Connection Server host and remote desktops. The file server must support authentication and file permissions that are based on computer accounts.

You must configure the file and sharing permissions on the network share that hosts the MSI packages to give Read access to the built-in Active Directory group Domain Computers. If you plan to distribute

ThinApp applications to domain controllers, you must also give Read access to the built-in Active

Directory group Domain Controllers.

To allow users access to streaming ThinApp application packages, you must set the NTFS permission of the network share that hosts the ThinApp packages to Read&Execute for users.

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View Administration n n

Make sure that a disjoint namespace does not prevent domain member computers from accessing the network share that hosts the MSI packages. A disjoint namespace occurs when an Active Directory domain name is different from the DNS namespace that is used by machines in that domain. See

VMware Knowledge Base (KB) article 1023309 for more information.

To run streamed ThinApp applications on remote desktops, users must have access to the network share that hosts the MSI packages.

Capturing and Storing Application Packages

ThinApp provides application virtualization by decoupling an application from the underlying operating system and its libraries and framework and bundling the application into a single executable file called an application package.

To manage ThinApp applications in View Administrator, you must use the ThinApp Setup Capture wizard to capture and package your applications in MSI format and store the MSI packages in an application repository.

An application repository is a Windows network share. You use View Administrator to register the network share as an application repository. You can register multiple application repositories.

N

OTE

If you have multiple application repositories, you can use third-party solutions to manage load balancing and availability. View does not include load balancing or availability solutions.

See the Introduction to VMware ThinApp and the ThinApp User's Guide for complete information on ThinApp features and how to use the ThinApp Setup Capture wizard.

1

Package Your Applications on page 202

You use the ThinApp Setup Capture wizard to capture and package your applications.

2

Create a Windows Network Share on page 203

You must create a Windows network share to host the MSI packages that are distributed to remote desktops and pools in View Administrator.

3

Register an Application Repository on page 203

You must register the Windows network share that hosts your MSI packages as an application repository in View Administrator.

4

Add ThinApp Applications to View Administrator on page 204

You add ThinApp applications to View Administrator by scanning an application repository and selecting ThinApp applications. After you add a ThinApp application to View Administrator, you can assign it to machines and desktop pools.

5

Create a ThinApp Template on page 204

You can create a template in View Administrator to specify a group of ThinApp applications. You can use templates to group applications together by function, vendor, or any other logical grouping that makes sense in your organization.

Package Your Applications

You use the ThinApp Setup Capture wizard to capture and package your applications.

Prerequisites n

Download the ThinApp software from http://www.vmware.com/products/thinapp and install it on a clean computer. View supports ThinApp version 4.6 and later.

n

Familiarize yourself with the ThinApp software requirements and application packaging instructions in the ThinApp User's Guide.

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Procedure

1 Start the ThinApp Setup Capture wizard and follow the prompts in the wizard.

2 When the ThinApp Setup Capture wizard prompts you for a project location, select Build MSI

package.

3 If you plan to stream the application to remote desktops, set the MSIStreaming property to 1 in the package.ini

file.

MSIStreaming=1

The ThinApp Setup Capture wizard encapsulates the application, all of the necessary components to run the application, and the application itself into an MSI package.

What to do next

Create a Windows network share to store the MSI packages.

Create a Windows Network Share

You must create a Windows network share to host the MSI packages that are distributed to remote desktops and pools in View Administrator.

Prerequisites n

Use the ThinApp Setup Capture wizard to package the applications.

n

Verify that the network share meets View requirements for storing ThinApp applications. See

“View

Requirements for ThinApp Applications,” on page 201 for more information.

Procedure

1 Create a shared folder on a computer in an Active Directory domain that it accessible to both your View

Connection Server host and remote desktops.

2 Configure the file and sharing permissions on the shared folder to give Read access to the built-in

Active Directory group Domain Computers.

3 If you plan to assign ThinApp applications to domain controllers, give Read access to the built-in Active

Directory group Domain Controllers.

4 If you plan to use streaming ThinApp application packages, set the NTFS permission of the network share that hosts the ThinApp packages to Read&Execute for users.

5 Copy your MSI packages to the shared folder.

What to do next

Register the Windows network share as an application repository in View Administrator.

Register an Application Repository

You must register the Windows network share that hosts your MSI packages as an application repository in

View Administrator.

You can register multiple application repositories.

Prerequisites

Create a Windows network share.

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View Administration

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > ThinApp Configuration and click Add

Repository.

2 Type a display name for the application repository in the Display name text box.

3 Type the path to the Windows network share that hosts your application packages in the Share path text box.

The network share path must be in the form \\ServerComputerName\ShareName where

ServerComputerName is the DNS name of the server computer. Do not specify an IP address.

For example:

\\server.domain.com\MSIPackages

4 Click Save to register the application repository with View Administrator.

Add ThinApp Applications to View Administrator

You add ThinApp applications to View Administrator by scanning an application repository and selecting

ThinApp applications. After you add a ThinApp application to View Administrator, you can assign it to machines and desktop pools.

Prerequisites

Register an application repository with View Administrator.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > ThinApps.

2 On the Summary tab, click Scan New ThinApps.

3 Select an application repository and a folder to scan and click Next.

If the application repository contains subfolders, you can expand the root folder and select a subfolder.

4 Select the ThinApp applications that you want to add to View Administrator.

You can press Ctrl+click or Shift+click to select multiple ThinApp applications.

5 Click Scan to begin scanning the MSI packages that you selected.

You can click Stop Scan if you need to stop the scan.

View Administrator reports the status of each scanning operation and the number of ThinApp applications that were added to View Administrator. If you select an application that is already in View

Administrator, it is not added again.

6 Click Finish.

The new ThinApp applications appear on the Summary tab.

What to do next

(Optional) Create ThinApp templates.

Create a ThinApp Template

You can create a template in View Administrator to specify a group of ThinApp applications. You can use templates to group applications together by function, vendor, or any other logical grouping that makes sense in your organization.

With ThinApp templates, you can streamline the distribution of multiple applications. When you assign a

ThinApp template to a machine or desktop pool, View Administrator installs all of the applications that are currently in the template.

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Creating ThinApp templates is optional.

N

OTE

If you add an application to a ThinApp template after assigning the template to a machine or desktop pool, View Administrator does not automatically assign the new application to the machine or desktop pool.

If you remove an application from a ThinApp template that was previously assigned to a machine or desktop pool, the application remains assigned to the machine or desktop pool.

Prerequisites

Add selected ThinApp applications to View Administrator.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > ThinApps and click New Template.

2 Type a name for the template and click Add.

All of the available ThinApp applications appear in the table.

3 To find a particular ThinApp application, type the name of the application in the Find text box and click

Find.

4 Select the ThinApp applications that you want to include in the template and click Add.

You can press Ctrl+click or Shift+click to select multiple applications.

5 Click OK to save the template.

Assigning ThinApp Applications to Machines and Desktop Pools

To install a ThinApp application on a remote desktop, you use View Administrator to assign the ThinApp application to a machine or desktop pool.

When you assign a ThinApp application to a machine, View Administrator begins installing the application on the virtual machine a few minutes later. When you assign a ThinApp application to a desktop pool, View

Administrator begins installing the application the first time a user logs in to a remote desktop in the pool.

Streaming

Full

View Administrator installs a shortcut to the ThinApp application on the remote desktop. The shortcut points to the ThinApp application on the network share that hosts the repository. Users must have access to the network share to run streamed ThinApp applications.

View Administrator installs the full ThinApp application on the local file system.

The amount of time it takes to install a ThinApp application depends on the size of the application.

I

MPORTANT

You can assign ThinApp applications to virtual machine-based desktops and automated desktop pools or manual pools that contains vCenter Server virtual machines. You cannot assign ThinApp applications to RDS desktops or traditional PCs.

n n n

Best Practices for Assigning ThinApp Applications on page 206

Follow best practices when you assign ThinApp applications to machines and desktop pools.

Assign a ThinApp Application to Multiple Machines on page 206

You can assign a particular ThinApp to one or more machines.

Assign Multiple ThinApp Applications to a Machine on page 207

You can assign one or more ThinApp applications to a particular machine.

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Assign a ThinApp Application to Multiple Desktop Pools on page 208

You can assign a particular ThinApp application to one or more desktop pools.

Assign Multiple ThinApp Applications to a Desktop Pool on page 208

You can assign one more ThinApp applications to a particular desktop pool.

Assign a ThinApp Template to a Machine or Desktop Pool on page 209

You can streamline the distribution of multiple ThinApp applications by assigning a ThinApp template to a machine or desktop pool.

Review ThinApp Application Assignments on page 210

You can review all of the machines and desktop pools that a particular ThinApp application is currently assigned to. You can also review all of the ThinApp applications that are assigned to a particular machine or desktop pool.

Display MSI Package Information on page 211

After you add a ThinApp application to View Administrator, you can display information about its

MSI package.

Best Practices for Assigning ThinApp Applications

Follow best practices when you assign ThinApp applications to machines and desktop pools.

n

To install a ThinApp application on a particular remote desktop, assign the application to the virtual machine that hosts the desktop. If you use a common naming convention for your machines, you can use machine assignments to quickly distribute applications to all of the machines that use that naming convention.

n n n

To install a ThinApp application on all of the machines in a desktop pool, assign the application to the desktop pool. If you organize your desktop pools by department or user type, you can use desktop pool assignments to quickly distribute applications to specific departments or users. For example, if you have a desktop pool for your accounting department users, you can distribute the same application to all of the users in your accounting department by assigning the application to the accounting pool.

To streamline the distribution of multiple ThinApp applications, include the applications in a ThinApp template. When you assign a ThinApp template to a machine or desktop pool, View Administrator installs all of the applications currently in the template.

Do not assign a ThinApp template to a machine or desktop pool if the template contains a ThinApp application that is already assigned to that machine or desktop pool. Also, do not assign a ThinApp template to the same machine or desktop pool more than once with a different installation type. View

Administrator will return ThinApp assignment errors in both of these situations.

Assign a ThinApp Application to Multiple Machines

You can assign a particular ThinApp to one or more machines.

Prerequisites

Scan an application repository and add selected ThinApp applications to View Administrator. See

“Add

ThinApp Applications to View Administrator,” on page 204.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > ThinApps and select the ThinApp application.

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2 Select Assign Machines from the Add Assignment drop-down menu.

The machines that the ThinApp application is not already assigned to appear in the table.

Option Action

Find a specific machine

Find all of the machines that follow the same naming convention

Type the name of the machine in the Find text box and click Find.

Type a partial machine name in the Find text box and click Find.

3 Select the machines that you want to assign the ThinApp application to and click Add.

You can press Ctrl+click or Shift+click to select multiple machines.

4 Select an installation type and click OK.

Option

Streaming

Action

Installs a shortcut to the application on the machine. The shortcut points to the application on the network share that hosts the repository. Users must have access to the network share to run the application.

Full Installs the full application on the machine's local file system.

Some ThinApp applications do not support both installation types. How the application package was created determines which installation types are available.

View Administrator begins installing the ThinApp application a few minutes later. After the installation is finished, the application is available to all of the users of the remote desktops hosted by the virtual machines.

Assign Multiple ThinApp Applications to a Machine

You can assign one or more ThinApp applications to a particular machine.

Prerequisites

Scan an application repository and add selected ThinApp applications to View Administrator. See

“Add

ThinApp Applications to View Administrator,” on page 204.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Machines and double-click the name of the machine in the

Machine column.

2 On the Summary tab, click Add Assignment in the ThinApps pane.

The ThinApp applications that are not already assigned to the machine appear in the table.

3 To find a particular application, type the name of the application in the Find text box and click Find.

4 Select a ThinApp application to assign to the machine and click Add.

Repeat this step to add multiple applications.

5 Select an installation type and click OK.

Option Action

Streaming Installs a shortcut to the application on the machine. The shortcut points to the application on the network share that hosts the repository. Users must have access to the network share to run the application.

Full Installs the full application on the machine's local file system.

Some ThinApp applications do not support both installation types. How the application package was created determines which installation types are available.

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View Administration

View Administrator begins installing the ThinApp applications a few minutes later. After the installation is finished, the applications are available to all of the users of the remote desktop that is hosted by the virtual machine.

Assign a ThinApp Application to Multiple Desktop Pools

You can assign a particular ThinApp application to one or more desktop pools.

If you assign a ThinApp application to a linked-clone pool and later refresh, recompose, or rebalance the pool, View Administrator reinstalls the application for you. You do not have to manually reinstall the application.

Prerequisites

Scan an application repository and add selected ThinApp applications to View Administrator. See

“Add

ThinApp Applications to View Administrator,” on page 204.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > ThinApps and select the ThinApp application.

2 Select Assign Desktop Pools from the Add Assignment drop-down menu.

The desktop pools that the ThinApp application is not already assigned to appear in the table.

Option Action

Find a specific desktop pool

Find all of the desktop pools that follow the same naming convention

Type the name of the desktop pool in the Find text box and click Find.

Type a partial desktop pool name in the Find text box and click Find.

3 Select the desktop pools that you want to assign the ThinApp application to and click Add.

You can press Ctrl+click or Shift+click to select multiple desktop pools.

4 Select an installation type and click OK.

Option

Streaming

Action

Installs a shortcut to the application on the machine. The shortcut points to the application on the network share that hosts the repository. Users must have access to the network share to run the application.

Full Installs the full application on the machine's local file system.

Some ThinApp applications do not support both installation types. How the application package was created determines which installation types are available.

View Administrator begins installing the ThinApp application the first time a user logs in to a desktop in the pool. After the installation is finished, the application is available to all of the users of the desktop pool.

Assign Multiple ThinApp Applications to a Desktop Pool

You can assign one more ThinApp applications to a particular desktop pool.

If you assign a ThinApp application to a linked-clone pool and later refresh, recompose, or rebalance the pool, View Administrator reinstalls the application for you. You do not have to manually reinstall the application.

Prerequisites

Scan an application repository and add selected ThinApp applications to View Administrator. See

“Add

ThinApp Applications to View Administrator,” on page 204.

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Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools and double-click the pool ID.

2 On the Inventory tab, click ThinApps and then click Add Assignment.

The ThinApp applications that are not already assigned to the pool appear in the table.

3 To find a particular application, type the name of the ThinApp application in the Find text box and click

Find.

4 Select a ThinApp application to assign to the pool and click Add.

Repeat this step to select multiple applications.

5 Select an installation type and click OK.

Option Action

Streaming Installs a shortcut to the application on the machine. The shortcut points to the application on the network share that hosts the repository. Users must have access to the network share to run the application.

Full

Installs the full application on the machine's local file system.

Some ThinApp applications do not support both installation types. How the application package was created determines which installation types are available.

View Administrator begins installing the ThinApp applications the first time a user logs in to a desktop in the pool. After the installation is finished, the applications are available to all of the users of the desktop pool.

Assign a ThinApp Template to a Machine or Desktop Pool

You can streamline the distribution of multiple ThinApp applications by assigning a ThinApp template to a machine or desktop pool.

When you assign a ThinApp template to a machine or desktop pool, View Administrator installs the

ThinApp applications currently in the template.

Prerequisites

Create a ThinApp template. See

“Create a ThinApp Template,” on page 204.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > ThinApps.

2 Select the ThinApp template.

3 Select Assign Machines or Assign Desktop Pools from the Add Assignment drop-down menu.

All machines or desktop pools appear in the table.

Option Action

Find a specific machine or desktop pool

Find all of the machines or desktop pools that follow the same naming convention

Type the name of the machine or desktop pool in the Find text box and click Find.

Type a partial machine or desktop pool name in the Find text box and click

Find.

4 Select the machines or desktop pools that you want to assign the ThinApp template to and click Add.

Repeat this step to select multiple machines or desktop pools.

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View Administration

5 Select an installation type and click OK.

Option Action

Streaming Installs a shortcut to the application on the machine. The shortcut points to the application on the network share that hosts the repository. Users must have access to the network share to run the application.

Full

Installs the full application on the machine's local file system.

Some ThinApp applications do not support both installation types. How the application package was created determines which installation types are available.

When you assign a ThinApp template to a machine, View Administrator begins installing the applications in the template a few minutes later. When you assign a ThinApp template to a desktop pool, View

Administrator begins installing the applications in the template the first time a user logs in to a remote desktop in the desktop pool. After the installation is finished, the applications are available to all of the users of the machine or desktop pool.

View Administrator returns an application assignment error if a ThinApp template contains an application that is already assigned to the machine or desktop pool.

Review ThinApp Application Assignments

You can review all of the machines and desktop pools that a particular ThinApp application is currently assigned to. You can also review all of the ThinApp applications that are assigned to a particular machine or desktop pool.

Prerequisites

Familiarize yourself with the ThinApp installation status values in “ThinApp Application Installation Status

Values,” on page 210.

Procedure u

Select the ThinApp application assignments that you want to review.

Option

Review all of the machines and desktop pools that a particular

ThinApp application is assigned to

Review all of the ThinApp applications that are assigned to a particular machine

Review all of the ThinApp applications that are assigned to a particular desktop pool

Action

Select Catalog > ThinApps and double-click the name of the ThinApp application.

The Assignments tab shows the machines and desktop pools that the application is currently assigned to, including the installation type.

The Machines tab shows the machines that are currently associated with the application, including installation status information.

N

OTE

When you assign a ThinApp application to a pool, machines in the pool appear on the Machines tab only after the application is installed.

Select Resources > Machines and double-click the name of the machine in

Machine column.

The ThinApps pane on Summary tab shows each application that is currently assigned to the machine, including the installation status.

Select Catalog > Desktop Pools, double-click the pool ID, select the

Inventory tab, and click ThinApps.

The ThinApp Assignments pane shows each application that is currently assigned to the desktop pool.

ThinApp Application Installation Status Values

After you assign a ThinApp application to a machine or pool, View Administrator indicates the status of the installation.

