5.2

Table Of Contents
Configuring User Profiles with View
Persona Management 9
With View Persona Management, you can configure user profiles that are dynamically synchronized with a
remote
profile repository. This feature gives users access to a personalized desktop experience whenever they
log in to a desktop. View Persona Management expands the functionality and improves the performance of
Windows roaming profiles, but does not require Windows roaming profiles to operate.
You configure group policy settings to enable View Persona Management and control various aspects of your
View Persona Management deployment.
To enable and use View Persona Management, you must have a View Premier license. See the VMware End
User Licensing Agreement (EULA) at http://www.vmware.com/download/eula.
This chapter includes the following topics:
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“Providing User Personas in View,” on page 227
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“Using View Persona Management with Standalone Systems,” on page 228
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“Migrating User Profiles with View Persona Management,” on page 229
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“Persona Management and Windows Roaming Profiles,” on page 231
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“Configuring a View Persona Management Deployment,” on page 232
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“Best Practices for Configuring a View Persona Management Deployment,” on page 240
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“View Persona Management Group Policy Settings,” on page 243
Providing User Personas in View
With the View Persona Management feature, a user's remote profile is dynamically downloaded when the user
logs in to a View desktop. You can configure View to store user profiles in a secure, centralized repository.
View downloads persona information as the user needs it.
View Persona Management is an alternative to Windows roaming profiles. View Persona Management
expands functionality and improves performance compared to Windows roaming profiles.
You can configure and manage personas entirely within View. You do not have to configure Windows roaming
profiles. If you have a Windows roaming profiles configuration, you can use your existing repository
configuration with View.
A user profile is independent of the virtual desktop. When a user logs in to any desktop, the same profile
appears.
For example, a user might log in to a floating-assignment, linked-clone desktop pool and change the desktop
background and Microsoft Word settings. When the user starts the next session, the virtual machine is different,
but the user sees the same settings.
VMware, Inc. 227