Administration

Table Of Contents
Disable or Enable Provisioning in an Automated Desktop Pool
When you disable provisioning in an automated desktop pool, View stops provisioning new virtual
machines for the pool. After you disable provisioning, you can enable provisioning again.
Before you change a desktop pool's configuration, you can disable provisioning to ensure that no new
machines are created with the old configuration. You also can disable provisioning to prevent View from
using additional storage when a pool is close to filling up the available space.
When provisioning is disabled in a linked-clone pool, View stops new machines from being provisioned and
stops machines from being customized after they are recomposed or rebalanced.
Procedure
1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.
2 Select a desktop pool and change the status of the pool.
Option Action
Disable provisioning
Select Disable Provisioning from the Status drop-down menu.
Enable provisioning
Select Enable Provisioning from the Status drop-down menu.
3 Click OK.
Configure Adobe Flash Quality and Throttling
You can set Adobe Flash quality and throttling modes to reduce the amount of bandwidth that is used by
Adobe Flash content in remote desktops. This reduction can improve the overall browsing experience and
make other applications that run in the remote desktop more responsive.
Prerequisites
Familiarize yourself with Adobe Flash quality and throttling settings. See “Adobe Flash Quality and
Throttling,” on page 144.
Procedure
1 In View Administrator, select Catalog > Desktop Pools.
2 Select a desktop pool and click Edit.
3 On the Desktop Pool Settings tab, select a quality mode from the Adobe Flash quality menu and a
throttling mode from the Adobe Flash throttling menu.
4 Click OK.
NOTE Adobe Flash bandwidth-reduction settings do not take effect until Horizon Client reconnects with the
remote desktop.
Adobe Flash Quality and Throttling
You can specify a maximum allowable level of quality for Adobe Flash content that overrides Web page
settings. If Adobe Flash quality for a Web page is higher than the maximum level allowed, quality is
reduced to the specified maximum. Lower quality results in more bandwidth savings.
To make use of Adobe Flash bandwidth-reduction settings, Adobe Flash must not be running in full screen
mode.
Table 8-3 shows the available Adobe Flash render-quality settings.
View Administration
144 VMware, Inc.