User guide

204 DSView Installer/User Guide
displayed. If you still wish to map a new drive, you must first unmap an existing mapped drive,
then map the new drive.
After a physical drive or image is mapped, it may be used on the target device.
To unmap a virtual media drive:
1. In the Virtual Media dialog box, uncheck the Mapped checkbox next to the drive you wish
to unmap.
2. You will be prompted to confirm the unmapping. Click Yes to confirm or No to cancel.
3. Repeat for any additional virtual media drives you wish to unmap.
To display virtual media drive details:
In the Virtual Media dialog box, click Details. The dialog box expands to display the Details table.
Each row indicates:
Target Drive - Name used for the mapped drive, such as Virtual CD 1 or Virtual CD 2.
Mapped to - Identical to Drive information that appears in the Client View Drive column.
Read Bytes and Write Bytes - Amount of data transferred since the mapping.
Duration - Elapsed time since the drive was mapped.
To close the Details view, click Details again.
To reset all USB devices on the target device:
NOTE: The USB reset feature resets every USB device on the target device, including the mouse and keyboard.
It should only be used when the target device is not responding.
1. In the Virtual Media dialog box, click Details.
2. The Details View will appear. Click USB Reset.
3. A warning message will appear, indicating the possible effects of the reset. Click Yes to con-
firm the reset or No to cancel the reset.
4. To close the Details view, click Details again.
Closing a virtual media session
To close the Virtual Media dialog box:
1. Click Exit.
2. If you have any mapped drives, a message is displayed, indicating that the drives will be
unmapped. Click Yes to confirm or No to cancel.
If a user attempts to disconnect a virtual media session or an active KVM session that has an
associated locked virtual media session, a confirmation message is displayed, indicating that any
virtual media mappings will be lost.
See Sharing and preemption considerations on page 201 and Managing Active Sessions on
page 129 for information about other factors that may affect virtual media session closings.