Table 12-1 describes each status value.

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Table 12 ‑1. ThinApp Application Installation Status

Status Description

Assigned

Install Error

Uninstall Error

Installed

Pending Install

Pending Uninstall

The ThinApp application is assigned to the machine.

An error occurred when View Administrator attempted to install the ThinApp application.

An error occurred when View Administrator attempted to uninstall the ThinApp application.

The ThinApp application is installed.

View Administrator is attempting to install the ThinApp application.

You cannot unassign an application that has this status.

N

OTE

This value does not appear for machines in desktop pools.

View Administrator is attempting to uninstall the ThinApp application.

Display MSI Package Information

After you add a ThinApp application to View Administrator, you can display information about its MSI package.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > ThinApps.

The Summary tab lists the applications that are currently available and shows the number of full and streaming assignments.

2 Double-click the name of the application in the ThinApp column.

3 Select the Summary tab to see general information about the MSI package.

4 Click Package Info to see detailed information about the MSI package.

Maintaining ThinApp Applications in View Administrator

Maintaining ThinApp applications in View Administrator involves tasks such as removing ThinApp application assignments, removing ThinApp applications and application repositories, and modifying and deleting ThinApp templates.

N

OTE

To upgrade a ThinApp application, you must unassign and remove the older version of the application and add and assign the newer version.

n n n n n

Remove a ThinApp Application Assignment from Multiple Machines on page 212

You can remove an assignment to a particular ThinApp application from one or more machines.

Remove Multiple ThinApp Application Assignments from a Machine on page 212

You can remove assignments to one or more ThinApp applications from a particular machine.

Remove a ThinApp Application Assignment from Multiple Desktop Pools on page 213

You can remove an assignment to a particular ThinApp application from one or more desktop pools.

Remove Multiple ThinApp Application Assignments from a Desktop Pool on page 213

You can remove one or more ThinApp application assignments from a particular desktop pool.

Remove a ThinApp Application from View Administrator on page 213

When you remove a ThinApp application from View Administrator, you can no longer assign the application to machinse and desktop pools.

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View Administration n n

Modify or Delete a ThinApp Template on page 214

You can add and remove applications from a ThinApp template. You can also delete a ThinApp template.

Remove an Application Repository on page 214

You can remove an application repository from View Administrator.

Remove a ThinApp Application Assignment from Multiple Machines

You can remove an assignment to a particular ThinApp application from one or more machines.

Prerequisites

Notify the users of the remote desktops that are hosted by the machines that you intend to remove the application.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > ThinApps and double-click the name of the ThinApp application.

2 On the Assignments tab, select a machine and click Remove Assignment.

You can press Ctrl+click or Shift+click to select multiple machines.

View Administrator uninstalls the ThinApp application a few minutes later.

I

MPORTANT

If an end user is using the ThinApp application at the time when View Administrator attempts to uninstall the application, the uninstallation fails and the application status changes to Uninstall Error.

When this error occurs, you must first manually uninstall the ThinApp application files from the machine and then click Remove App Status for Desktop in View Administrator.

Remove Multiple ThinApp Application Assignments from a Machine

You can remove assignments to one or more ThinApp applications from a particular machine.

Prerequisites

Notify the users of the remote desktop that is hosted by the machine that you intend to remove the applications.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Resources > Machines and double-click the name of the machine in the

Machine column.

2 On the Summary tab, select the ThinApp application and click Remove Assignment in the ThinApps pane.

Repeat this step to remove another application assignment.

View Administrator uninstalls the ThinApp application a few minutes later.

I

MPORTANT

If an end user is using the ThinApp application at the time when View Administrator attempts to uninstall the application, the uninstallation fails and the application status changes to Uninstall Error.

When this error occurs, you must first manually uninstall the ThinApp application files from the machine and then click Remove App Status For Desktop in View Administrator.

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Remove a ThinApp Application Assignment from Multiple Desktop Pools

You can remove an assignment to a particular ThinApp application from one or more desktop pools.

Prerequisites

Notify the users of the remote desktops in the pools that you intend to remove the application.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > ThinApps and double-click the name of the ThinApp application.

2 On the Assignments tab, select a desktop pool and click Remove Assignment.

You can press Ctrl+click or Shift+click to select multiple desktop pools.

View Administrator uninstalls the ThinApp application the first time a user logs in to a remote desktop in the pool.

Remove Multiple ThinApp Application Assignments from a Desktop Pool

You can remove one or more ThinApp application assignments from a particular desktop pool.

Prerequisites

Notify the users of the remote desktops in the pool that you intend to remove the applications.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools and double-click the pool ID.

2 On the Inventory tab, click ThinApps, select the ThinApp application, and click Remove Assignment.

Repeat this step to remove multiple applications.

View Administrator uninstalls the ThinApp applications the first time a user logs in to a remote desktop in the pool.

Remove a ThinApp Application from View Administrator

When you remove a ThinApp application from View Administrator, you can no longer assign the application to machinse and desktop pools.

You might need to remove a ThinApp application if your organization decides to replace it with a different vendor's application.

N

OTE

You cannot remove a ThinApp application if it is already assigned to a machine or desktop pool or if it is in the Pending Uninstall state.

Prerequisites

If a ThinApp application is currently assigned to a machine or desktop pool, remove the assignment from the machine or desktop pool.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > ThinApps and select the ThinApp application.

2 Click Remove ThinApp.

3 Click OK.

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Modify or Delete a ThinApp Template

You can add and remove applications from a ThinApp template. You can also delete a ThinApp template.

If you add an application to a ThinApp template after assigning the template to a machine or desktop pool,

View Administrator does not automatically assign the new application to the machine or desktop pool. If you remove an application from a ThinApp template that was previously assigned to a machine or desktop pool, the application remains assigned to the machine or desktop pool.

Procedure u

In View Administrator, select Catalog > ThinApps and select the ThinApp template.

Option

Add or remove ThinApp applications from the template

Delete the template

Action

Click Edit Template.

Click Remove Template.

Remove an Application Repository

You can remove an application repository from View Administrator.

You might need to remove an application repository if you no longer need the MSI packages that it contains, or if you need to move the MSI packages to a different network share. You cannot edit the share path of an application repository in View Administrator.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > ThinApp Configuration and select the application repository.

2 Click Remove Repository.

Monitoring and Troubleshooting ThinApp Applications in View

Administrator

View Administrator logs events that are related to ThinApp application management to the Events and

Reporting database. You can view these events on the Events page in View Administrator.

An event appears on the Events page when the following situations occur.

n

A ThinApp application is assigned or an application assignment is removed n n n n

A ThinApp application is installed or uninstalled on a machine

A ThinApp application cannot be installed or uninstalled

A ThinApp application repository is registered, modified, or removed from View Administrator

A ThinApp application is added to View Administrator

Troubleshooting tips are available for common ThinApp application management problems.

Cannot Register an Application Repository

You cannot register an application repository in View Administrator.

Problem

You receive an error message when you attempt to register an application repository in View Administrator.

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Cause

The View Connection Server host cannot access the network share that hosts the application repository. The network share path that you typed in the Share path text box might be incorrect, the network share that hosts the application repository is in a domain that is not accessible from the View Connection Server host, or the network share permissions have not been set up properly.

Solution n n n

If the network share path is incorrect, type the correct network share path. Network share paths that contain IP addresses are not supported.

If the network share is not in an accessible domain, copy your application packages to a network share in a domain that is accessible from the View Connection Server host.

Verify that the file and sharing permissions on the shared folder give Read access to the built-in Active

Directory group Domain Computers. If you plan to assign ThinApps to domain controllers, verify that the file and sharing permissions also give Read access to the built-in Active Directory group Domain

Controllers. After you set or change permissions, it can take up to 20 minutes for the network share to become accessible.

Cannot Add ThinApp Applications to View Administrator

View Administrator cannot add ThinApp applications to View Administrator.

Problem

No MSI packages are available when you click Scan New ThinApps in View Administrator.

Cause

Either the application packages are not in MSI format or the View Connection Server host cannot access the directories in the network share.

Solution n n

Verify that the application packages in the application repository are in MSI format.

Verify that the network share meets View requirements for ThinApp applications. See “View

Requirements for ThinApp Applications,” on page 201 for more information.

n

Verify that the directories in the network share have the proper permissions. See

“Cannot Register an

Application Repository,” on page 214 for more information.

Messages appear in the View Connection Server debug log file when an application repository is scanned.

View Connection Server log files are located on the View Connection Server host in the

drive:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\VMware\VDM\logs

directory.

Cannot Assign a ThinApp Template

You cannot assign a ThinApp template to a machine or desktop pool.

Problem

View Administrator returns an assignment error when you attempt to assign a ThinApp template to a machine or desktop pool.

Cause

Either the ThinApp template contains an application that is already assigned to the machine or desktop pool, or the ThinApp template was previously assigned to the machine or desktop pool with a different installation type.

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Solution

If the template contains a ThinApp application that is already assigned to the machine or desktop pool, create a new template that does not contain the application or edit the existing template and remove the application. Assign the new or modified template to the machine or desktop pool.

To change the installation type of a ThinApp application, you must remove the existing application assignment from the machine or desktop pool. After the ThinApp application is uninstalled, you can assign it to the machine or desktop pool with a different installation type.

ThinApp Application Is Not Installed

View Administrator cannot install a ThinApp application.

Problem

The ThinApp application installation status shows either Pending Install or Install Error.

Cause

Common causes for this problem include the following: n n n n

There was not enough disk space on the machine to install the ThinApp application.

Network connectivity was lost between the View Connection Server host and the machine or between the View Connection Server host and the application repository.

The ThinApp application was not accessible in the network share.

The ThinApp application was previously installed or the directory or file already exists on the machine.

You can see the Horizon Agent and View Connection Server log files for more information about the cause of the problem.

Horizon Agent log files are located on the machine in drive:\ProgramData\VMware\VDM\logs .

View Connection Server log files are located on the View Connection Server host in the drive:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\VMware\VDM\logs directory.

Solution

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > ThinApps.

2 Click the name of the ThinApp application.

3 On the Machines tab, select the machine and click Retry Install to reinstall the ThinApp application.

ThinApp Application Is Not Uninstalled

View Administrator cannot uninstall a ThinApp application.

Problem

The ThinApp application installation status shows Uninstall Error.

Cause

Common causes for this error include the following: n n

The ThinApp application was busy when View Administrator tried to uninstall it.

Network connectivity was lost between the View Connection Server host and the machine.

You can see the Horizon Agent and View Connection Server log files for more information about the cause of the problem.

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Horizon Agent log files are located on the machine in

drive:\Documents and Settings\All

Users\Application Data\VMware\VDM\logs

drive:\ProgramData\VMware\VDM\logs

for Windows XP systems and

for Windows 7 systems.

View Connection Server log files are located on the View Connection Server host in the

drive:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\VMware\VDM\logs

directory.

Solution

1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > ThinApps.

2 Click the name of the ThinApp application.

3 Click the Machines tab, select the machine, and click Retry Uninstall to retry the uninstall operation.

4 If the uninstall operation still fails, manually remove the ThinApp application from the machine and then click Remove App Status For Desktop.

This command clears the ThinApp application assignment in View Administrator. It does not remove any files or settings in the machine.

I

MPORTANT

Use this command only after manually removing the ThinApp application from the machine.

MSI Package Is Invalid

View Administrator reports an invalid MSI package in an application repository.

Problem

View Administrator reports that an MSI package is invalid during a scanning operation.

Cause

Common causes of this problem include the following: n n n

The MSI file is corrupted.

The MSI file was not created with ThinApp.

The MSI file was created or repackaged with an unsupported version of ThinApp. You must use

ThinApp version 4.6 or later.

Solution

See the ThinApp User's Guide for information on troubleshooting problems with MSI packages.

ThinApp Configuration Example

The ThinApp configuration example takes you step-by-step through a typical ThinApp configuration, beginning with capturing and packaging applications and ending with checking the status of an installation.

Prerequisites

See these topics for complete information about how to perform the steps in this example.

n n

“Capturing and Storing Application Packages,” on page 202

“Assigning ThinApp Applications to Machines and Desktop Pools,” on page 205

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Procedure

1 Download the ThinApp software from http://www.vmware.com/products/thinapp and install it on a clean computer.

View supports ThinApp version 4.6 and later.

2 Use the ThinApp Setup Capture wizard to capture and package your applications in MSI format.

3 Create a shared folder on a computer in an Active Directory domain that it accessible to both your View

Connection Server host and your remote desktops and configure the file and sharing permissions on the shared folder to give Read access to the built-in Active Directory group Domain Computers.

If you plan to assign ThinApp applications to domain controllers, also give Read access to the built-in

Active Directory group Domain Controllers.

4 Copy your MSI packages to the shared folder.

5 Register the shared folder as an application repository in View Administrator.

6 In View Administrator, scan the MSI packages in the application repository and add selected ThinApp applications to View Administrator.

7 Decide whether to assign the ThinApp applications to machines or desktop pools.

If you use a common naming convention for your machines, you can use machine assignments to quickly distribute applications to all of the machines that use that naming convention. If you organize your desktop pools by department or user type, you can use desktop pool assignments to quickly distribute applications to specific departments or users.

8 In View Administrator, select the ThinApp applications to assign to your machines or desktop pools and specify the installation method.

Option Action

Streaming Installs a shortcut to the application on the machine. The shortcut points to the application on the network share that hosts the repository. Users must have access to the network share to run the application.

Installs the full application on the machine's local file system.

Full

9 In View Administrator, check the installation status of the ThinApp applications.

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Setting Up Clients in Kiosk Mode

13

You can set up unattended clients that can obtain access to their desktops from View.

A client in kiosk mode is a thin client or a lock-down PC that runs Horizon Client to connect to a View

Connection Server instance and launch a remote session. End users do not typically need to log in to access the client device, although the remote desktop might require them to provide authentication information for some applications. Sample applications include medical data entry workstations, airline check-in stations, customer self-service points, and information terminals for public access.

You should ensure that the desktop application implements authentication mechanisms for secure transactions, that the physical network is secure against tampering and snooping, and that all devices connected to the network are trusted.

Clients in kiosk mode support the standard features for remote access such as automatic redirection of USB devices to the remote session and location-based printing.

View uses the Flexible Authentication feature in View 4.5 and later to authenticate a client device in kiosk mode rather than the end user. You can configure a View Connection Server instance to authenticate clients that identify themselves by their MAC address or by a user name that starts with the characters "custom-" or with an alternate prefix string that you have defined in ADAM. If you configure a client to have an automatically generated password, you can run Horizon Client on the device without specifying a password. If you configure an explicit password, you must specify this password to Horizon Client. As you would usually run Horizon Client from a script, and the password would appear in clear text, you should take precautions to make the script unreadable by unprivileged users.

Only View Connection Server instances that you enable to authenticate clients in kiosk mode can accept connections from accounts that start with the characters "cm-" followed by a MAC address, or that start with the characters "custom-" or an alternate string that you have defined. Horizon Client in View 4.5 and later does not allow the manual entry of user names that take these forms.

As a best practice, use dedicated View Connection Server instances to handle clients in kiosk mode, and to create dedicated organizational units and groups in Active Directory for the accounts of these clients. This practice not only partitions these systems against unwarranted intrusion, but also makes it easier to configure and administer the clients.

Configure Clients in Kiosk Mode

To configure Active Directory and View to support clients in kiosk mode, you must perform several tasks in sequence.

Prerequisites

Verify that you have the privileges required to perform the configuration tasks.

n Domain Admins or Account Operators credentials in Active Directory to make changes to the accounts of users and groups in a domain.

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Administrators, Inventory Administrators, or an equivalent role to use View Administrator to entitle users or groups to remote desktops.

Administrators or an equivalent role to run the vdmadmin

command.

Procedure

1

Prepare Active Directory and View for Clients in Kiosk Mode on page 220

You must configure Active Directory to accept the accounts that you create to authenticate client devices. Whenever you create a group, you must also entitle that group to the desktop pool that a client accesses. You can also prepare the desktop pool that the clients use.

2

Set Default Values for Clients in Kiosk Mode on page 221

You can use the vdmadmin command to set the default values for the organizational unit, password expiry, and group membership in Active Directory for clients in kiosk mode.

3

Display the MAC Addresses of Client Devices on page 222

If you want to create an account for a client that is based on its MAC address, you can use

Horizon Client to discover the MAC address of the client device.

4

Add Accounts for Clients in Kiosk Mode on page 223

You can use the vdmadmin command to add accounts for clients to the configuration of a View

Connection Server group. After you add a client, it is available for use with a View Connection Server instance on which you have enabled authentication of clients. You can also update the configuration of clients, or remove their accounts from the system.

5

Enable Authentication of Clients in Kiosk Mode on page 224

You can use the vdmadmin

command to enable authentication of clients that attempt to connect to their remote desktops via a View Connection Server instance.

6

Verify the Configuration of Clients in Kiosk Mode on page 225

You can use the vdmadmin command to display information about clients in kiosk mode and View

Connection Server instances that are configured to authenticate such clients.

7

Connect to Remote Desktops from Clients in Kiosk Mode on page 226

You can run the client from the command line or use a script to connect a client to a remote session.

Prepare Active Directory and View for Clients in Kiosk Mode

You must configure Active Directory to accept the accounts that you create to authenticate client devices.

Whenever you create a group, you must also entitle that group to the desktop pool that a client accesses.

You can also prepare the desktop pool that the clients use.

As a best practice, create a separate organizational unit and group to help minimize your work in administering clients in kiosk mode. You can add individual accounts for clients that do not belong to any group, but this creates a large administrative overhead if you configure more than a small number of clients.

Procedure

1 In Active Directory, create a separate organizational unit and group to use with clients in kiosk mode.

You must specify a pre-Windows 2000 name for the group. You use this name to identify the group to the vdmadmin command.

