7.0

Table Of Contents
Table 124. Desktop Pool Setting Descriptions (Continued)
Setting Options
Delete or refresh
machine on logoff
Select whether to delete, refresh, or leave alone floating-assignment, linked-clone virtual
machines.
n
Never. Virtual machines remain in the pool and are not refreshed after users log off.
n
Delete immediately. Virtual machines are powered off and deleted as soon as users log off.
When users log off, virtual machines immediately go into a Deleting state.
n
Refresh immediately. Virtual machines are refreshed as soon as users log off. When users log
off, virtual machines immediately go into maintenance mode to prevent other users from
logging in as the refresh operation begins.
For instant-clone desktops, the machine is always deleted and recreated after logoff.
Refresh OS disk
after logoff
Select whether and when to refresh the OS disks for dedicated-assignment, linked-clone virtual
machines.
n
Never. The OS disk is never refreshed.
n
Always. The OS disk is refreshed every time the user logs off.
n
Every. The OS disk is refreshed at regular intervals of a specified number of days. Type the
number of days.
The number of days is counted from the last refresh, or from the initial provisioning if no
refresh has occurred yet. For example, if the specified value is 3 days, and three days have
passed since the last refresh, the machine is refreshed after the user logs off.
n
At. The OS disk is refreshed when its current size reaches a specified percentage of its
maximum allowable size. The maximum size of a linked clone's OS disk is the size of the
replica's OS disk. Type the percentage at which refresh operations occur.
With the At option, the size of the linked clone's OS disk in the datastore is compared to its
maximum allowable size. This disk-utilization percentage does not reflect disk usage that you
might see inside the machine's guest operating system.
When you refresh the OS disks in a linked-clone pool with dedicated assignment, the View
Composer persistent disks are not affected.
For instant-clone desktops, the machine is always deleted and recreated after logoff.
Default display
protocol
Select the display protocol that you want Connection Server to use to communicate with clients.
VMware Blast
The VMware Blast Extreme protocol is built on the H.264 protocol
and supports the broadest range of client devices, including smart
phones, tablets, ultra-low-cost PCs, and Macs, across any network.
This protocol consumes the least CPU resources and so provides
longer battery life on mobile devices.
PCoIP
The default option wherever it is supported. PCoIP is supported as
the display protocol for virtual and physical machines that have
Teradici hardware. PCoIP provides an optimized PC experience for
the delivery of images, audio, and video content for a wide range of
users on the LAN or across the WAN.
Microsoft RDP
Microsoft Remote Desktop Connection (RDC) uses RDP to transmit
data. RDP is a multichannel protocol that allows a user to connect to
a computer remotely.
Allow users to
choose protocol
Allow users to override the default display protocol for their desktops by using Horizon Client.
Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View
136 VMware, Inc.