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Table Of Contents
To configure advanced options, use Windows advanced settings on the appropriate system. See “Advanced
Configuration Settings for True SSO,” on page 83.
Command-line Reference for Configuring True SSO
You can use the vdmutil command-line interface to configure and manage the True SSO feature.
Location of the Utility
By default, the path to the vdmutil command executable file is C:\Program Files\VMware\VMware
View\Server\tools\bin. To avoid entering the path on the command line, add the path to your PATH
environment variable.
Syntax and Authentication
Use the following form of the vdmutil command from a Windows command prompt.
vdmutil authentication options --truesso additional options and arguments
The additional options that you can use depend on the command option. This topic focuses on the options
for configuring True SSO (--truesso). Following is an example of a command for listing connectors that
have been configured for True SSO:
vdmUtil --authAs admin-role-user --authDomain domain-name --authPassword admin-user-password --
truesso --list --connector
The vdmutil command includes authentication options to specify the user name, domain, and password to
use for authentication.
Table 51. vdmutil Command Authentication Options
Option Description
--authAs
Name of a View administrator user. Do not use domain\username or user principal name (UPN)
format.
--authDomain
Fully qualified domain name or Netbios name of the domain for the View administrator user
specified in the --authAs option.
--authPassword Password for the View administrator user specified in the --authAs option. Entering "*" instead of
a password causes the vdmutil command to prompt for the password and does not leave sensitive
passwords in the command history on the command line.
You must use the authentication options with all vdmutil command options except for --help and
--verbose.
Command Output
The vdmutil command returns 0 when an operation succeeds and a failure-specific non-zero code when an
operation fails. The vdmutil command writes error messages to standard error. When an operation produces
output, or when verbose logging is enabled by using the --verbose option, the vdmutil command writes
output to standard output, in US English.
View Administration
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