2 Create the image or template for the guest virtual machine.

You can use a virtual machine that is managed by vCenter Server as a template for an automated pool, as a parent for a linked-clone pool, or as a virtual machine in a manual desktop pool. You can also install and configure applications on the guest operating system.

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3 Configure the guest operating system so that the clients are not locked when they are left unattended.

View suppresses the pre-login message for clients that connect in kiosk mode. If you require an event to unlock the screen and display a message, you can configure a suitable application on the guest operating system.

4 In View Administrator, create the desktop pool that the clients will use and entitle the group to this pool.

For example, you might choose to create a floating-assignment, linked-clone desktop pool as being most suitable for the requirements of your client application. You might also associate one or more ThinApp applications with the desktop pool.

I

MPORTANT

Do not entitle a client or a group to more than one desktop pool. If you do, View assigns a remote desktop at random from the pools to which a client is entitled, and generates a warning event.

5 If you want to enable location-based printing for the clients, configure the Active Directory group policy setting

AutoConnect Location-based Printing for VMware View

, which is located in the

Microsoft Group Policy Object Editor in the

Software Settings

folder under

Computer Configuration

.

6 Configure other policies that you need to optimize and secure the remote desktops of the clients.

For example, you might want to override the policies that connect local USB devices to the remote desktop when it is launched or when the devices are plugged in. By default, Horizon Client for

Windows enables these policies for clients in kiosk mode.

Example: Preparing Active Directory for Clients in Kiosk Mode

A company intranet has a domain MYORG, and its organizational unit has the distinguished name

OU=myorg-ou,DC=myorg,DC=com. In Active Directory, you create the organizational unit kiosk-ou with the distinguished name OU=kiosk-ou,DC=myorg,DC=com and the group kc-grp for use with clients in kiosk mode.

What to do next

Set default values for the clients.

Set Default Values for Clients in Kiosk Mode

You can use the vdmadmin

command to set the default values for the organizational unit, password expiry, and group membership in Active Directory for clients in kiosk mode.

You must run the vdmadmin

command on one of the View Connection Server instances in the group that contains the View Connection Server instance that clients will use to connect to their remote desktops.

When you configure defaults for password expiry and Active Directory group membership, these settings are shared by all View Connection Server instances in a group.

Procedure u

Set the default values for clients.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -setdefaults [-b authentication_arguments] [-ou DN]

[ -expirepassword | -noexpirepassword ] [-group group_name | -nogroup]

Option

-expirepassword

-group group_name

Description

Specifies that the expiry time for passwords on the client accounts is the same as for the View Connection Server group. If no expiry time is defined for the group, passwords do not expire.

Specifies the name of the default group to which client accounts are added.

The name of the group must be specified as the pre-Windows 2000 group name from Active Directory.

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Option Description

-noexpirepassword

-nogroup

Specifies that passwords on client accounts do not expire.

Clears the setting for the default group.

-ou DN Specifies the distinguished name of the default organizational unit to which client accounts are added.

For example: OU=kiosk-ou,DC=myorg,DC=com

N

OTE

You cannot use the command to change the configuration of an organizational unit.

The command updates the default values for clients in the View Connection Server group.

Example: Setting Default Values for Cients in Kiosk Mode

Set the default values for the organizational unit, password expiry, and group membership of clients.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -setdefaults -ou "OU=kiosk-ou,DC=myorg,DC=com" -noexpirepassword -group kc-grp

What to do next

Find out the MAC addresses of client devices that use their MAC address for authentication.

Display the MAC Addresses of Client Devices

If you want to create an account for a client that is based on its MAC address, you can use Horizon Client to discover the MAC address of the client device.

Prerequisites

Log in on the console of the client.

Procedure u

To display the MAC address, type the appropriate command for your platform.

Option

Windows

Linux

Action

Enter

C:\Program Files (x86)\VMware\VMware Horizon View

Client\vmware-view.exe -printEnvironmentInfo

The client uses the default View Connection Server instance that you configured for it. If you have not configured a default value, the client prompts you for the value.

The command displays the IP address, MAC address, and machine name of the client device.

Enter vmware-view --printEnvironmentInfo -s connection_server

You must specify the IP address or FQDN of the View Connection Server instance that the client will use to connect to the desktop.

The command displays the IP address, MAC address, machine name, domain, name and domain of any logged-on user, and time zone of the client device.

What to do next

Add accounts for the clients.

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Add Accounts for Clients in Kiosk Mode

You can use the vdmadmin

command to add accounts for clients to the configuration of a View Connection

Server group. After you add a client, it is available for use with a View Connection Server instance on which you have enabled authentication of clients. You can also update the configuration of clients, or remove their accounts from the system.

You must run the vdmadmin

command on one of the View Connection Server instances in the group that contains the View Connection Server instance that clients will use to connect to their remote desktops.

When you add a client in kiosk mode, View creates a user account for the client in Active Directory. If you specify a name for a client, this name must start with a recognized prefix string, such as "custom-", or with an alternate prefix string that you have defined in ADAM, and it cannot be more than 20 characters long. If you do not specify a name for a client, View generates a name from the MAC address that you specify for the client device. For example, if the MAC address is 00:10:db:ee:76:80, the corresponding account name is cm-00_10_db_ee_76_80. You can only use these accounts with View Connection Server instances that you enable to authenticate clients.

I

MPORTANT

Do not use a specified name with more than one client device. Future releases might not support this configuration.

Procedure u

Run the vdmadmin

command using the -domain and -clientid options to specify the domain and the name or the MAC address of the client.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -add [-b authentication_arguments] -domain domain_name -clientid

client_id [-password "password" | -genpassword] [-ou DN] [-expirepassword |

-noexpirepassword] [-group group_name | -nogroup] [-description "description_text"]

Option

-clientid client_id

-description "description_text"

-domain domain_name

-expirepassword

-genpassword

-group group_name

-noexpirepassword

-nogroup

-ou DN

-password "password"

Description

Specifies the name or the MAC address of the client.

Creates a description of the account for the client device in Active

Directory.

Specifies the domain for the client.

Specifies that the expiry time for the password on the client's account is the same as for the View Connection Server group. If no expiry time is defined for the group, the password does not expire.

Generates a password for the client's account. This is the default behavior if you do not specify either -password or -genpassword.

A generated password is 16 characters long, contains at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter, one symbol, and one number, and can contain repeated characters. If you require a stronger password, use the -password option to specify the password.

Specifies the name of the group to which the client's account is added. The name of the group must be specified as the pre-Windows 2000 group name from Active Directory. If you previously set a default group, client's account is added to this group.

Specifies that the password on the client's account does not expire.

Specifies that the client's account is not added to the default group.

Specifies the distinguished name of the organizational unit to which the client's account is added.

For example: OU=kiosk-ou,DC=myorg,DC=com

Specifies an explicit password for the client's account.

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The command creates a user account in Active Directory for the client in the specified domain and group (if any).

Example: Adding Accounts for Clients

Add an account for a client specified by its MAC address to the MYORG domain, using the default settings for the group kc-grp.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -add -domain MYORG -clientid 00:10:db:ee:76:80 -group kc-grp

Add an account for a client specified by its MAC address to the MYORG domain, using an automatically generated password.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -add -domain MYORG -clientid 00:10:db:ee:76:80 -genpassword

Add an account for a named client, and specify a password to be used with the client.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -add -domain MYORG -clientid custom-Terminal21 -password "guest" -ou

"OU=kiosk-ou,DC=myorg,DC=com" -description "Terminal 21"

Add an account for a named client, using an automatically generated password.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -add -domain MYORG -clientid custom-Kiosk11 -genpassword -ou "OU=kioskou,DC=myorg,DC=com" -description "Kiosk 11"

What to do next

Enable authentication of the clients.

Enable Authentication of Clients in Kiosk Mode

You can use the vdmadmin

command to enable authentication of clients that attempt to connect to their remote desktops via a View Connection Server instance.

You must run the vdmadmin

command on one of the View Connection Server instances in the group that contains the View Connection Server instance that clients will use to connect to their remote desktops.

Although you enable authentication for an individual View Connection Server instance, all View

Connection Server instances in a group share all other settings for client authentication. You need only add an account for a client once. In a View Connection Server group, any enabled View Connection Server instance can authenticate the client.

If you plan to use kiosk mode with a session-based View desktop on an RDS host, you must also add the user account to the Remote Desktop Users group.

Procedure

1 Enable authentication of clients on a View Connection Server instance.

vdmadmin -Q -enable [-b authentication_arguments] -s connection_server [-requirepassword]

Option Description

-requirepassword Specifies that you require clients to provide passwords.

I

MPORTANT

If you specify this option, the View Connection Server instance cannot authenticate clients that have automatically generated passwords.

If you change the configuration of a View Connection Server instance to specify this option, such clients cannot authenticate themselves and they fail with the error message Unknown username or bad password.

-s connection_server Specifies the NetBIOS name of the View Connection Server instance on which to enable authentication of clients.

The command enables the specified View Connection Server instance to authenticate clients.

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2 If the remote desktop is provided by a Microsoft RDS host, log in to the RDS host and add the user account to the Remote Desktop Users group.

For example, say that on the View server, you entitle the user account custom-11

to a session-based

View desktop on an RDS host. You must then log in to the RDS host, and add the user custom-11

to the

Remote Desktop Users group by going to Control Panel > System and Security > System > Remote

settings > Select users > Add.

Example: Enabling Authentication of Clients in Kiosk Mode

Enable authentication of clients for the View Connection Server instance csvr-2. Clients with automatically generated passwords can authenticate themselves without providing a password.

vdmadmin -Q -enable -s csvr-2

Enable authentication of clients for the View Connection Server instance csvr-3, and require that the clients specify their passwords to Horizon Client. Clients with automatically generated passwords cannot authenticate themselves.

vdmadmin -Q -enable -s csvr-3 -requirepassword

What to do next

Verify the configuration of the View Connection Server instances and the clients.

Verify the Configuration of Clients in Kiosk Mode

You can use the vdmadmin

command to display information about clients in kiosk mode and View

Connection Server instances that are configured to authenticate such clients.

You must run the vdmadmin

command on one of the View Connection Server instances in the group that contains the View Connection Server instance that clients will use to connect to their remote desktops.

Procedure u

Display information about clients in kiosk mode and client authentication.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -list [-b authentication_arguments] [-xml]

The command displays information about clients in kiosk mode and the View Connection Server instances on which you have enabled client authentication.

Example: Displaying Information for Clients in Kiosk Mode

Display information about clients in text format. Client cm-00_0c_29_0d_a3_e6 has an automatically generated password, and does not require an end user or an application script to specify this password to

Horizon Client. Client cm-00_22_19_12_6d_cf has an explicitly specified password and requires the end user to provide this. The View Connection Server instance CONSVR2 accepts authentication requests from clients with automatically generated passwords. CONSVR1 does not accept authentication requests from clients in kiosk mode.

C:\ vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -list

Client Authentication User List

===============================

GUID : 94be6344-0c9b-4a92-8d54-1brc1c2dc282

ClientID : cm-00_0c_29_0d_a3_e6

Domain : myorg.com

Password Generated: true

GUID : 471d9d35-68b2-40ee-b693-56a7d92b2e25

ClientID : cm-00_22_19_12_6d_cf

Domain : myorg.com

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Password Generated: false

Client Authentication Connection Servers

========================================

Common Name : CONSVR1

Client Authentication Enabled : false

Password Required : false

Common Name : CONSVR2

Client Authentication Enabled : true

Password Required : false

What to do next

Verify that the clients can connect to their remote desktops.

Connect to Remote Desktops from Clients in Kiosk Mode

You can run the client from the command line or use a script to connect a client to a remote session.

You would usually use a command script to run Horizon Client on a deployed client device.

N

OTE

On a Windows or Mac OS X client, by default USB devices on the client are not forwarded automatically if they are in use by another application or service when the remote desktop session starts. On all clients, human interface devices (HIDs) and smart card readers are not forwarded by default.

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Procedure u

To connect to a remote session, type the appropriate command for your platform.

Option

Windows

Description

Enter

C:\Program Files (x86)\VMware\VMware Horizon View

Client\vmware-view.exe -unattended [-serverURL connection_server ] [-userName user_name] [-password password ]

-password password

-serverURL connection_ser ver

-userName user_name

Specifies the password for the client's account. If you defined a password for the account, you must specify this password.

Specifies the IP address or FQDN of the View

Connection Server instance that Horizon Client will use to connect to its remote desktop. If you do not specify the IP address or FQDN of the View

Connection Server instance that the client will use to connect to its remote desktop, the client uses the default View Connection Server instance that you configured for it.

Specifies the name of the client's account. If you want a client to authenticate itself using an account name that begins with a recognized prefix string, such as "custom-", rather than using its MAC address, you must specify this name.

Linux Enter vmware-view --unattended -s connection_server [--once] [-u user_name ] [-p password]

--once Specifies that you do not want Horizon Client to retry connecting in the case of an error occurring.

I

MPORTANT

You should usually specify this option, and use the exit code to handle the error.

Otherwise, you might find it difficult to kill the vmware-view process remotely.

-p password

-s connection_ser ver

Specifies the password for the client's account. If you defined a password for the account, you must specify this password.

Specifies the IP address or FQDN of the View

Connection Server instance that the client will use to connect to its desktop.

-u user_name Specifies the name of the client's account. If you want a client to authenticate itself using an account name that begins with a recognized prefix string, such as "custom-", rather than using its MAC address, you must specify this name.

If the server authenticates the kiosk client and a remote desktop is available, the command starts the remote session.

Example: Running Horizon Client on Clients in Kiosk Mode

Run Horizon Client on a Windows client whose account name is based on its MAC address, and which has an automatically generated password.

C:\Program Files (x86)\VMware\VMware Horizon View Client\vmware-view.exe -unattended -serverURL consvr2.myorg.com

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Run Horizon Client on a Linux client using an assigned name and password.

vmware-view -unattended -s 145.124.24.100 --once -u custom-Terminal21 -p "Secret1!"

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14

You can use a variety of procedures for diagnosing and fixing problems that you might encounter when using View. You can use troubleshooting procedures to investigate the causes of such problems and attempt to correct them yourself, or you can obtain assistance from VMware Technical Support.

For information about troubleshooting desktops and desktop pools, see the Setting Up Desktop and

Application Pools in View document.

This chapter includes the following topics: n

“Monitoring System Health,” on page 229

n n

“Monitor Events in View,” on page 230

“Collecting Diagnostic Information for View,” on page 231

n n

“Update Support Requests,” on page 235

“Troubleshooting an Unsuccessful Security Server Pairing with View Connection Server,” on page 235

n n n

“Troubleshooting View Server Certificate Revocation Checking,” on page 236

“Troubleshooting Smart Card Certificate Revocation Checking,” on page 237

“Further Troubleshooting Information,” on page 237

Monitoring System Health

You can use the system health dashboard in View Administrator to quickly see problems that might affect the operation of View or access to remote desktops by end users.

The system health dashboard in the top left of the View Administrator display provides a number of links that you can use to view reports about the operation of View:

Sessions

Problem vCenter VMs

Problem RDS Hosts

Provides a link to the Sessions screen, which displays information about the status of remote desktop and application sessions.

Provides a link to the Machines screen, which displays information about vCenter virtual machines, RDS hosts, other machines that View has flagged as having problems.

Provides a link to the RDS Hosts tab on the Machines screen, which displays information about RDS hosts that View has flagged as having problems.

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Events

System Health

Provides links to the Events screen filtered for error events and for warning events.

Provides links to the Dashboard screen, which displays summaries of the status of View components, vSphere components, domains, desktops, and datastore usage.

The system health dashboard displays a numbered link against each item. This value indicates the number of items that the linked report provides details about.

Monitor Events in View

The event database stores information about events that occur in the View Connection Server host or group,

Horizon Agent, and View Administrator, and notifies you of the number of events on the dashboard. You can examine the events in detail on the Events screen.

N

OTE

Events are listed in the View Administrator interface for a limited time period. After this time, the events are only available in the historical database tables. You can use Microsoft SQL Server or Oracle database reporting tools to examine events in the database tables. For more information, see the View

Integration document.

In addition to monitoring events in View Administrator, you can generate View events in

Syslog

format so that the event data can be accessible to analytics software. See

“Generating View Event Log Messages in

Syslog Format Using the -I Option,” on page 249 and "Configure Event Logging for Syslog Servers" in the

View Installation document.

Prerequisites

Create and configure the event database as described in the View Installation document.

Procedure

1 In View Administrator, select Monitoring > Events.

2 (Optional) In the Events window, you can select the time range of the events, apply filtering to the events, and sort the listed events by one or more of the columns.

View Event Messages

View reports events whenever the state of the system changes or it encounters a problem. You can use the information in the event messages to take the appropriate action.

Table 14-1 shows the types of events that View reports.

Table 14 ‑1. Types of Event Reported by View

Event Type Description

Audit Failure or

Audit Success

Error

Information

Warning

Reports the failure or success of a change that an administrator or user makes to the operation or configuration of View.

Reports a failed operation by View.

Reports normal operations within View.

Reports minor problems with operations or configuration settings that might lead to more serious problems over time.

You might need to take some action if you see messages that are associated with Audit Failure, Error, or

Warning events. You do not need to take any action for Audit Success or Information events.

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Collecting Diagnostic Information for View

You can collect diagnostic information to help VMware Technical Support diagnose and resolve issues with

View.

You can collect diagnostic information for various components of View. How you collect this information varies depending on the View component.

n n

Create a Data Collection Tool Bundle for Horizon Agent on page 231

To assist VMware Technical Support in troubleshooting Horizon Agent, you might need to use the vdmadmin command to create a Data Collection Tool (DCT) bundle. You can also obtain the DCT bundle manually, without using vdmadmin .

