Setting Up Desktop and Application Pools in View

Table Of Contents
Creating RDS Desktop Pools 10
One of the tasks that you perform to give users remote access to session-based desktops is to create a
Remote Desktop Services (RDS) desktop pool. An RDS desktop pool has properties that can satisfy some
specific needs of a remote desktop deployment.
This chapter includes the following topics:
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“Understanding RDS Desktop Pools,” on page 105
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“Create an RDS Desktop Pool,” on page 106
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“Desktop Pool Settings for RDS Desktop Pools,” on page 106
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“Configure Adobe Flash Throttling with Internet Explorer for RDS Desktop Pools,” on page 107
Understanding RDS Desktop Pools
An RDS desktop pool is one of three types of desktop pools that you can create. This type of pool was
known as a Microsoft Terminal Services pool in previous View releases.
An RDS desktop pool and an RDS desktop have the following characteristics:
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An RDS desktop pool is associated with a farm, which is a group of RDS hosts. Each RDS host is a
Windows server that can host multiple RDS desktops.
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An RDS desktop is based on a session to an RDS host. In contrast, a desktop in an automated desktop
pool is based on a virtual machine, and a desktop in a manual desktop pool is based on a virtual or
physical machine.
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An RDS desktop supports the RDP, PCoIP, and Blast (for HTML Access) display protocols. To enable
HTML Access, see "Prepare Desktops, Pools, and Farms for HTML Access," in the "Setup and
Installation" chapter in the Using HTML Access document, available from
https://www.vmware.com/support/viewclients/doc/viewclients_pubs.html.
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An RDS desktop pool is only supported on Windows Server operating systems that support the RDS
role and are supported by View. See "System Requirements for Guest Operating Systems" in the View
Installation document.
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View provides load balancing of the RDS hosts in a farm by directing connection requests to the RDS
host that has the least number of active sessions.
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Because an RDS desktop pool provides session-based desktops, it does not support operations that are
specific to a linked-clone desktop pool, such as refresh, recompose, and rebalance.
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If an RDS host is a virtual machine that is managed by vCenter Server, you can use snapshots as base
images. You can use vCenter Server to manage the snapshots. The use of snapshots on RDS host virtual
machines is transparent to View.
VMware, Inc.
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