Configuring Internet Explorer 11 Enterprise Mode (IE11 Compatibility Mode)

With yesterdays release of Windows 8.1 Update 1 came the significant improvement to Internet Explorer 11 with the inclusion of Enterprise Mode, also known as compatibility mode. This will encourage businesses who are struggling to move to the later operating systems because of legacy applications reliant on using the older browsers such as Internet Explorer 8. These legacy and often business critical applications have probably had a lot of investment over the years making it a difficult business decision to move away from it.

Although not a fix for all, Internet Explorer 11 Enterprise Mode is here to ease the transition. This guide is a quick start to show you how to implement, manage and set it up centrally with a quick easy to follow screen guide.

Please note that to use the Group Policy Management the Server / Workstation must be on Windows 8.1 Update 1 / Windows Server 2012 R2 Update 1 or at least your ADMX Files must be updated.

Go to the following link to download the IE 11 Enterprise Mode Site List Manager

Once downloaded install on a server / workstation of your choice – we chose to install the Site List Manager on our domain controller.

Now before we dive off in to Group Policy and went and configured IE 11 Enterprise Mode for the End Users, it is identified that Enterprise Mode requires a centralised list of sites that are to be used with Internet Explorer 11 Enterprise Mode. Reading the small print it requires a web server to obtain the xml file from. I have seen a few other posts placing it as an xml off their main public facing website – not a security choice I prefer myself, and as big advocators of DirectAccess thought it best to place the “sitelist.xml” file on an internal web server. So as shown below a blank xml file was created under inetpub\wwwroot on the respective chosen server.

Using Group Policy Management Console we now configure Internet Explorer 11 Enterprise Mode for our users and sites. Choose a common Group Policy that is used by Users, or alternatively create a new GPO just for this. We often use specialised Group Policies for Common User and Computers Settings that we wish people to have so our choice was easy.

On Opening the GPO - Navigate to User Configuration \ Administrative Templates \ Windows Components \ Internet Explorer, and select the Let users turn on and use Enterprise Mode from the Tools menu setting to Enabled as shown below.

Then open Use the Enterprise Mode IE website list – enter the URL of your Internal Webserver and xml list name as per the example shown below

Click Apply and close the Group Policy.

Now Open Enterprise Mode Site List Manager

By Clicking add will bring up the dialogue box as shown. Enter the URL and select whether to use “Enterprise Mode” or “Default Mode”. Once you enter a URL the Enterprise Mode Site List Manager will attempt to connect to the URL to validate it. Additionally it is useful for other Administrators if notes are made.

Once the Sites are added and verified then save the list to the webserver \ wwwroot \ sitelist.xml

This then becomes the central repository for the Enterprise Mode Enabled Websites which after the Group Policy has applied will automatically switch between Enterprise Mode and Default IE 11 Mode.

Now when you navigate to the Enterprise Mode Enabled URL the following icon displays clearly to the user that it is in Enterprise Mode

Hope this guide was helpful to anyone wanting to deploy Internet Explorer 11 Enterprise Mode Centrally

If you need any help or advice please feel free to get in touch and we will run through your infrastructure deployment requirements and if you have any questions about the blog post please direct any questions to [email protected]

Windows 8.1 Update 1 Released

Microsoft have finally released Windows 8.1 Update 1 today, with a few nice touches to improve the user experience and also make the new metro interface more friendly for corporate environments. Iconic have already deployed this update and the effects are quite refreshing but are still being explored.

One of the key areas of Windows 8.1 Update 1 is to the desktop experience (shown below)

Here is a quick list of the improvements in Windows 8.1 Update 1 that can make life more effective when using the desktop.

Improvements include:

On certain devices the Power and Search buttons now appear at the top-right corner next to the account picture. This enables the ability to search and shutdown / restart more easily and is available from the Start screen. (See below)

Taskbar improvements – You can now pin both desktop apps and Windows Store apps to the taskbar, making it easy to open and switch between apps right from the desktop. When using a mouse, you can also see the taskbar on any screen by moving the mouse to the bottom edge of the screen.

Boot to desktop as default – At last something that makes Windows 8.1 more accessible for corporate users. Showing the desktop and icons is usually the preference for work environments and makes the transition from previous operating systems a little more palatable.

The Start screen and the desktop are more aligned – On the Start screen, if you right-click on a tile, you will get a context menu next to the tile that shows what you can do with the tile, such as pin to Start, or unpin from the taskbar, change the tile size or even uninstall the app.

Right-clicking on an app tile on the Start screen works just like right-clicking on something on the desktop which improves the end user experience.