Save Diagnostic Information for Horizon Client on page 232

If you encounter problems using Horizon Client, and cannot resolve the problems using general network troubleshooting techniques, you can save a copy of the log files and information about the configuration.

n n n

Collect Diagnostic Information for View Composer Using the Support Script on page 233

You can use the View Composer support script to collect configuration data and generate log files for

View Composer. This information helps VMware customer support diagnose any issues that arise with View Composer.

Collect Diagnostic Information for View Connection Server on page 233

You can use the support tool to set logging levels and generate log files for View Connection Server.

Collect Diagnostic Information for Horizon Agent, Horizon Client, or View Connection Server from the Console on page 234

If you have direct access to the console, you can use the support scripts to generate log files for View

Connection Server, Horizon Client, or remote desktops that are running Horizon Agent. This information helps VMware Technical Support diagnose any issues that arise with these components.

Create a Data Collection Tool Bundle for Horizon Agent

To assist VMware Technical Support in troubleshooting Horizon Agent, you might need to use the vdmadmin command to create a Data Collection Tool (DCT) bundle. You can also obtain the DCT bundle manually, without using vdmadmin .

For your convenience, you can use the vdmadmin command on a View Connection Server instance to request a DCT bundle from a remote desktop. The bundle is returned to View Connection Server.

You can alternatively log in to a specific remote desktop and run a support command that creates the DCT bundle on that desktop. If User Account Control (UAC) is turned on, you must obtain the DCT bundle in this fashion.

Procedure

1 Log in as a user with the required privileges.

Option

On View Connection Server, using vdmadmin

On the remote desktop

Action

Log in to a standard or replica instance View Connection Server as a user with the Administrators role.

Log in to the remote desktop as a user with administrative privileges.

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2 Open a command prompt and run the command to generate the DCT bundle.

Option

On View Connection Server, using vdmadmin

On the remote desktop

Action

To specify the names of the output bundle file, desktop pool, and machine, use the -outfile, -d, and -m options with the vdmadmin command.

vdmadmin -A [-b authentication_arguments] -getDCT -outfile

local_file -d desktop -m machine

Change directories to c:\Program Files\VMware\VMware

View\Agent\DCT and run the following command: support

The command writes the bundle to the specified output file.

Example: Using vdmadmin to Create a Bundle File for Horizon Agent

Create the DCT bundle for the machine machine1 in the desktop pool dtpool2 and write it to the zip file

C:\myfile.zip

.

vdmadmin -A -d dtpool2 -m machine1 -getDCT -outfile C:\myfile.zip

What to do next

If you have an existing support request, you can update it by attaching the DCT bundle file.

Save Diagnostic Information for Horizon Client

If you encounter problems using Horizon Client, and cannot resolve the problems using general network troubleshooting techniques, you can save a copy of the log files and information about the configuration.

You can attempt to resolve connection problems for Horizon Client before saving the diagnostic information and contacting VMware Technical Support. For more information, see "Connection Problems Between

Horizon Client and View Connection Server" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document.

Procedure

1 In Horizon Client, click Support Information, or, on the remote desktop menu, select Options >

Support Information.

2 In the Support Information window, click Collect Support Data and click Yes when prompted.

A command window shows the progress of gathering the information. This process can take several minutes.

3 In the command window, respond to the prompts by entering the URLs of the View Connection Server instances against which you want to test the configuration of Horizon Client, and, if required, selecting to generate diagnostic dumps of the View processes.

The information is written to a zip file in a folder on the client machine's desktop.

4 File a support request on the Support page of the VMware Web site, and attach the output zip file.

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Collect Diagnostic Information for View Composer Using the Support Script

You can use the View Composer support script to collect configuration data and generate log files for View

Composer. This information helps VMware customer support diagnose any issues that arise with View

Composer.

Prerequisites

Log in to the computer on which View Composer is installed.

Because you must use the Windows Script Host utility ( cscript ) to run the support script, familiarize yourself with using cscript . See http://technet.microsoft.com/library/bb490887.aspx

.

Procedure

1 Open a command prompt window and change to the

C:\Program Files\VMware\VMware View Composer directory.

If you did not install the software in the default directories, substitute the appropriate drive letter and path.

2 Type the command to run the svi-support

script.

cscript ".\svi-support.wsf" /zip

You can use the /? option to display information about other command options that are available with the script.

When the script finishes, it informs you of the name and location of the output file.

3 File a support request on the Support page of the VMware Web site and attach the output file.

Collect Diagnostic Information for View Connection Server

You can use the support tool to set logging levels and generate log files for View Connection Server.

The support tool collects logging data for View Connection Server. This information helps VMware

Technical Support diagnose any issues that arise with View Connection Server. The support tool is not intended to collect diagnostic information for Horizon Client or Horizon Agent. You must instead use the support script. See

“Collect Diagnostic Information for Horizon Agent, Horizon Client, or View Connection

Server from the Console,” on page 234.

Prerequisites

Log in to a standard or replica instance View Connection Server instance as a user in the Administrators role.

Procedure

1 Select Start > All Programs > VMware > Set View Connection Server Log Levels.

2 In the Choice text box, type a numeric value to set the logging level and press Enter.

Option

0

1

Description

Resets the logging level to the default value.

Selects a normal level of logging.

Selects a debug level of logging (default).

2

3 Selects full logging.

The system starts recording log information with the level of detail that you have selected.

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3 When you have collected enough information about the behavior of View Connection Server, select

Start > All Programs > VMware > Generate View Connection Server Log Bundle.

The support tool writes the log files to a folder called vdm-sdct

on the desktop of the View Connection

Server instance.

4 File a support request on the Support page of the VMware Web site and attach the output files.

Collect Diagnostic Information for Horizon Agent , Horizon Client, or View

Connection Server from the Console

If you have direct access to the console, you can use the support scripts to generate log files for View

Connection Server, Horizon Client, or remote desktops that are running Horizon Agent. This information helps VMware Technical Support diagnose any issues that arise with these components.

Prerequisites

Log in to the system that you want to collect information for. You must log in as a user with administrator privileges.

n n n

For Horizon Agent, log in to the virtual machine that has Horizon Agent installed.

For Horizon Client, log in to the system with Horizon Client installed.

For View Connection Server, log in to the View Connection Server host.

Procedure

1 Open a command prompt window and change to the appropriate directory for the View component that you want to collect diagnostic information for.

Option Description

Horizon Agent

Horizon Client

Change to the C:\Program Files\VMware View\Agent\DCT directory.

Change to the C:\Program Files\VMware View\Client\DCT directory.

View Connection Server Change to the C:\Program Files\VMware View\Server\DCT directory.

If you did not install the software in the default directories, substitute the appropriate drive letter and path.

2 Type the command to run the support script.

.\support.bat [loglevels]

If you want to enable advanced logging, specify the loglevels option and enter the numeric value for the logging level when prompted.

5

6

Option

0

1

2

3

4

Description

Resets the logging level to the default value.

Selects a normal level of logging.

Selects a debug level of logging (default).

Selects full logging.

Selects informational logging for PCoIP (Horizon Agent and

Horizon Client only).

Selects debug logging for PCoIP (Horizon Agent and Horizon Client only).

Selects informational logging for virtual channels (Horizon Agent and

Horizon Client only).

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Option Description

7 Selects debug logging for virtual channels (Horizon Agent and

Horizon Client only).

8 Selects trace logging for virtual channels (Horizon Agent and

Horizon Client only).

The script writes the zipped log files to the folder vdm-sdct on the desktop.

3 You can find the View Composer guest agent logs in the C:\Program Files\Common Files\VMware\View

Composer Guest Agent svi-ga-support directory.

4 File a support request on the Support page of the VMware Web site and attach the output file.

Update Support Requests

You can update your existing support request at the Support Web site.

After you file a support request, you might receive an email request from VMware Technical Support asking for the output file from the support or svi-support scripts. When you run the scripts, they inform you of the name and location of the output file. Reply to the email message and attach the output file to the reply.

If the output file is too large to include as an attachment (10MB or more), contact VMware Technical

Support, tell them the number of your support request, and request FTP upload instructions. Alternatively, you can attach the file to your existing support request at the Support Web site.

Procedure

1 Visit the Support page at the VMware Web site and log in.

2 Click Support Request History and find the applicable support request number.

3 Update the support request and attach the output that you obtained by running the support or svisupport script.

Troubleshooting an Unsuccessful Security Server Pairing with View

Connection Server

A security server might not be working if it failed to pair successfully with a View Connection Server instance.

Problem

The following security server issues might occur if a security server failed to pair with View Connection

Server: n n

When you try to install the security server a second time, the security server cannot connect to View

Connection Server.

Horizon Client cannot connect to View. The following error message appears: The View Connection

Server authentication failed. No gateway is available to provide a secure connection to a desktop. Contact your network administrator.

n

The security server is displayed in the View Administrator dashboard as Down .

Cause

This problem can occur if you started to install a security server and the attempt was cancelled or otherwise aborted after you entered a security server pairing password.

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Solution

If you intend to keep the security server in your View environment, take these steps:

1 In View Administrator, select View Configuration > Servers.

2 On the Security Servers tab, select a security server, select Prepare for Upgrade or Reinstallation from the More Commands drop-down menu, and click OK.

3 On the Connection Servers tab, select the View Connection Server instance that you want to pair with the security server, select Specify Security Server Pairing Password from the More Commands dropdown menu, type a password, and click OK.

4 Install the security server again.

If you intend to remove the security server entry from your View environment, run the vdmadmin -S command.

For example: vdmadmin -S -r -s security_server_name

Troubleshooting View Server Certificate Revocation Checking

A security server or a View Connection Server instance that is used for secure Horizon Client connections might show as red in View Administrator if certificate revocation checking cannot be performed on the server's SSL certificate.

Problem

A security server or View Connection Server icon is red on the View Administrator dashboard. The View server's status shows the following message:

Server's certificate cannot be checked

.

Cause

Certificate revocation checking might fail if your organization uses a proxy server for Internet access, or if a

View Connection Server instance cannot reach the servers that provide revocation checking because of firewalls or other controls.

A View Connection Server instance performs certificate revocation checking on its own certificate and on those of the security servers paired to it. By default, the VMware Horizon View Connection Server service is started with the LocalSystem account. When it runs under LocalSystem , a View Connection Server instance cannot use the proxy settings configured in Internet Explorer to access the CRL DP URL or OCSP responder to determine the revocation status of the certificate.

You can use Microsoft Netshell commands to import the proxy settings to the View Connection Server instance so that the server can access the certificate revocation checking sites on the Internet.

Solution

1 On the View Connection Server computer, open a command-line window with the Run as

administrator setting.

For example, click Start, type cmd , right-click the cmd.exe

icon, and select Run as administrator.

2 Type netsh and press Enter.

3 Type winhttp and press Enter.

4 Type show proxy and press Enter.

Netshell shows that the proxy was set to DIRECT connection. With this setting, the View Connection

Server computer cannot connect to the Internet if a proxy is in use in your organization.

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5 Configure the proxy settings.

For example, at the netsh winhttp>

prompt, type import proxy source=ie .

The proxy settings are imported to the View Connection Server computer.

6 Verify the proxy settings by typing show proxy .

7 Restart the VMware Horizon View Connection Server service.

8 On the View Administrator dashboard, verify that the security server or View Connection Server icon is green.

Troubleshooting Smart Card Certificate Revocation Checking

The View Connection Server instance or security server that has the smart card connected cannot perform certificate revocation checking on the server's SSL certificate unless you have configured smart card certificate revocation checking.

Problem

Certificate revocation checking might fail if your organization uses a proxy server for Internet access, or if a

View Connection Server instance or security server cannot reach the servers that provide revocation checking because of firewalls or other controls.

I

MPORTANT

Make sure the CRL file is up to date.

Cause

View supports certificate revocation checking with certificate revocation lists (CRLs) and with the Online

Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP). A CRL is a list of revoked certificates published by the CA (Certificate

Authority) that issued the certificates. OCSP is a certificate validation protocol that is used to get the revocation status of an X.509 certificate. The CA must be accessible from the View Connection Server or security server host. This issue can only occur if you configured revocation checking of smart card certificates. See

“Using Smart Card Certificate Revocation Checking,” on page 51.

Solution

1 Create your own (manual) procedure for downloading an up-to-date CRL from the CA website you use to a path on your View server.

2 Create or edit the locked.properties

file in the SSL gateway configuration folder on the View

Connection Server or security server host.

For example:

install_directory\VMware\VMware View\Server\sslgateway\conf\locked.properties

3 Add the enableRevocationChecking

and crlLocation

properties in the locked.properties

file to the local path to where the CRL is stored.

4 Restart the View Connection Server service or security server service to make your changes take effect.

Further Troubleshooting Information

You can find further troubleshooting information in VMware Knowledge Base articles.

The VMware Knowledge Base (KB) is continually updated with new troubleshooting information for

VMware products.

For more information about troubleshooting View, see the KB articles that are available on the VMware KB

Web site: http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/microsite.do

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Using the vdmadmin Command

15

You can use the vdmadmin command line interface to perform a variety of administration tasks on a View

Connection Server instance.

You can use vdmadmin to perform administration tasks that are not possible from within the View

Administrator user interface or to perform administration tasks that need to run automatically from scripts.

For a comparison of the operations that are possible in View Administrator, View cmdlets, and vdmadmin , see the View Integration document.

n

vdmadmin Command Usage on page 241

The syntax of the vdmadmin command controls its operation.

n n n

Configuring Logging in Horizon Agent Using the -A Option on page 243

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -A option to configure logging by Horizon Agent.

Overriding IP Addresses Using the -A Option on page 244

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -A option to override the IP address reported by

Horizon Agent.

Setting the Name of a View Connection Server Group Using the -C Option on page 245

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -C option to set the name of a View Connection Server group. The Microsoft System Center Operations Manager (SCOM) console displays this name to help you identify the group within SCOM.

n n n n

Updating Foreign Security Principals Using the -F Option on page 246

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -F option to update the foreign security principals (FSPs) of Windows users in Active Directory who are authorized to use a desktop.

Listing and Displaying Health Monitors Using the -H Option on page 247

You can use the vdmadmin command -H to list the existing health monitors, to monitor instances for

View components, and to display the details of a specific health monitor or monitor instance.

Listing and Displaying Reports of View Operation Using the -I Option on page 248

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -I option to list the available reports of View operation and to display the results of running one of these reports.

Generating View Event Log Messages in Syslog Format Using the -I Option on page 249

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -I option to record View event messages in Syslog format in event log files. Many third-party analytics products require flat-file Syslog data as input for their analytics operations.

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View Administration n n n n n n n n n n n n n

Assigning Dedicated Machines Using the -L Option on page 250

You can use the vdmadmin

command with the -L option to assign machines from a dedicated pool to users.

Displaying Information About Machines Using the -M Option on page 251

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -M option to display information about the configuration of virtual machines or physical computers.

Reclaiming Disk Space on Virtual Machines Using the -M Option on page 252

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -M option to mark a linked-clone virtual machine for disk space reclamation. View directs the ESXi host to reclaim disk space on the linked-clone OS disk without waiting for the unused space on the OS disk to reach the minimum threshold that is specified in View Administrator.

Configuring Domain Filters Using the -N Option on page 253

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -N option to control the domains that View makes available to end users.

Configuring Domain Filters on page 255

You can configure domain filters to limit the domains that a View Connection Server instance or security server makes available to end users.

Displaying the Machines and Policies of Unentitled Users Using the -O and -P Options on page 259

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -O and -P options to display the virtual machines and policies that are assigned to users who are no longer entitled to use the system.

Configuring Clients in Kiosk Mode Using the -Q Option on page 260

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -Q option to set defaults and create accounts for clients in kiosk mode, to enable authentication for these clients, and to display information about their configuration.

Displaying the First User of a Machine Using the -R Option on page 264

You can use the vdmadmin

command with the -R option to find out the initial assignment of a managed virtual machine. For example, in the event of the loss of LDAP data, you might need this information so that you can reassign virtual machines to users.

Removing the Entry for a View Connection Server Instance or Security Server Using the -S Option on page 264

You can use the vdmadmin

command with the -S option to remove the entry for a View Connection

Server instance or security server from the View configuration.

Providing Secondary Credentials for Administrators Using the -T Option on page 265

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -T option to provide Active Directory secondary credentials to administrator users.

Displaying Information About Users Using the -U Option on page 267

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -U option to display detailed information about users.

Unlocking or Locking Virtual Machines Using the -V Option on page 267

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -V option to unlock or lock virtual machines in the datacenter.

Detecting and Resolving LDAP Entry Collisions Using the -X Option on page 268

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -X option to detect and resolve colliding LDAP entries on replicated View Connection Server instances in a group.

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vdmadmin Command Usage

The syntax of the vdmadmin

command controls its operation.

Use the following form of the vdmadmin

command from a Windows command prompt.

vdmadmin command_option [additional_option argument] ...

The additional options that you can use depend on the command option.

By default, the path to the vdmadmin

command executable file is

C:\Program Files\VMware\VMware

View\Server\tools\bin

. To avoid having to enter the path on the command line, add the path to your PATH environment variable.

n n

vdmadmin Command Authentication on page 241

You must run the vdmadmin command as a user who is in the Administrators role for a specified action to succeed.

vdmadmin Command Output Format on page 241

Some vdmadmin

command options allow you to specify the format of the output information.

n

vdmadmin Command Options on page 242

You use the command options of the vdmadmin command to specify the operation that you want it to perform.

vdmadmin Command Authentication

You must run the vdmadmin command as a user who is in the Administrators role for a specified action to succeed.

You can use View Administrator to assign the Administrators role to a user. See

Chapter 6, “Configuring

Role-Based Delegated Administration,” on page 89.

