5.2

Table Of Contents
Creating Desktop Pools 5
With View Manager, you create pools of desktops that deliver View desktop access to clients. View Manager
deploys
pools from desktop sources, which can be virtual machines that are managed by vCenter Server, virtual
machines that run on another virtualization platform, or physical computers, terminal servers, or blade PCs.
You can create several types of desktop pools. You can also provision an individual desktop by deploying a
manual pool with a single desktop source.
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Automated Pools That Contain Full Virtual Machines on page 88
To create an automated desktop pool, View Manager dynamically provisions desktops based on settings
that you apply to the pool. View Manager uses a virtual machine template as the desktop source for the
pool and creates a new virtual machine in vCenter Server for each desktop.
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Linked-Clone Desktop Pools on page 92
To create a linked-clone desktop pool, View Composer generates linked-clone virtual machines from a
snapshot of a parent virtual machine. View Manager dynamically provisions the linked-clone desktops
based on settings that you apply to the pool.
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Manual Desktop Pools on page 119
To create a manual desktop pool, View Manager provisions desktops from existing desktop sources. You
select a separate desktop source for each desktop in the pool.
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Microsoft Terminal Services Pools on page 123
You can use Microsoft Terminal Servers to provide Terminal Services sessions as desktops to View clients.
View Manager manages Terminal Services sessions in the same way that it manages other View desktops.
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Provisioning Desktop Pools on page 125
When you create a desktop pool, you select configuration options that determine how the pool is
managed and how users interact with the desktops.
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Setting Power Policies for Desktop Pools on page 140
You can configure a power policy for the virtual machines in a desktop pool if the virtual machines are
managed by vCenter Server.
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Configure View Storage Accelerator for Desktop Pools on page 145
You can configure desktop pools to enable 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 can reduce IOPS and improve performance during boot storms, when many
desktops start up or run anti-virus scans at once. The feature is also beneficial when administrators or
users load applications or data frequently. To use this feature, you must make sure that View Storage
Accelerator is enabled for individual desktop pools.
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