HP ThinPro 5.2 - Administrator Guide

root > sshd
Table E-35 root > sshd
Registry key Description
root/sshd/enabled
If set to 1, the SSH daemon is enabled and the thin client can be
accessed via SSH.
root/sshd/userAccess
If set to 1, standard users can connect to the thin client via SSH.
root > time
Table E-36 root > time
Registry key Description
root/time/NTPServers
Species NTP servers to use via a comma-separated list. Private
NTP servers or large virtual NTP clusters such as
pool.ntp.org are the best choices to minimize server load.
Clear this value to return to using DHCP servers (tag 42) instead of
a xed list.
root/time/TimeServerIPAddress
Sets the time server used by the Linux net command. These
servers are typically the domain controller servers on the
corporate network. This should be used when NTP servers are not
congured or they are not responding. The Linux net command
identies this server on its own. However, specic server IP
addresses can be provided here if desired.
root/time/WebServerURL
Sets the web server URL (such as hp.com) to use when fetching
the time using the http protocol. This URL can be within an
intranet or over the Internet.
root/time/timezone
Sets the time zone. Time zones should be specied as dened by
Linux Timezone in the Date and Time utility in the Control Panel,
and they should be in the following format: <region>/
<subregion>.
root/time/use24HourFormat
If set to -1, the system chooses the format automatically
according to the locale. If set to 0, the a.m./p.m. format is used. If
set to 1, the 24-hour format is used.
root/time/useDHCPTimezone
If set to 1, the thin client will attempt to set the time zone via
DHCP. To properly set the time zone via this registry key, ensure
that the DHCP server for the thin client forwards the tcode DHCP
tag (which is usually tag 101, although 100 and 2 can work also).
root/time/useNTPServers
If set to 1, the use of NTP time servers to synchronize the thin
client clock is enabled. If this is enabled, ensure that an NTP
server is specied via DHCP or via NTPServers.
root > sshd 149