If you are logged in as a user with insufficient privileges, you can use the -b option to run the command as a user who has been assigned the Administrators role, if you know that user's password. You can specify the

-b option to run the vdmadmin command as the specified user in the specified domain. The following usage forms of the -b option are equivalent.

-b username domain [password | *]

-b username@domain [password | *]

-b domain\username [password | *]

If you specify an asterisk (*) instead a password, you are prompted to enter the password, and the vdmadmin command does not leave sensitive passwords in the command history on the command line.

You can use the -b option with all command options except the -R and -T options.

vdmadmin Command Output Format

Some vdmadmin command options allow you to specify the format of the output information.

Table 15-1 shows the options that some

vdmadmin command options provide for formatting output text.

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Table 15 ‑1. Options for Selecting Output Format

Option

-csv

-n

-w

-xml

Description

Formats the output as comma-separated values.

Display the output using ASCII (UTF-8) characters. This is the default character set for comma-separated values and plain text output.

Display the output using Unicode (UTF-16) characters. This is the default character set for XML output.

Formats the output as XML.

vdmadmin Command Options

You use the command options of the vdmadmin command to specify the operation that you want it to perform.

Table 15-2 shows the command options that you can use with the

vdmadmin command to control and examine the operation of View.

Table 15 ‑2. Vdmadmin Command Options

Option Description

-A

-C

-F

-H

-I

-L

-M

-N

-O

-P

-Q

-R

-S

-T

Administers the information that Horizon Agent records in its log files. See “Configuring Logging in

Horizon Agent Using the -A Option,” on page 243.

Overrides the IP address reported by Horizon Agent. See “Overriding IP Addresses Using the -A

Option,” on page 244

Sets the name for a View Connection Server group. See “Setting the Name of a View Connection Server

Group Using the -C Option,” on page 245.

Updates the Foreign Security Principals (FSPs) in Active Directory for all users or for specified users. See

“Updating Foreign Security Principals Using the -F Option,” on page 246.

Displays health information about View services. See

“Listing and Displaying Health Monitors Using the

-H Option,” on page 247.

Generates reports about View operation. See “Listing and Displaying Reports of View Operation Using the -I Option,” on page 248.

Assigns a dedicated desktop to a user or removes an assignment. See “Assigning Dedicated Machines

Using the -L Option,” on page 250.

Displays information about a virtual machine or physical computer. See “Displaying Information About

Machines Using the -M Option,” on page 251.

Configures the domains that a View Connection Server instance or group makes available to

Horizon Client. See “Configuring Domain Filters Using the -N Option,” on page 253.

Displays the remote desktops that are assigned to users who are no longer entitled to those desktops. See

“Displaying the Machines and Policies of Unentitled Users Using the -O and -P Options,” on page 259.

Displays the user policies that are associated with the remote desktops of unentitled users. See

“Displaying the Machines and Policies of Unentitled Users Using the -O and -P Options,” on page 259.

Configures the account in Active Directory account and View configuration of a client device in kiosk mode. See

“Configuring Clients in Kiosk Mode Using the -Q Option,” on page 260.

Reports the first user who accessed a remote desktop. See

“Displaying the First User of a Machine Using the -R Option,” on page 264.

Removes a configuration entry for a View Connection Server instance from the configuration of View. See

“Removing the Entry for a View Connection Server Instance or Security Server Using the -S Option,” on page 264.

Provides Active Directory secondary credentials to administrator users. See “Providing Secondary

Credentials for Administrators Using the -T Option,” on page 265.

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Table 15 ‑2. Vdmadmin Command Options (Continued)

Option

-U

-V

-X

Description

Displays information about a user including their remote desktop entitlements and ThinApp assignments, and Administrator roles. See

“Displaying Information About Users Using the -U Option,” on page 267.

Unlocks or locks virtual machines. See “Unlocking or Locking Virtual Machines Using the -V Option,” on page 267.

Detects and resolves duplicated LDAP entries on replicated View Connection Server instances. See

“Detecting and Resolving LDAP Entry Collisions Using the -X Option,” on page 268.

Configuring Logging in Horizon Agent Using the -A Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -A option to configure logging by Horizon Agent.

Syntax

vdmadmin -A [-b authentication_arguments] -getDCT-outfile local_file -d desktop -m machine vdmadmin -A [-b authentication_arguments] -getlogfile logfile -outfile local_file -d desktop -m machine vdmadmin -A [-b authentication_arguments] -getloglevel [-xml] -d desktop [-m machine] vdmadmin -A [-b authentication_arguments] -getstatus [-xml] -d desktop [-m machine] vdmadmin -A [-b authentication_arguments] -getversion [-xml] -d desktop [-m machine] vdmadmin -A [-b authentication_arguments] -list [-xml] [-w | -n] -d desktop -m machine vdmadmin -A [-b authentication_arguments] -setloglevel level -d desktop [-m machine]

Usage Notes

To assist VMware Technical Support in troubleshooting Horizon Agent, you can create a Data Collection

Tool (DCT) bundle. You can also change the logging level, display the version and status of Horizon Agent, and save individual log files to your local disk.

Options

Table 15-3 shows the options that you can specify to configure logging in Horizon Agent.

Table 15 ‑3. Options for Configuring Logging in Horizon Agent

Option Description

-d desktop

-getDCT

-getlogfile logfile

-getloglevel

-getstatus

-getversion

-list

-m machine

Specifies the desktop pool.

Creates a Data Collection Tool (DCT) bundle and saves it to a local file.

Specifies the name of the log file to save a copy of.

Displays the current logging level of Horizon Agent.

Displays the status of Horizon Agent.

Displays the version of Horizon Agent.

List the log files for Horizon Agent.

Specifies the machine within a desktop pool.

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Table 15 ‑3. Options for Configuring Logging in Horizon Agent (Continued)

Option

-outfile local_file

-setloglevel level

Description

Specifies the name of the local file in which to save a DCT bundle or a copy of a log file.

Sets the logging level of Horizon Agent.

debug normal trace

Logs error, warning, and debugging events.

Logs error and warning events.

Logs error, warning, informational, and debugging events.

Examples

Display the logging level of Horizon Agent for the machine machine1 in the desktop pool dtpool2.

vdmadmin -A -d dtpool2 -m machine1 -getloglevel

Set the logging level of Horizon Agent for the machine machine1 in the desktop pool dtpool2 to debug.

vdmadmin -A -d dtpool2 -m machine1 -setloglevel debug

Display the list of the Horizon Agent log files for the machine machine1 in the desktop pool dtpool2.

vdmadmin -A -d dtpool2 -m machine1 -list

Save a copy of the Horizon Agent log file log-2009-01-02.txt

for the machine machine1 in the desktop pool dtpool2 as C:\mycopiedlog.txt

.

vdmadmin -A -d dtpool2 -m machine1 -getlogfile log-2009-01-02.txt -outfile C:\mycopiedlog.txt

Display the version of Horizon Agent for the machine machine1 in the desktop pool dtpool2.

vdmadmin -A -d dtpool2 -m machine1 -getversion

Display the status of Horizon Agent for the machine machine1 in the desktop pool dtpool2.

vdmadmin -A -d dtpool2 -m machine1 -getstatus

Create the DCT bundle for the machine machine1 in the desktop pool dtpool2 and write it to the zip file

C:\myfile.zip

.

vdmadmin -A -d dtpool2 -m machine1 -getDCT -outfile C:\myfile.zip

Overriding IP Addresses Using the -A Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -A option to override the IP address reported by

Horizon Agent.

Syntax

vdmadmin -A [-b authentication_arguments] -override -i ip_or_dns -d desktop -m machine vdmadmin -A [-b authentication_arguments] -override -list -d desktop -m machine vdmadmin -A [-b authentication_arguments] -override -r -d desktop [-m machine]

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Usage Notes

Horizon Agent reports the discovered IP address of the machine on which it is running to the View

Connection Server instance. In secure configurations where the View Connection Server instance cannot trust the value that Horizon Agent reports, you can override the value provided by Horizon Agent and specify the IP address that the managed machine should be using. If the address of a machine that

Horizon Agent reports does not match the defined address, you cannot use Horizon Client to access the machine.

Options

Table 15-4 shows the options that you can specify to override IP addresses.

Table 15 ‑4. Options for Overriding IP Addresses

Option

-d desktop

-i ip_or_dns

-m machine

-override

-r

Description

Specifies the desktop pool.

Specifies the IP address or resolvable domain name in

DNS.

Specifies the name of the machine in a desktop pool.

Specifies an operation for overriding IP addresses.

Removes an overridden IP address.

Examples

Override the IP address for the machine machine2 in the desktop pool dtpool2.

vdmadmin -A -override -i 10.20.54.165 -d dtpool2 -m machine2

Display the IP addresses that are defined for the machine machine2 in the desktop pool dtpool2.

vdmadmin -A -override -list -d dtpool2 -m machine2

Remove the IP addresses that is defined for the machine machine2 in the desktop pool dtpool2.

vdmadmin -A -override -r -d dtpool2 -m machine2

Remove the IP addresses that are defined for the desktops in the desktop pool dtpool3.

vdmadmin -A -override -r -d dtpool3

Setting the Name of a View Connection Server Group Using the

C

Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -C option to set the name of a View Connection Server group.

The Microsoft System Center Operations Manager (SCOM) console displays this name to help you identify the group within SCOM.

Syntax

vdmadmin -C [-b authentication_arguments] [-c groupname]

Usage Notes

You must name a View Connection Server group if you intend to use SCOM to monitor and manage the state of View components. View Administrator does not display the name of a group. Run the command on a member of the group that you want to name.

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If you do not specify a name for the group, the command returns the GUID of the group to which the local

View Connection Server instance belongs. You can use the GUID to verify whether a View Connection

Server instance is a member of the same View Connection Server group as another View Connection Server instance.

For a description of how to use SCOM with View, see the View Integration document.

Options

The -c option specifies the name of the View Connection Server group. If you do not specify this option, the command returns the GUID of the group.

Examples

Set the name of a View Connection Server group to VCSG01.

vdmadmin -C -c VCSG01

Return the GUID of the group.

vdmadmin -C

Updating Foreign Security Principals Using the

F Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -F option to update the foreign security principals (FSPs) of

Windows users in Active Directory who are authorized to use a desktop.

Syntax

vdmadmin -F [-b authentication_arguments] [-u domain\user]

Usage Notes

If you trust domains outside of your local domains, you allow access by security principals in the external domains to the local domains' resources. Active Directory uses FSPs to represent security principals in trusted external domains. You might want to update the FSPs of users if you modify the list of trusted external domains.

Options

The -u option specifies the name and domain of the user whose FSP you want to update. If you do not specify this option, the command updates the FSPs of all users in Active Directory.

Examples

Update the FSP of the user Jim in the EXTERNAL domain.

vdmadmin -F -u EXTERNAL\Jim

Update the FSPs of all users in Active Directory.

vdmadmin -F

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Listing and Displaying Health Monitors Using the

H Option

You can use the vdmadmin command -H to list the existing health monitors, to monitor instances for View components, and to display the details of a specific health monitor or monitor instance.

Syntax

vdmadmin -H [-b authentication_arguments] -list -xml [-w | -n] vdmadmin -H [-b authentication_arguments] -list -monitorid monitor_id -xml [-w | -n] vdmadmin -H [-b authentication_arguments] -monitorid monitor_id -instanceid instance_id -xml [-w

| -n]

Usage Notes

Table 15-5 shows the health monitors that View uses to monitor the health of its components.

Table 15 ‑5. Health Monitors

Monitor Description

CBMonitor

DBMonitor

DomainMonitor

SGMonitor

VCMonitor

Monitors the health of View Connection Server instances.

Monitors the health of the events database.

Monitors the health of the View Connection Server host's local domain and all trusted domains.

Monitors the health of security gateway services and security servers.

Monitors the health of vCenter servers.

If a component has several instances, View creates a separate monitor instance to monitor each instance of the component.

The command outputs all information about health monitors and monitor instances in XML format.

Options

Table 15-6 shows the options that you can specify to list and display health monitors.

Table 15 ‑6. Options for Listing and Displaying Health Monitors

Option Description

-instanceid instance_id

-list

-list -monitorid monitor_id

-monitorid monitor_id

Specifies a health monitor instance

Displays the existing health monitors if a health monitor ID is not specified.

Displays the monitor instances for the specified health monitor ID.

Specifies a health monitor ID.

Examples

List all existing health monitors in XML using Unicode characters.

vdmadmin -H -list -xml

List all instances of the vCenter monitor (VCMonitor) in XML using ASCII characters.

vdmadmin -H -list -monitorid VCMonitor -xml -n

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Display the health of a specified vCenter monitor instance.

vdmadmin -H -monitorid VCMonitor -instanceid 4aec2c99-4879-96b2-de408064d035 -xml

Listing and Displaying Reports of View Operation Using the

I Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -I option to list the available reports of View operation and to display the results of running one of these reports.

Syntax

vdmadmin -I [-b authentication_arguments] -list [-xml] [-w | -n] vdmadmin -I [-b authentication_arguments] -report report -view view [-startdate yyyy-MM-dd-

HH:mm:ss][-enddate yyyy-MM-dd-HH:mm:ss] [-w | -n] -xml | -csv

Usage Notes

You can use the command to display the available reports and views, and to display the information that

View has recorded for a specified report and view.

You can also use the vdmadmin command with the -I option to generate View log messages in syslog format.

See

“Generating View Event Log Messages in Syslog Format Using the -I Option,” on page 249.

Options

Table 15-7 shows the options that you can specify to list and display reports and views.

Table 15 ‑7. Options for Listing and Displaying Reports and Views

Option Description

-enddate yyyy-MM-dd-HH:mm:ss

-list

-report report

-startdate yyyy-MM-dd-HH:mm:ss

-view view

Specifies a upper limit for the date of information to be displayed.

Lists the available reports and views.

Specifies a report.

Specifies a lower limit for the date of information to be displayed.

Specifies a view.

Examples

List the available reports and views in XML using Unicode characters.

vdmadmin -I -list -xml -w

Display a list of user events that occurred since August 1, 2010 as comma-separated values using ASCII characters.

vdmadmin -I -report events -view user_events -startdate 2010-08-01-00:00:00 -csv -n

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Generating View Event Log Messages in Syslog Format Using the

I

Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -I option to record View event messages in Syslog format in event log files. Many third-party analytics products require flat-file Syslog data as input for their analytics operations.

Syntax

vdmadmin -I -eventSyslog -disable vdmadmin -I -eventSyslog -enable -localOnly vdmadmin -I -eventSyslog -enable -path path vdmadmin -I -eventSyslog -enable -path path

-user DomainName\username -password password

Usage Notes

You can use the command to generate View event log messages in Syslog format. In a Syslog file, View event log messages are formatted in key-value pairs, which makes the logging data accessible to analytics software.

You can also use the vdmadmin command with the -I option to list the available reports and views and to display the contents of a specified report. See

“Listing and Displaying Reports of View Operation Using the

-I Option,” on page 248.

Options

You can disable or enable the eventSyslog option. You can direct the Syslog output to the local system only or to another location. Direct UDP connection to a Syslog server is supported with View 5.2 or later.

See "Configure Event Logging for Syslog Servers" in the View Installation document.

Table 15 ‑8. Options for Generating View Event Log Messages in Syslog Format

Option Description

-disable

-e|-enable

-eventSyslog

-localOnly

-password password

-path

-u|-user DomainName\username

Disables Syslog logging.

Enables Syslog logging.

Specifies that View events are generated in Syslog format.

Stores the Syslog output on the local system only. When you use the -localOnly option, the default destination of the Syslog output is %PROGRAMDATA

%\VMware\VDM\events\ .

Specifies the password for the user that authorizes access to the specified destination path for the Syslog output.

Determines the destination UNC path for the Syslog output.

Specifies the domain and username that can access the destination path for the Syslog output.

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Examples

Disable generating View events in

Syslog

format.

vdmadmin -I -eventSyslog -disable

Direct

Syslog

output of View events to the local system only.

vdmadmin -I -eventSyslog -enable -localOnly

Direct

Syslog

output of View events to a specified path.

vdmadmin -I -eventSyslog -enable -path path

Direct

Syslog

output of View events to a specified path that requires access by an authorized domain user.

vdmadmin -I -eventSyslog -enable -path \\logserver\share\ViewEvents -user mydomain\myuser

-password mypassword

Assigning Dedicated Machines Using the

L Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -L option to assign machines from a dedicated pool to users.

Syntax

vdmadmin -L [-b authentication_arguments] -d desktop -m machine -u domain\user vdmadmin -L [-b authentication_arguments] -d desktop [-m machine | -u domain\user] -r

Usage Notes

View assigns machines to users when they first connect to a dedicated desktop pool. Under some circumstances, you might want to preassign machines to users. For example, you might want to prepare their system environments in advance of their initial connection. After a user connects to a remote desktop that View assigns from a dedicated pool, the virtual machine that hosts the desktop remains assigned to the user for the life span of the virtual machine. You can assign a user to a single machine in a dedicated pool.

You can assign a machine to any entitled user. You might want to do this when recovering from the loss of

View LDAP data on a View Connection Server instance, or when you want to change ownership of a particular machine.

After a user connects to a remote desktop that View assigns from a dedicated pool, that remote desktop remains assigned to the user for the life span of the virtual machine that hosts the desktop. You might want to remove the assignment of a machine to a user who has left the organization, who no longer requires access to the desktop, or who will use a desktop in a different desktop pool. You can also remove assignments for all users who access a desktop pool.

N

OTE

The vdmadmin -L command does not assign ownership to View Composer persistent disks. To assign linked-clone desktops with persistent disks to users, use the Assign User menu option in View

Administrator or the View PowerCLI Update-UserOwnership cmdlet.

If you do use vdmadmin -L to assign a linked-clone desktop with a persistent disk to a user, unexpected results can occur in certain situations. For example, if you detach a persistent disk and use it to recreate a desktop, the recreated desktop is not assigned to the owner of the original desktop.

