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Table Of Contents
Prevent Access to View Desktops Through RDP
In certain View environments, it is a priority to prohibit access to View desktops through the RDP display
protocol. You can prevent users and administrators from using RDP to access View desktops by configuring
pool settings and a group policy setting.
NOTE Remote Desktop Services, called Terminal Services on Windows XP systems, must be started on the
virtual machine that you use to create pools and on View desktops. Remote Desktop Services are required for
View Agent installation, SSO, and other View session-management operations.
Prerequisites
Verify that the VMware View Agent Configuration Administrative Template file is installed in Active
Directory. See “Using the View Group Policy Administrative Template Files,” on page 142.
Procedure
1 Select PCoIP as the display protocol that you want View Connection Server to use to communicate with
View clients.
Option Description
Create a desktop pool
a In View Administrator, start the Add Pool wizard.
b On the Desktop Settings page, select PCoIP as the default display
protocol.
Edit an existing desktop pool
a In View Administrator, select the desktop pool and click Edit.
b Select the Pool Settings tab and select PCoIP as the default display
protocol.
2 For the Allow users to choose protocol setting, select No.
3 Prevent non-View clients from connecting directly to View desktops through RDP by disabling the
AllowDirectRDP group policy setting.
a On your Active Directory server, open the Group Policy Management Console and select Computer
Configuration > Administrative Templates > VMware View Agent Configuration.
b Disable the AllowDirectRDP setting.
Setting Power Policies for Desktop Pools
You can configure a power policy for the virtual machines in a desktop pool if the virtual machines are managed
by vCenter Server.
Power policies control how a virtual machine behaves when its associated desktop is not in use. A desktop is
considered not in use before a user logs in and after a user disconnects or logs off. Power policies also control
how a virtual machine behaves after administrative tasks such as refresh, recompose, and rebalance are
completed.
You configure power policies when you create or edit desktop pools in View Administrator. See Chapter 5,
“Creating Desktop Pools,” on page 71 or “Managing Desktop Pools,” on page 205 for more information.
NOTE You cannot configure power policies for desktop pools that have unmanaged desktops.
Power Policies for Desktop Pools
Power policies control how a virtual machine behaves when the associated View desktop is not in use.
You set power policies when you create or edit a desktop pool. Table 5-20 describes the available power policies.
VMware View Administration
110 VMware, Inc.