Product User Guide

Intel® Remote Management Module 2 User Guide 67
automatically. However, in order to make the installation possible, you still have to answer the
according dialogs with "yes". The download volume is around 11 Mbytes. The advantage of
downloading the Sun Microsystems* JVM is the usage of a stable and identical JVM across
different platforms. The Remote Console software is optimized for the Sun Microsystems* JVM
and offers a wider range of functionality.
7.5.1.4 Miscellaneous Remote Console Settings
Start in Monitor Mode
Sets the initial value for the monitor mode. By default the monitor mode is disabled. When
switched on, the Remote Console window will start in a read only mode, i.e., only remote video
is visible - remote keyboard and mouse are not working.
Start in Exclusive Access Mode
Enables the exclusive access mode immediately at Remote Console startup. This forces the
Remote Consoles of all other users to close. Nobody else can open the Remote Console at the
same time again until you disable this feature or log off.
7.5.1.5 Mouse Hotkey
Allows to specify a hotkey combination which starts either the mouse synchronization process if
pressed in the Remote Console or is used to leave the single mouse mode. This is only
available if you have selected the Mouse Mode "Other Operating System".
7.5.1.6 Remote Console Button Keys
Button Keys allow simulating keystrokes on the remote system that cannot be generated locally.
The reason for this might be a missing key, or the fact that the local operating system of the
Remote Console is unconditionally catching this keystroke already. Typical examples are
"Ctrl+Alt+Delete" on Windows* and DOS*, that is always caught, or the key sequence
"Ctrl+Backspace" on Linux that can be used for terminating the X-Server.
In order to define a new Button Key or to adjust an existing one, review the rules that describe
the setting for a key. In general, the syntax for a key is as follows:
[confirm] <keycode>[+|-|>[*]<keycode>]
A term in brackets is optional. The star at the end means that you add further keys as often as
required for your case. The term "confirm" adds a confirmation dialog that is displayed before
the key strokes will be sent to the remote host.
The "keycode" is the key to be sent. Multiple key codes can be concatenated with either a plus,
a minus, or a ">" sign. The plus sign builds key combinations - all the keys will be pressed until
a minus sign or the end of the combination is encountered. In this case all pressed keys will be
released in reversed sequence. So, the minus sign builds single, separate key presses and key
releases. The ">" sign releases the last key only. The star inserts a pause with duration of 100
milliseconds
.
As an example, the key combination of Ctrl, Alt, and F2 is represented by the sequence
“Ctrl+Alt+F2”.