Options

Table 15-9 shows the options that you can specify to assign a desktop to a user or to remove an assignment.

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Table 15 ‑9. Options for Assigning Dedicated Desktops

Option Description

-d desktop

-m machine

-r

-u domain\user

Specifies the name of the desktop pool.

Specifies the name of the virtual machine that hosts the remote desktop.

Removes an assignment to a specified user, or all assignments to a specified machine.

Specifies the login name and domain of the user.

Examples

Assign the machine machine2 in the desktop pool dtpool1 to the user Jo in the CORP domain.

vdmadmin -L -d dtpool1 -m machine2 -u CORP\Jo

Remove the assignments for the user Jo in the CORP domain to desktops in the pool dtpool1.

vdmadmin -L -d dtpool1 -u Corp\Jo -r

Remove all user assignments to the machine machine1 in the desktop pool dtpool3.

vdmadmin -L -d dtpool3 -m machine1 -r

Displaying Information About Machines Using the -M Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -M option to display information about the configuration of virtual machines or physical computers.

Syntax

vdmadmin -M [-b authentication_arguments] [-m machine | [-u domain\user][-d desktop]] [-xml |

-csv] [-w | -n]

Usage Notes

The command displays information about a remote desktop's underlying virtual machine or physical computer.

n n n n n n n n n

Display name of the machine.

Name of the desktop pool.

State of the machine.

The machine state can be one of the following values: UNDEFINED, PRE_PROVISIONED, CLONING,

CLONINGERROR, CUSTOMIZING, READY, DELETING, MAINTENANCE, ERROR, LOGOUT .

The command does not display all dynamic machine states, such as Connected or Disconnected , that are displayed in View Administrator.

SID of the assigned user.

Account name of the assigned user.

Domain name of the assigned user.

Inventory path of the virtual machine (if applicable).

Date on which the machine was created.

Template path of the machine (if applicable).

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URL of the vCenter Server (if applicable).

Options

Table 15-10

shows the options that you can use to specify the machine whose details you want to display.

Table 15 ‑10. Options for Displaying Information About Machines

Option Description

-d desktop

-m machine

-u domain\user

Specifies the name of the desktop pool.

Specifies the name of the virtual machine.

Specifies the login name and domain of the user.

Examples

Display information about the underlying machine for the remote desktop in the pool dtpool2 that is assigned to the user Jo in the CORP domain and format the output as XML using ASCII characters.

vdmadmin -M -u CORP\Jo -d dtpool2 -xml -n

Display information about the machine machine3 and format the output as comma-separated values.

vdmadmin -M -m machine3 -csv

Reclaiming Disk Space on Virtual Machines Using the

M Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -M option to mark a linked-clone virtual machine for disk space reclamation. View directs the ESXi host to reclaim disk space on the linked-clone OS disk without waiting for the unused space on the OS disk to reach the minimum threshold that is specified in View

Administrator.

Syntax

vdmadmin -M [-b authentication_arguments] -d desktop -m machine -markForSpaceReclamation

Usage Notes

With this option, you can initiate disk space reclamation on a particular virtual machine for demonstration or troubleshooting purposes.

Space reclamation does not take place if you run this command when a blackout period is in effect.

The following prerequisites must be met before you can reclaim disk space by using the vdmadmin command with the -M option: n

Verify that View is using vCenter Server and ESXi version 5.1 or later.

n n n n n

Verify that VMware Tools that are provided with vSphere version 5.1 or later are installed on the virtual machine.

Verify that the virtual machine is virtual hardware version 9 or later.

In View Administrator, verify that the Enable space reclamation option is selected for vCenter Server.

See

“Allow vSphere to Reclaim Disk Space in Linked-Clone Virtual Machines,” on page 18.

In View Administrator, verify that the Reclaim VM disk space option was selected for the desktop pool. See "Reclaim Disk Space on Linked-Clone Desktops" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools

in View document.

Verify that the virtual machine is powered on before you initiate the space reclamation operation.

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Verify that a blackout period is not in effect. See "Set Blackout Times for ESXi Operations on Remote

Desktops" in the Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View document.

Options

Table 15 ‑11. Options for Reclaiming Disk Space on Virtual Machines

Option Description

-d desktop

-m machine

-MarkForSpaceReclamation

Specifies the name of the desktop pool.

Specifies the name of the virtual machine.

Marks the virtual machine for disk space reclamation.

Example

Marks the virtual machine machine3

in the desktop pool pool1

for disk space reclamation.

vdmadmin -M -d pool1 -m machine3 -markForSpaceReclamation

Configuring Domain Filters Using the

N Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -N option to control the domains that View makes available to end users.

Syntax

vdmadmin -N [-b authentication_arguments] -domains {-exclude | -include | -search} -domain

domain -add [-s connsvr] vdmadmin -N [-b authentication_arguments] -domains -list [-w | -n] [-xml] vdmadmin -N [-b authentication_arguments] -domains -list -active [-w | -n] [-xml] vdmadmin -N [-b authentication_arguments] -domains {-exclude | -include | -search} -domain

domain -remove [-s connsvr] vdmadmin -N [-b authentication_arguments] -domains {-exclude | -include | -search} -removeall

[-s connsvr]

Usage Notes

Specify one of the -exclude, -include, or -search options to apply an operation to the exclusion list, inclusion list, or search exclusion list respectively.

If you add a domain to a search exclusion list, the domain is excluded from an automated domain search.

If you add a domain to an inclusion list, the domain is included in the results of the search.

If you add a domain to an exclusion list, the domain is excluded from the results of the search.

Options

Table 15-12

shows the options that you can specify to configure domain filters.

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Table 15 ‑12. Options for Configuring Domain Filters

Option

-add

-domain domain

-domains

-exclude

-include

-list

-list -active

-remove

-removeall

-s connsvr

-search

Description

Adds a domain to a list.

Specifies the domain to be filtered.

You must specify domains by their NetBIOS names and not by their DNS names.

Specifies a domain filter operation.

Specifies an operation on a exclusion list.

Specifies an operation on an inclusion list.

Displays the domains that are configured in the search exclusion list, exclusion list, and inclusion list on each View

Connection Server instance and for the View Connection

Server group.

Displays the available domains for the View Connection

Server instance on which you run the command.

Removes a domain from a list.

Removes all domains from a list.

Specifies that the operation applies to the domain filters on a View Connection Server instance. You can specify the

View Connection Server instance by its name or IP address.

If you do not specify this option, any change that you make to the search configuration applies to all View Connection

Server instances in the group.

Specifies an operation on a search exclusion list.

Examples

Add the domain FARDOM to the search exclusion list for the View Connection Server instance csvr1.

vdmadmin -N -domains -search -domain FARDOM -add -s csvr1

Add the domain NEARDOM to the exclusion list for a View Connection Server group.

vdmadmin -N -domains -exclude -domain NEARDOM -add

Display the domain search configuration on both View Connection Server instances in the group, and for the group.

C:\ vdmadmin -N -domains -list

Domain Configuration

====================

Cluster Settings

Include:

Exclude:

Search :

FARDOM

DEPTX

Broker Settings: CONSVR-1

Include:

(*)Exclude:

YOURDOM

Search :

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Broker Settings: CONSVR-2

Include:

Exclude:

Search :

View limits the domain search on each View Connection Server host in the group to exclude the domains

FARDOM and DEPTX. The characters (*) next to the exclusion list for CONSVR-1 indicates that View excludes the YOURDOM domain from the results of the domain search on CONSVR-1.

Display the domain filters in XML using ASCII characters.

vdmadmin -N -domains -list -xml -n

Display the domains that are available to View on the local View Connection Server instance.

C:\ vdmadmin -N -domains -list -active

Domain Information (CONSVR)

===========================

Primary Domain: MYDOM

Domain: MYDOM DNS:mydom.mycorp.com

Domain: YOURDOM DNS:yourdom.mycorp.com

Domain: FARDOM DNS:fardom.mycorp.com

Domain: DEPTX DNS:deptx.mycorp.com

Domain: DEPTY DNS:depty.mycorp.com

Domain: DEPTZ DNS:deptz.mycorp.com

Display the available domains in XML using ASCII characters.

vdmadmin -N -domains -list -active -xml -n

Remove the domain NEARDOM from the exclusion list for a View Connection Server group.

vdmadmin -N -domains -exclude -domain NEARDOM -remove

Remove all domains from the inclusion list for the View Connection Server instance csvr1.

vdmadmin -N -domains -include -removeall -s csvr1

Configuring Domain Filters

You can configure domain filters to limit the domains that a View Connection Server instance or security server makes available to end users.

View determines which domains are accessible by traversing trust relationships, starting with the domain in which a View Connection Server instance or security server resides. For a small, well-connected set of domains, View can quickly determine a full list of domains, but the time that this operation takes increases as the number of domains increases or as the connectivity between the domains decreases. View might also include domains in the search results that you would prefer not to offer to users when they log in to their remote desktops.

If you have previously set the value of the Windows registry key that controls recursive domain enumeration (

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\VMware, Inc.\VMware VDM\RecursiveDomainEnum

) to false, recursive domain searching is disabled, and the View Connection Server instance uses only the primary domain. To use the domain filtering feature, delete the registry key or set its value to true, and restart the system. You must do this for every View Connection Server instance on which you have set this key.

Table 15-13

shows the types of domain lists that you can specify to configure domain filtering.

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Table 15 ‑13. Types of Domain List

Domain List Type Description

Search exclusion list

Exclusion list

Inclusion list

Specifies the domains that View can traverse during an automated search. The search ignores domains that are included in the search exclusion list, and does not attempt to locate domains that the excluded domain trusts. You cannot exclude the primary domain from the search.

Specifies the domains that View excludes from the results of a domain search. You cannot exclude the primary domain.

Specifies the domains that View does not exclude from the results of a domain search. All other domains are removed apart from the primary domain.

The automated domain search retrieves a list of domains, excluding those domains that you specify in the search exclusion list and domains that are trusted by those excluded domains. View selects the first nonempty exclusion or inclusion list in this order.

1 Exclusion list configured for the View Connection Server instance.

2 Exclusion list configured for the View Connection Server group.

3 Inclusion list configured for the View Connection Server instance.

4 Inclusion list configured for the View Connection Server group

View applies only the first list that it selects to the search results.

If you specify a domain for inclusion, and its domain controller is not currently accessible, View does not include that domain in the list of active domains.

You cannot exclude the primary domain to which a View Connection Server instance or security server belongs.

Example of Filtering to Include Domains

You can use an inclusion list to specify the domains that View does not exclude from the results of a domain search. All other domains, apart from the primary domain, are removed.

A View Connection Server instance is joined to the primary MYDOM domain and has a trusted relationship with the YOURDOM domain. The YOURDOM domain has a trusted relationship with the DEPTX domain.

Display the currently active domains for the View Connection Server instance.

C:\ vdmadmin -N -domains -list -active

Domain Information (CONSVR)

===========================

Primary Domain: MYDOM

Domain: MYDOM DNS:mydom.mycorp.com

Domain: YOURDOM DNS:yourdom.mycorp.com

Domain: FARDOM DNS: fardom.mycorp.com

Domain: DEPTX DNS:deptx.mycorp.com

Domain: DEPTY DNS:depty.mycorp.com

Domain: DEPTZ DNS:deptz.mycorp.com

The DEPTY and DEPTZ domains appear in the list because they are trusted domains of the DEPTX domain.

Specify that the View Connection Server instance should make only the YOURDOM and DEPTX domains available, in addition to the primary MYDOM domain.

vdmadmin -N -domains -include -domain YOURDOM -add vdmadmin -N -domains -include -domain DEPTX -add

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Display the currently active domains after including the YOURDOM and DEPTX domains.

C:\ vdmadmin -N -domains -list -active

Domain Information (CONSVR)

===========================

Primary Domain: MYDOM

Domain: MYDOM DNS:mydom.mycorp.com

Domain: YOURDOM DNS:yourdom.mycorp.com

Domain: DEPTX DNS:deptx.mycorp.com

View applies the include list to the results of a domain search. If the domain hierarchy is very complex or network connectivity to some domains is poor, the domain search can be slow. In such cases, use search exclusion instead.

Example of Filtering to Exclude Domains

You can use an inclusion list to specify the domains that View excludes from the results of a domain search.

A group of two View Connection Server instances, CONSVR-1 and CONSVR-2, is joined to the primary

MYDOM domain and has a trusted relationship with the YOURDOM domain. The YOURDOM domain has a trusted relationship with the DEPTX and FARDOM domains.

The FARDOM domain is in a remote geographical location, and network connectivity to that domain is over a slow, high-latency link. There is no requirement for users in the FARDOM domain to be able to access the

View Connection Server group in the MYDOM domain.

Display the currently active domains for a member of the View Connection Server group.

C:\ vdmadmin -N -domains -list -active

Domain Information (CONSVR-1)

=============================

Primary Domain: MYDOM

Domain: MYDOM DNS:mydom.mycorp.com

Domain: YOURDOM DNS:yourdom.mycorp.com

Domain: FARDOM DNS: fardom.mycorp.com

Domain: DEPTX DNS:deptx.mycorp.com

Domain: DEPTY DNS:depty.mycorp.com

Domain: DEPTZ DNS:deptz.mycorp.com

The DEPTY and DEPTZ domains are trusted domains of the DEPTX domain.

To improve connection performance for Horizon Client, exclude the FARDOM domain from being searched by the View Connection Server group.

vdmadmin -N -domains -search -domain FARDOM -add

The command displays the currently active domains after excluding the FARDOM domain from the search.

C:\ vdmadmin -N -domains -list -active

Domain Information (CONSVR-1)

=============================

Primary Domain: MYDOM

Domain: MYDOM DNS:mydom.mycorp.com

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Domain: YOURDOM DNS:yourdom.mycorp.com

Domain: DEPTX DNS:deptx.mycorp.com

Domain: DEPTY DNS:depty.mycorp.com

Domain: DEPTZ DNS:deptz.mycorp.com

Extend the search exclusion list to exclude the DEPTX domain and all its trusted domains from the domain search for all View Connection Server instances in a group. Also, exclude the YOURDOM domain from being available on CONSVR-1.

vdmadmin -N -domains -search -domain DEPTX -add vdmadmin -N -domains -exclude -domain YOURDOM -add -s CONSVR-1

Display the new domain search configuration.

C:\ vdmadmin -N -domains -list

Domain Configuration

====================

Cluster Settings

Include:

Exclude:

Search :

FARDOM

DEPTX

Broker Settings: CONSVR-1

Include:

(*)Exclude:

YOURDOM

Search :

Broker Settings: CONSVR-2

Include:

Exclude:

Search :

View limits the domain search on each View Connection Server host in the group to exclude the domains

FARDOM and DEPTX. The characters (*) next to the exclusion list for CONSVR-1 indicates that View excludes the YOURDOM domain from the results of the domain search on CONSVR-1.

On CONSVR-1, display the currently active domains.

C:\ vdmadmin -N -domains -list -active

Domain Information (CONSVR-1)

=============================

Primary Domain: MYDOM

Domain: MYDOM DNS:mydom.mycorp.com

On CONSVR-2, display the currently active domains.

C:\ vdmadmin -N -domains -list -active

Domain Information (CONSVR-2)

=============================

Primary Domain: MYDOM

Domain: MYDOM DNS:mydom.mycorp.com

Domain: YOURDOM DNS:yourdom.mycorp.com

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Displaying the Machines and Policies of Unentitled Users Using the

O and P Options

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -O and -P options to display the virtual machines and policies that are assigned to users who are no longer entitled to use the system.

Syntax

vdmadmin -O [-b authentication_arguments] [-ld | -lu] [-w | -n] [-xml [-noxslt | -xsltpath path]] vdmadmin -P [-b authentication_arguments] [-ld | -lu] [-w | -n] [-xml [-noxslt | -xsltpath path]]

Usage Notes

If you revoke a user's entitlement to a persistent virtual machine or to a physical system, the associated remote desktop assignment is not automatically revoked. This condition might be acceptable if you have temporarily suspended a user’s account or if the user is on a sabbatical. When you reenable entitlement, the user can continue using the same virtual machine as previously. If a user has left the organization, other users cannot access the virtual machine, and it is considered to be orphaned. You might also want to examine any policies that are assigned to unentitled users.

Options

Table 15-14

shows the options that you can specify to display the virtual machines and policies of unentitled users.

Table 15 ‑14. Options for Displaying the Machines and Policies of Unentitled Users

Option Description

-ld

-lu

-noxslt

-xsltpath path

Orders output entries by machine.

Orders output entries by user.

Specifies that the default stylesheet should not be applied to the XML output.

Specifies the path to the stylesheet that is used to transform XML output.

Table 15-15

shows the stylesheets that you can apply to the XML output to transform it into HTML. The stylesheets are located in the directory C:\Program Files\VMware\VMware View\server\etc .

Table 15 ‑15. XSL Stylesheets

Stylesheet File Name unentitled-machines.xsl

unentitled-policies.xsl

Description

Transforms reports containing a list of unentitled virtual machines, grouped either by user or system, and which are currently assigned to a user. This is the default stylesheet.

Transforms reports containing a list of virtual machines with user-level policies that are applied to unentitled users.

Examples

Display the virtual machines that are assigned to unentitled users, grouped by virtual machine in text format.

vdmadmin -O -ld

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Display virtual machines that are assigned to unentitled users, grouped by user, in XML format using ASCII characters.

vdmadmin -O -lu -xml -n

Apply your own stylesheet

C:\tmp\unentitled-users.xsl

and redirect the output to the file uu-output.html

.

vdmadmin -O -lu -xml -xsltpath "C:\tmp\unentitled-users.xsl" > uu-output.html

Display the user policies that are associated with unentitled users’ virtual machinse, grouped by desktop, in

XML format using Unicode characters.

vdmadmin -P -ld -xml -w

Apply your own stylesheet

C:\tmp\unentitled-policies.xsl

and redirect the output to the file upoutput.html

.

vdmadmin -P -ld -xml -xsltpath "C:\tmp\unentitled-policies.xsl" > up-output.html

Configuring Clients in Kiosk Mode Using the

Q Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -Q option to set defaults and create accounts for clients in kiosk mode, to enable authentication for these clients, and to display information about their configuration.

