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Table Of Contents
Configuring Policies for Desktop and
Application Pools 16
You can configure policies to control the behavior of desktop and application pools, machines, and users.
You use View Administrator to set policies for client sessions. You can use Active Directory group policy
settings to control the behavior of View Agent, Horizon Client for Windows, and features that affect single-
user machines, RDS hosts, or the PCoIP display protocol.
This chapter includes the following topics:
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“Setting Policies in View Administrator,” on page 189
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“Using Active Directory Group Policies,” on page 191
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“Using View Group Policy Administrative Template Files,” on page 192
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“View ADM and ADMX Template Files,” on page 193
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“View Agent Configuration ADM Template Settings,” on page 193
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“View PCoIP Session Variables ADM Template Settings,” on page 199
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“Using Remote Desktop Services Group Policies,” on page 210
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“Setting Up Location-Based Printing,” on page 218
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“Active Directory Group Policy Example,” on page 222
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.
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