Syntax

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -add [-b authentication_arguments] -domain domain_name-clientid

client_id [-password "password" | -genpassword] [-ou DN] [-expirepassword | -noexpirepassword]

[-group group_name | -nogroup] [-description "description_text"] vdmadmin -Q -disable [-b authentication_arguments] -s connection_server vdmadmin -Q -enable [-b authentication_arguments] -s connection_server [-requirepassword] vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -getdefaults [-b authentication_arguments] [-xml] vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -list [-b authentication_arguments] [-xml] vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -remove [-b authentication_arguments] -domain domain_name-clientid client_id vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -removeall [-b authentication_arguments] [-force] vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -setdefaults [-b authentication_arguments] [-ou DN] [ -expirepassword |

-noexpirepassword ] [-group group_name | -nogroup] vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -update [-b authentication_arguments] -domain domain_name-clientid

client_id [-password "password" | -genpassword] [-description "description_text"]

Usage Notes

You must run the vdmadmin command on one of the View Connection Server instances in the group that contains the View Connection Server instance that clients use to connect to their remote desktops.

When you configure defaults for password expiry and Active Directory group membership, these settings are shared by all View Connection Server instances in a group.

When you add a client in kiosk mode, View creates a user account for the client in Active Directory. If you specify a name for a client, this name must start with the characters "custom-" or with one of the alternate strings that you can define in ADAM, and it cannot be more than 20 characters long. You should use each specified name with no more than one client device.

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You can define alternate prefixes to "custom-" in the pae-ClientAuthPrefix

multi-valued attribute under cn=common,ou=global,ou=properties,dc=vdi,dc=vmware,dc=int

in ADAM on a View Connection Server instance. Avoid using these prefixes with ordinary user accounts.

If you do not specify a name for a client, View generates a name from the MAC address that you specify for the client device. For example, if the MAC address is 00:10:db:ee:76:80, the corresponding account name is cm-00_10_db_ee_76_80. You can only use these accounts with View Connection Server instances that you enable to authenticate clients.

Some thin clients allow only account names that start with the characters "custom-" or "cm-" to be used with kiosk mode.

An automatically generated password is 16 characters long, contains at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter, one symbol, and one number, and can contain repeated characters. If you require a stronger password, you must use the -password option to specify the password.

If you use the -group option to specify a group or you have previously set a default group, View adds the client's account to this group. You can specify the -nogroup option to prevent the account being added to any group.

If you enable a View Connection Server instance to authenticate clients in kiosk mode, you can optionally specify that clients must provide a password. If you disable authentication, clients cannot connect to their remote desktops.

Although you enable or disable authentication for an individual View Connection Server instance, all View

Connection Server instances in a group share all other settings for client authentication. You need only add a client once for all View Connection Server instances in a group to be capable of accepting requests from the client.

If you specify the -requirepassword option when enabling authentication, the View Connection Server instance cannot authenticate clients that have automatically generated passwords. If you change the configuration of a View Connection Server instance to specify this option, such clients cannot authenticate themselves, and they fail with the error message Unknown username or bad password .

Options

Table 15-16

shows the options that you can specify to configure clients in kiosk mode.

Table 15 ‑16. Options for Configuring Clients in Kiosk Mode

Option Description

-add

-clientauth

-clientid client_id

-description "description_text"

-disable

-domain domain_name

-enable

-expirepassword

Adds an account for a client in kiosk mode.

Specifies an operation that configures authentication for a client in kiosk mode.

Specifies the name or the MAC address of the client.

Creates a description of the account for the client device in

Active Directory.

Disables authentication of clients in kiosk mode on a specified View Connection Server instance.

Specifies the domain for the account for the client device.

Enables authentication of clients in kiosk mode on a specified View Connection Server instance.

Specifies that the expiry time for the password on client accounts is the same as for the View Connection Server group. If no expiry time is defined for the group, passwords do not expire.

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Table 15 ‑16. Options for Configuring Clients in Kiosk Mode (Continued)

Option

-force

-genpassword

-getdefaults

-group group_name

-list

-noexpirepassword

-nogroup

-ou DN

-password "password"

-remove

-removeall

-requirepassword

-s connection_server

-setdefaults

-update

Description

Disables the confirmation prompt when removing the account for a client in kiosk mode.

Generates a password for the client's account. This is the default behavior if you do not specify either -password or

-genpassword .

Gets the default values that are used for adding client accounts.

Specifies the name of the default group to which client accounts are added. The name of the group must be specified as the pre-Windows 2000 group name from

Active Directory.

Displays information about clients in kiosk mode and about the View Connection Server instances on which you have enabled authentication of clients in kiosk mode.

Specifies that the password on an account does not expire.

When adding an account for a client, specifies that the client's account is not added to the default group.

When setting the default values for clients, clears the setting for the default group.

Specifies the distinguished name of the organizational unit to which client accounts are added.

For example: OU=kiosk-ou,DC=myorg,DC=com

N

OTE

You cannot use the -setdefaults option to change the configuration of an organizational unit.

Specifies an explicit password for the client's account.

Removes the account for a client in kiosk mode.

Removes the accounts of all clients in kiosk mode.

Specifies that clients in kiosk mode must provide passwords. View will not accept generated passwords for new connections.

Specifies the NetBIOS name of the View Connection Server instance on which to enable or disable the authentication of clients in kiosk mode.

Sets the default values that are used for adding client accounts.

Updates an account for a client in kiosk mode.

Examples

Set the default values for the organizational unit, password expiry, and group membership of clients.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -setdefaults -ou "OU=kiosk-ou,DC=myorg,DC=com" -noexpirepassword -group kc-grp

Get the current default values for clients in plain text format.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -getdefaults

Get the current default values for clients in XML format.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -getdefaults -xml

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Add an account for a client specified by its MAC address to the MYORG domain, and use the default settings for the group kc-grp.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -add -domain MYORG -clientid 00:10:db:ee:76:80 -group kc-grp

Add an account for a client specified by its MAC address to the MYORG domain, and use an automatically generated password.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -add -domain MYORG -clientid 00:10:db:ee:76:80 -genpassword -ou

"OU=kiosk-ou,DC=myorg,DC=com" -group kc-grp

Add an account for a named client, and specify a password to be used with the client.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -add -domain MYORG -clientid custom-Terminal21 -password "guest" -ou

"OU=kiosk-ou,DC=myorg,DC=com" -description "Terminal 21"

Update an account for a client, specifying a new password and descriptive text.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -update -domain MYORG -clientid custom-Terminal21 -password "Secret1!" description "Foyer Entry Workstation"

Remove the account for a kiosk client specified by its MAC address from the MYORG domain.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -remove -domain MYORG -clientid 00:10:db:ee:54:12

Remove the accounts of all clients without prompting to confirm the removal.

vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -removeall -force

Enable authentication of clients for the View Connection Server instance csvr-2. Clients with automatically generated passwords can authenticate themselves without providing a password.

vdmadmin -Q -enable -s csvr-2

Enable authentication of clients for the View Connection Server instance csvr-3, and require that the clients specify their passwords to Horizon Client. Clients with automatically generated passwords cannot authenticate themselves.

vdmadmin -Q -enable -s csvr-3 -requirepassword

Disable authentication of clients for the View Connection Server instance csvr-1.

vdmadmin -Q -disable -s csvr-1

Display information about clients in text format. Client cm-00_0c_29_0d_a3_e6 has an automatically generated password, and does not require an end user or an application script to specify this password to

Horizon Client. Client cm-00_22_19_12_6d_cf has an explicitly specified password, and requires the end user to provide this. The View Connection Server instance CONSVR2 accepts authentication requests from clients with automatically generated passwords. CONSVR1 does not accept authentication requests from clients in kiosk mode.

C:\ vdmadmin -Q -clientauth -list

Client Authentication User List

===============================

GUID : 94be6344-0c9b-4a92-8d54-1brc1c2dc282

ClientID : cm-00_0c_29_0d_a3_e6

Domain : myorg.com

Password Generated: true

GUID : 471d9d35-68b2-40ee-b693-56a7d92b2e25

ClientID : cm-00_22_19_12_6d_cf

Domain : myorg.com

Password Generated: false

Client Authentication Connection Servers

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========================================

Common Name : CONSVR1

Client Authentication Enabled : false

Password Required : false

Common Name : CONSVR2

Client Authentication Enabled : true

Password Required : false

Displaying the First User of a Machine Using the -R Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -R option to find out the initial assignment of a managed virtual machine. For example, in the event of the loss of LDAP data, you might need this information so that you can reassign virtual machines to users.

N

OTE

The vdmadmin command with the -R option works only on virtual machines that are earlier than View

Agent 5.1. On virtual machines that run View Agent 5.1 and later and Horizon Agent 7.0 and later versions, this option does not work. To locate the first user of a virtual machine, use the Events database to determine which users logged into the machine.

Syntax

vdmadmin -R -i network_address

Usage Notes

You cannot use the -b option to run this command as a privileged user. You must be logged in as a user in the Administrator role.

Options

The -i option specifies the IP address of the virtual machine.

Examples

Display the first user who accessed the virtual machine at the IP address 10.20.34.120.

vdmadmin -R -i 10.20.34.120

Removing the Entry for a View Connection Server Instance or

Security Server Using the

S Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -S option to remove the entry for a View Connection Server instance or security server from the View configuration.

Syntax

vdmadmin -S [-b authentication_arguments] -r -s server

Usage Notes

To ensure high availability, View allows you to configure one or more replica View Connection Server instances in a View Connection Server group. If you disable a View Connection Server instance in a group, the entry for the server persists within the View configuration.

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You can also use the vdmadmin command with the -S option to remove a security server from your View environment. You do not have to use this option if you intend to upgrade or reinstall a security server without removing it permanently.

To make the removal permanent, perform these tasks:

1 Uninstall the View Connection Server instance or security server from the Windows Server computer by running the View Connection Server installer.

2 Remove the Adam Instance VMwareVDMDS program from the Windows Server computer by running the Add or Remove Programs tool.

3 On another View Connection Server instance, use the vdmadmin command to remove the entry for the uninstalled View Connection Server instance or security server from the configuration.

If you want to reinstall View on the removed systems without replicating the View configuration of the original group, restart all the View Connection Server hosts in the original group before performing the reinstallation. This prevents the reinstalled View Connection Server instances from receiving configuration updates from their original group.

Options

The -s option specifies the NetBIOS name of the View Connection Server instance or security server to be removed.

Examples

Remove the entry for the View Connection Server instance connsvr3.

vdmadmin -S -r -s connsvr3

Providing Secondary Credentials for Administrators Using the

T

Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -T option to provide Active Directory secondary credentials to administrator users.

Syntax

vdmadmin -T [-b authentication_arguments] -domainauth

{-add | -update | -remove | -removeall | -list} -owner domain\user -user domain\user [-password

password]

Usage Notes

If your users and groups are in a domain with a one-way trust relationship with the View Connection Server domain, you must provide secondary credentials for the administrator users in View Administrator.

Administrators must have secondary credentials to give them access to the one-way trusted domains. A one-way trusted domain can be an external domain or a domain in a transitive forest trust.

Secondary credentials are required only for View Administrator sessions, not for end users' desktop or application sessions. Only administrator users require secondary credentials.

With the vdmadmin command, you configure secondary credentials on a per-user basis. You cannot configure globally specified secondary credentials.

For a forest trust, you typically configure secondary credentials only for the forest root domain. View

Connection Server can then enumerate the child domains in the forest trust.

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Active Directory account lock, disable, and logon hours checks can be performed only when a user in a oneway trusted domain first logs on.

PowerShell administration and smart card authentication of users is not supported in one-way trusted domains. SAML authentication of users in one-way trusted domains is not supported.

Secondary credential accounts require the following permissions. A standard user account should have these permissions by default.

n n

List Contents

Read All Properties n n

Read Permissions

Read tokenGroupsGlobalAndUniversal (implied by Read All Properties)

Options

Table 15 ‑17. Options for Providing Secondary Credentials

Option Description

-add

-update

-list

-remove

-removeall

Adds a secondary credential for the owner account.

A Windows logon is performed to verify that the specified credentials are valid. A foreign security principal (FSP) is created for the user in View LDAP.

Updates a secondary credential for the owner account.

A Windows logon is performed to verify that the updated credentials are valid.

Displays the security credentials for the owner account.

Passwords are not displayed.

Removes a security credential from the owner account.

Removes all security credentials from the owner account.

Examples

Add a secondary credential for the specified owner account. A Windows logon is performed to verify that the specified credentials are valid.

vdmadmin -T -domainauth -add -owner domain\user -user domain\user -password password

Update a secondary credential for the specified owner account. A Windows logon is performed to verify that the updated credentials are valid.

vdmadmin -T -domainauth -update -owner domain\user -user domain\user -password password

Remove a secondary credential for the specified owner account.

vdmadmin -T -domainauth -remove -owner domain\user -user domain\user

Remove all secondary credentials for the specified owner account.

vdmadmin -T -domainauth -removeall -owner domain\user

Display all secondary credentials for the specified owner account. Passwords are not displayed.

vdmadmin -T -domainauth -list -owner domain\user

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Displaying Information About Users Using the

U Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -U option to display detailed information about users.

Syntax

vdmadmin -U [-b authentication_arguments] -u domain\user [-w | -n] [-xml]

Usage Notes

The command displays information about a user obtained from Active Directory and View.

n

Details from Active Directory about the user's account.

n n n n

Membership of Active Directory groups.

Machine entitlements including the machine ID, display name, description, folder, and whether a machine has been disabled.

ThinApp assignments.

Administrator roles including the administrative rights of a user and the folders in which they have those rights.

Options

The -u option specifies the name and domain of the user.

Examples

Display information about the user Jo in the CORP domain in XML using ASCII characters.

vdmadmin -U -u CORP\Jo -n -xml

Unlocking or Locking Virtual Machines Using the

V Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -V option to unlock or lock virtual machines in the datacenter.

Syntax

vdmadmin -V [-b authentication_arguments] -e -d desktop -m machine [-m machine] ...

vdmadmin -V [-b authentication_arguments] -e -vcdn vCenter_dn -vmpath inventory_path vdmadmin -V [-b authentication_arguments] -p -d desktop -m machine [-m machine] ...

vdmadmin -V [-b authentication_arguments] -p -vcdn vCenter_dn -vmpath inventory_path

Usage Notes

You should only use the vdmadmin command to unlock or lock a virtual machine if you encounter a problem that has left a remote desktop in an incorrect state. Do not use the command to administer remote desktops that are operating normally.

If a remote desktop is locked and the entry for its virtual machine no longer exists in ADAM, use the

-vmpath and -vcdn options to specify the inventory path of the virtual machine and the vCenter Server.

You can use vCenter Client to find out the inventory path of a virtual machine for a remote desktop under

Home/Inventory/VMs and Templates . You can use ADAM ADSI Edit to find out the distinguished name of the vCenter Server under the OU=Properties heading.

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Options

Table 15-18

shows the options that you can specify to unlock or lock virtual machines.

Table 15 ‑18. Options for Unlocking or Locking Virtual Machines

Option Description

-d desktop

-e

-m machine

-p

-vcdn vCenter_dn

-vmpath inventory_path

Specifies the desktop pool.

Unlocks a virtual machine.

Specifies the name of the virtual machine.

Locks a virtual machine.

Specifies the distinguished name of the vCenter Server.

Specifies the inventory path of the virtual machine.

Examples

Unlock the virtual machines machine 1 and machine2 in desktop pool dtpool3.

vdmadmin -V -e -d dtpool3 -m machine1 -m machine2

Lock the virtual machine machine3 in desktop pool dtpool3.

vdmadmin -V -p -d dtpool3 -m machine3

Detecting and Resolving LDAP Entry Collisions Using the -X Option

You can use the vdmadmin command with the -X option to detect and resolve colliding LDAP entries on replicated View Connection Server instances in a group.

Syntax

vdmadmin -X [-b authentication_arguments] -collisions [-resolve]

Usage Notes

If duplicate LDAP entries are created on two or more View Connection Server instances, this can cause problems with the integrity of LDAP data in View. For example, this condition can happen during an upgrade while LDAP replication is inoperative. Although View checks for this error condition at regular intervals, you can run the vdmadmin command on one of the View Connection Server instances in the group to detect and resolve LDAP entry collisions manually.

Options

Table 15-19

shows the options that you can specify to detect and resolve colliding LDAP entries.

Table 15 ‑19. Options for Detecting and Resolving LDAP Entry Collisions

Option Description

-collisions

-resolve

Specifies an operation for detecting LDAP collisions in a

View Connection Server group.

Resolves all detected LDAP collisions.

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Examples

Detect LDAP entry collisions in a View Connection Server group.

vdmadmin -X -collisions

Detect and resolve LDAP entry collisions.

vdmadmin -X -collisions -resolve

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Index

A

access groups

changing, for a desktop pool or a farm 96 creating 90, 91, 96

managing 95

organizing desktops and pools 90

removing 96

reviewing desktop pools, application pools, or

farms 97 reviewing vCenter virtual machines 97

root 90

Active Directory

preparing for clients in kiosk mode 220

preparing for smart card authentication 47

updating Foreign Security Principals of

users 246

updating general user information 127

ADM template files

View components 109

View Common Configuration 112

View Server Configuration 111

where to find 110

administration

configuring 89

delegating 90

administrator groups

creating 92

managing 89, 92

removing 93

administrator permissions

adding 94 deleting 94

managing 93

viewing 95

administrator privileges

command line utilities 104

common tasks 103 desktop management 103

general administration 104

global 101

internal 102 object-specific 102

persistent disk management 103 pool management 103

predefined 99

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understanding 89

user and administrator management 104

administrator roles

adding custom 89, 98, 99

managing custom 97

modifying custom 98

predefined 89, 99

removing custom 98

understanding 89

administrator users

creating 92, 93

managing 92

Administrators (Read only) role 99

Administrators role 99

Adobe Flash

quality modes 172

RDS desktops 192

reducing bandwidth 171 setting quality modes 171 setting throttling modes 171

throttling modes 172

Agent Registration Administrators role 99

alarm settings, performance 112

allowCertCRLs property 53

anti-affinity feature 199, 200

application pools

deleting 186

editing 185 managing 185

application packages, capturing and storing 202

application repositories

creating a network share 203

load balancing 202

problems registering 214

problems scanning 215

registering 203

removing 214

scanning 204

applications, monitoring concurrent users 126

ASP.NET IIS registration tool, RSA key

container 132

audience information 7

authentication

enabling for clients in kiosk mode 224

vdmadmin command 241

authenticators for True SSO 82

271

View Administration

automated farms, recompose 187

automated desktop pools

adding machines manually 169 changing the pool size 169

B

backing up

configuration backup settings 117

scheduling backups 116

View configuration data 115

View Connection Server 25

biometric authentication, configuring 63

Blast Extreme 33

Blast Secure Gateway service 125

C

CBRC, configuring for vCenter Server 19

certificate templates 71

certificate revocation checking

enabling 51

troubleshooting for security server 236

certificates

accept the thumbprint 22

updating on View Connection Server 133

certutil command 48

client accounts, adding for kiosk mode 223

client session policies

configuring global 108 configuring pool-level 108 configuring user-level 108

defined 107

general 109

inheritance 107

client sessions

global settings 25, 26

session timeouts 26

setting timeouts 25

client systems

configuring in kiosk mode 219

displaying information about kiosk mode 225,

260

displaying MAC addresses 222

preparing Active Directory for kiosk mode 220

setting defaults for kiosk mode 221

setting up in kiosk mode 219

configuration data

exporting with vdmexport 117

importing with vdmimport 118

Connection Server service 125

connectors for True SSO 81

Console Interaction privilege 101

credentials 66

credentials, user 65

272

CRL checking

configuring 52 logging in 52 crlLocation property 52, 53

CSV output, vdmadmin command 241

custom administrator roles

creating 89

managing 97

modifying 98 removing 98

customer experience program

additional features 136

Cloud Pod Architecture data 147

collecting data 134

desktop pool data 140, 147, 149

ensuring privacy 135

global data 136

joining or withdrawing 38

machine data 143

previewing collected data 135

security server data 140

ThinApp data 146

vCenter Server data 145

View Connection Server data 137

D

dashboard, monitoring View components 123

Data Collection Tool bundles, creating for View

Agent 231, 243

data recovery password, changing 25

database restore, View Composer sviconfig 120

DCT bundles, creating for View Agent 231, 243

dedicated-assignment pools

assigning user ownership 174 removing user assignments 174

user ownership 250

delegating administration 90

desktop management

deleting machines 178

monitoring concurrent sessions 126

understanding 174

desktop pools, managing 166

desktop pool deletion property, configuring 173

desktop pool management

deleting desktop pools 172

disabling provisioning 171

disabling desktop pools 170

editable desktop pool settings 166 editing desktop pools 166

fixed desktop pool settings 168

desktop recomposition

linked-clone virtual machines 154

preparing a parent virtual machine 153

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detached persistent disks

attaching 161

deleting 164

editing the desktop pool or user 162 recreating a virtual machine 162

detecting LDAP entry collisions 268

diagnostic information

collecting 231

collecting for View Composer 233 collecting using the support tool 233

using support scripts 234

direct connections, configuring 32

Direct Interaction privilege 101

disjoint namespaces 201

domain filters

configuring 255

displaying 253

example of excluding domains 257

example of including domains 256

domains

enumerating trusted 111

filter lists 253

secondary credentials 265

E

Enable Farms and Desktop Pools privilege 102

enableOCSP property 53 enableRevocationChecking property 52, 53

encryption, of user credentials 65

enrollment server 73

enrollment servers, commands for managing 81

Enrollment Service Client certificate 74, 75

enterprise CA 70

Enterprise NTAuth store, adding root

certificates 48

Entitle Desktop and Application Pools

privilege 102

events

generating output in syslog format 249

monitoring 230 types and descriptions 230

exclusion lists 255

expiration period for SAML metadata 62

external URL, editing 37

F

farms

deleting 186

disabling 187

editing 186

enabling 187

managing 185, 186

filter lists, adding and removing domains 253

VMware, Inc.

Flexible Authentication 219

Foreign Security Principals, updating 246

Framework Component service 125

FSPs, updating 246

Full (Read only) privilege 102

G

gatewayLocation 36

global policies, configuring 108

Global Configuration and Policy Administrators

role 99

Global Configuration and Policy Administrators

(Read only) role 99

global settings

client sessions 25, 26

message security mode 30

group policies

ADM template files 110

View common configuration 112

View components 109

View Connection Server 111

GUIDs, displaying for View Connection Server

group 245

H

health monitors, listing and displaying 247

Horizon Client

collecting diagnostic information 234

saving log files 232

troubleshooting 229

using with kiosk clients 226

host caching, for vCenter Server 19

HTML access, configuring 33

HTTP, allowing for SSL off-loading 35

I

inclusion lists 255

instant clones, recover 179

instant-clone desktop pool

cancel a push image 165 reschedule a push image 165 schedule a push image 165

intermediate certificates adding to intermediate certification

authorities 49

See also certificates

Intermediate Certification Authorities policy 49

Inventory Administrators (Read only) role 99

Inventory Administrators role 99

IP addresses, overriding for View Agent 244

IPSec, security server connections 28

J

JMS message security mode 31

Index

273

View Administration

K

keytool utility 44

kiosk mode

adding client accounts 223

configuring 219

connecting to desktops 226

displaying information about clients 225

displaying MAC address of client devices 222

enabling authentication of clients 224

managing client authentication 260

preparing Active Directory 220

setting defaults for clients 221

setting up 219

viewing and modifying client accounts 260

Knowledge Base articles, where to find 237

L

LDAP entries, detecting and resolving

collisions 268

LDAP repository

backing up 117

importing 118

licenses

adding to View 126 monitoring usage 126

resetting 127

linked-clone desktop management, managing

persistent disks 160

linked-clone desktop virtual machine

management, understanding 151

linked-clone machine management

refresh operation guidelines 152

refreshing 151

linked-clone virtual machine management

detaching persistent disks 160

disk filenames after a rebalance 159

managing persistent disks 160

migrating to another datastore 159

preparing a parent virtual machine for

recompositon 153

rebalancing 157, 158

recomposing 154, 155

recomposing machines 153

restoring persistent disks from vSphere 163

linked-clone virtual machine troubleshooting, correcting an unsuccessful

recomposition 156

Linux systems, using with View Administrator 12

load balancers, off-loading SSL connections 34

load balancing scripts 193–196

load balancing, application repositories 202

load balancing RDS hosts 193, 197

locked.properties file

configuring CRL checking 52

274

configuring OCSP checking 53

configuring smart card authentication 44

configuring smart card certificate

revocation 53

off-loading SSL connections 35

locking, machines 267

log files

collecting for Horizon Client 232

configuring settings 112

configuring in View Agent 243

displaying for View Connection Server 50

Log in as current user feature 65

logging levels, View Agent 243

M

MAC addresses, displaying for client

systems 222

Mac systems, using with View Administrator 12

machine management

displaying machines for unentitled users 259

displaying the first user of a machine 264

exporting information to a file 183

monitoring machine status 123, 175

machine recomposition, linked-clone virtual

machines 153

machine refresh, linked clones 152

machine status

locating machines 123, 175

physical computers 181

RDS hosts 181, 191

virtual machines 176

machines

locking and unlocking 267

managing physical computers 179

maintenance mode

entering 175 exiting 175

Manage Composer Desktop Pool Image

privilege 102

Manage Farms and Desktop and Application

Pools privilege 102

Manage Global Configuration and Policies

privilege 101

Manage Global Configuration and Policies (Read

only) privilege 102

Manage Inventory (Read only) privilege 102

Manage Persistent Disks privilege 102

Manage Reboot Operation privilege 102

Manage Roles and Permissions privilege 101

Manage Sessions privilege 102

manual farms

adding an RDS host 189

removing an RDS host 190

max concurrent power operations, configuration

guidelines 21

VMware, Inc.

Message Bus Component service 125

message security mode

global settings 30

JMS 31

migrating

linked-clone virtual machines 159

View Composer with an existing

database 129

View Composer without linked clones 131

View Composer to another machine 128

MSI packages

creating 202

invalid 217

N

NET Framework, migrating RSA key

container 132

O

OCSP certificate revocation checking

configuring 53

logging in 52

ocspCRLFailover property 53 ocspSendNonce property 53 ocspSigningCert 53 ocspSigningCert property 53 ocspURL property 53

orphaned machinse, displaying 259

OS disks, machine refresh 151, 152

OUs, creating for kiosk mode clients 220

output formats, vdmadmin command 241

overriding IP addresses for View Agent 244

P

passwords 66

pcoip.adm, ADM template files 110

performance alarms, configuring 112

permissions

adding 94 deleting 94

viewing 91

persistent disks

attaching 161

deleting detached disks 164

detaching 160

editing the desktop pool or user 162

importing from a vSphere datastore 163

recreating a virtual machine 162

understanding 160

View Composer 160

physical computers

adding to a pool 180

displaying information about 251

VMware, Inc.

Index

machine status 181

removing from a pool 180

policies

client session 107 client session inheritance 107 configuring for View 107

displaying for unentitled users 259

general client session 109

global 108

Intermediate Certification Authorities 49

pool-level 108

Trusted Root Certification Authorities 49

user-level 108

pool size, changing 169

power operations, setting concurrency limits 21

pre-login messages, displaying to clients 26

predefined administrator roles 89

privileges, See administrator privileges

problem desktops, viewing 229

product license key, resetting 127

push image 165

R

RADIUS authentication

enabling 56 logging in 56

RDS desktops, Adobe Flash Throttling 192

RDS hosts

adding to a manual farm 189

desktop status 181

disabling 190

editing 189

enabling 190

machine status 191

managing 185, 189

monitoring 191

removing from View 190 removing from a manual farm 190

view properties of 191

rebalancing linked-clone virtual machines, disk

filenames after a rebalance 159

recomposing linked-clone virtual machines 154

recomposing machines, View Composer 153

recomposing virtual machines

correcting an unsuccessful recomposition 156

View Composer 155

refresh

linked-clone machines 151

View Composer 152

Register Agent privilege 101

registered machines

removing 181 removing from View 181

275

View Administration remote sessions

privileges for managing 103

viewing 229

removing registered machines 181

reports, displaying 248

resolving LDAP entry collisions 268

restoredata, result codes 121

restoring, View configuration data 115, 118

result codes, restoredata operation 121

role-based delegated administration

best practices 105

configuring 89

roles, See administrator roles

root certificates

adding to the Enterprise NTAuth store 48

adding to trusted roots 49

exporting 43

importing to a server truststore file 44

obtaining 43

root access group 90

RSA Agent host node secret, resetting 58

RSA key container

migrating to View Composer 132 using NET Framework 132

RSA SecurID authentication

configuring 55

enabling 56 logging in 56

troubleshooting 58

S

SAML 60, 63

SAML 2.0 Authentication 59

SAML 2.0 authenticators, configuring in View

Administrator 60, 63

SAML authentication with True SSO 76

SAML metadata for View Connection Server 63

Save Password check box 66 saving credential information 66

SCOM, setting the name of a View Connection

Server group 245

Script Host service 125, 195

search exclusion lists 255

secondary credentials, providing for

administrators 265

security server problems with certificate revocation

checking 236

removing entry from configuration 264

troubleshooting pairing with View Connection

Server 235

Security Gateway Component service 125

Security Server service 125

276 security servers

enabling smart card authentication 44

services 125

updating certificates 133

services

security server hosts 125

stopping and starting 124 understanding 124

View Connection Server hosts 125

session management 182

sessions, privileges for managing 102

Setup Capture wizard, ThinApp 202

single sign-on (SSO) 65

smart card authentication

Active Directory preparation 47

certificate revocation checking 51

configuring 42, 44, 45, 47

understanding 41

UPNs for smart card users 48

verifying configuration 50

smart card certificates, revoking 51

smart cards

exporting user certificates 43

using to authenticate 42

sparse disks, configuring for vCenter Server 18

SSL

accept a certificate thumbprint 22

enabling for client connections 25, 28

importing certificates to View servers 34 off-loading to intermediate servers 34

setting external URLs for intermediate

servers 34

SSL certificates, See certificates

SSO

disabling 26 enabling 26 setting timeout limits 26

storage, reclaiming disk space 18

Storage vMotion, migrating linked clones 159

support requests

collecting log files 232

updating 235

support scripts

collecting diagnostic information 234

View Composer 233

support tool, using to collect diagnostic

information 233

sviconfig utility

restoring the database 120

result codes for restoredata 121

Syslog format, generating log messages 249

system health dashboard 229

VMware, Inc.

T

templates, certificate 71

text display issues, View Administrator 12

ThinApp applications

assigning 205–208

checking installation status 210

configuration walkthrough 217

displaying MSI package information 211 maintaining 211

packaging 202

problems assigning 215

problems installing 216 problems uninstalling 216

removing assignments 212, 213

removing from View Administrator 213

requirements 201

reviewing assignments 210

troubleshooting 214

upgrading 211

ThinApp templates

assigning 209

creating 204

removing 214

ThinApp Setup Capture wizard 202

thumbprint, accept for a default certificate 22

True SSO advanced configuration settings through

Windows Registry 83 agent configuration settings 83

configuring 78, 80

connection server configuration settings 85

enrollment server configuration settings 84

troubleshooting, using the system

health dashboard 86

trusted domains, enumerating 111

Trusted Root Certification Authorities policy 49

trustKeyfile property 44 trustStoretype property 44

two-factor authentication 55, 58

U

unassigning users, dedicated-assignment

pools 174

unentitled users, displaying machines 259

Unix systems, using with View Administrator 12

Unknown username or bad password 224, 260

unlocking, machines 267

unmanaged machines

adding to a pool 180

managing 179

removing from a pool 180

updating linked-clone virtual machines

correcting an unsuccessful recomposition 156

machine recomposition 153

VMware, Inc.

Index

UPNs, smart card users 48

useCertAuth property 44, 50

user authentication, configuring 55

user accounts, View Composer AD

operations 13

userPrincipalName attribute 48

users

displaying information about 267

updating general user information 127

V

vCenter Server

configuring concurrent operations limits 20

configuring host caching 19

configuring sparse disks 18

vCenter Server instances

adding in View Administrator 13, 14

correcting conflicting unique IDs 24

removing in View Administrator 23

vdm_agent.adm 110 vdm_client.adm 110 vdm_common.adm 110, 112 vdm_server.adm 110, 111

vdmadmin command

authentication 241

command options 242

introduction 239

output formats 241 syntax 241

vdmutil command-line utility 31, 78, 80

View Storage Accelerator, configuring for

vCenter Server 19

View Administrator

logging in 10

managing a View deployment 9

navigating 10

overview 9

text display issues 12

tips for using 10

using the health dashboard 229

using with Linux, Unix, or Mac 12

View Agent

collecting diagnostic information 234

configuring logging levels 243

creating a Data Collection Tool bundle 231

overriding IP addresses 244

View components, maintaining 115

View Composer configuration

concurrent operations limits 20

configuring settings for vCenter Server 16

creating a user account 13

domains 17

removing the service from vCenter Server 23

277

View Administration

View Composer maintenance

backing up configuration data 25, 115

guidelines for migrating 129

migrating an RSA key container 132

migrating View Composer to another

machine 128

migrating with the existing database 129

restoring configuration data 118

restoring the database 120

scheduling backups 116

View Composer persistent disks

attaching 161

deleting detached 164

detaching 160

editing the desktop pool or user 162

importing from vSphere 163

management overview 160 understanding 160

View Composer troubleshooting

collecting diagnostic information 233

correcting an unsuccessful recomposition 156

overview 229

View Composer use managing linked-clone desktop virtual

machines 151

migrating linked-clone virtual machines 159

preparing a parent virtual machine for

recomposition 153

rebalancing linked-clone virtual machines

157, 158

recomposing automated farms 187

recomposing linked-clone virtual

machines 154

recreating a virtual machine with a detached

persistent disk 162

refreshing machines 151

understanding desktop recomposition 153

understanding machine refresh

operations 152

understanding virtual machine

recomposition 155

View Connection Server

backing up configuration data 25, 115

collecting diagnostic information 234

configuring 13

configuring direct connections 32

disabling 36

editing the external URL 37

exporting configuration data 117

removing entry from configuration 264

restoring configuration data 118

scheduling backups 116

services 124, 125

278

setting names of groups 245

View LDAP configuration data 38

View Connection Server configuration, server

certificate 133

View LDAP, configuration data 38

View services, stopping and starting 124

ViewPM.adm, ADM template files 110

virtual machines

displaying information about 251

machine status 176

managing 165, 174

reclaiming disk space 252

virtual machine recomposition

correcting an unsuccessful recomposition 156

linked-clone virtual machines 155

VMware Identity Manager 65

VMware ThinApp

integrating with View 201

using the Setup Capture wizard 202

VMwareVDMDS service 125

W

Web Component service 125

X

XML output, vdmadmin command 241

VMware, Inc.

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