Internet Explorer 11 Updates – With Windows 8.1 Update, Internet Explorer 11 detects your Windows device and input type, and adapts the browsing experience (such as the number of tabs on screen, the size of the fonts, and the size of the menus) accordingly. The most important feature though aimed at the corporate environment is the inclusion of IE11 Enterprise Mode. This mode will encourage businesses to transition to Windows 8.1 because of the Internet Explorer 11 Enterprise Mode This is a compatibility mode that runs on Internet Explorer 11 on Windows 8.1 Update and Windows® 7 devices, that allows legacy websites render using a modified browser configuration that is designed to avoid the common compatibility problems associated with web apps written and tested on older versions of Internet Explorer, like Internet Explorer 7 or Internet Explorer 8. IE 11 Enterprise Mode can either be enabled using Group Policy or by using a Registry Key.

For full details on how to use Internet Explorer 11 Enterprise Mode follow this link to TechNet

If you need any help or advice please feel free to get in touch and we will run through your requirements and ff you have any questions about the blog post please direct any questions to [email protected]

Online Data Retrieval Error -Windows 2012 R2 Upgrade

Iconic have recently upgraded a large majority of our servers to Windows 2012 R2 – most of them were in place upgrades and resulted in the errors in Server Manager as shown and explained below.

Following an upgrade from Windows Server 2012 to Windows Server 2012 R2, upon opening Server Manager you may receive an issue telling you that you got an “Online Data Retrieval Error” as seen in the screenshot below.

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This error arises because the event service is attempting to read an event log that no longer exists.

We can only assume that this event log is deprecated in Windows Server 2012 but we are investigating further.

The event log in question is Microsoft-Windows-DxpTaskRingtone/Analytic

A Review of the logs in the Event Viewer confirms this.

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As does a manual inspection of the logs folder.

The simple answer to fix the error is to stop the event service looking for the log file by removing it from the registry.

Backup your registry keys before applying the below fix – this is just good standard practice

Delete the following key.

HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\WINEVT\Channels\Microsoft-Windows-DxpTaskRingtone/Analytic

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Now return to Server Manager and refresh to see all is well.

Any questions or queries please email us at [email protected]

Installing XenDesktop 7 Part 5 - Configuring Storefront 2.0

The final part of this series Installing Citrix XenDesktop 7. We are going to walk you through the configuration of a Storefront 2.0 site.

Open the Citrix Storefront console and you will see a very similar layout to the current console We will begin by creating a new store:

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Step one is to create a store name. We recommend using a simple name as this becomes part of the URL that you are using to access the farm

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Next we need to add the delivery controller. This will be the servers name by default and this will be configured on port 80. Here you can add AppController Server, VDI-In-A-Box, XenDesktop or XenApp hosts

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Next you can configure your NetScaler or Access gateway configuration if you are using these as your access methods. We are not going to run through this for this demonstration, but this is the same process for previous versions

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Finally Click create and the server will create your Storefront store and that is it done!

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As you can see this is probably the simplest deployment of Citrix XenDesktop 7 to date. There are a  lot of design decisions that need to be planned out, and a large number of tools and technologies that we have not touched on such as Citrix XenApp and App-V integration.

If blog readers are interested in these features drop us an email, and we will address the topics over the coming weeks.

If you need any help or advice please feel free to get in touch and we will run through your requirements.

If you have any questions about the blog post please direct any questions to [email protected]

Installing XenDesktop 7 Part 4 - Creating Catalogues

In the previous articles we have gone through installing XenDesktop 7 on a single machine, creating your first farm and in the last article we demonstrated the installation of the Virtual Desktop Agent onto a Windows 8.1 Preview machine.

We are now going to show you how to configure a catalogue and how to make these machines available to your users.

On your XenDesktop Controller open up the Citrix XenDesktop 7 studio console and at this stage it should like like the following:

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Click on Create Catalogue

you are now presented with the create catalogue wizard click next, you can optionally choose not to display the first message again.

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First we need to choose the type of catalogue we are going to create, we have three options:

  1. Windows Desktop OS – For delivering Windows VDI machines
  2. Windows Server OS – For publishing XenApp desktops/applications
  3. Remote PC Access – For delivering remote access to physical PC’s

We are going to be selecting option 1 to deliver Windows Desktop OS

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Next we need to choose what type of infrastructure we are going to deliver physical or virtual, we are using virtual desktops. We also need to choose what delivery method you need.

The three options are

  1. Machine Creation Services
  2. Provisioning Services
  3. Other

We will be leveraging the inbuilt Machine creation services

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Next you need to choose what type of experience the users are going to have. You need to choose between static or dynamically assigned desktops and whether users will be able to make changes to their desktops. For the purposes of this demonstration we will be using dynamic desktops with the deployment of personal vDisk’s so that users have the option of dynamically installing their own applications, these design decisions should be completed prior to your deployments

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The wizard will now communicate to your virtual infrastructure and will give you the option to choose what virtual machine will be used as the base image for your new desktops. We have created a snapshot which you can see in the following image labelled as 0.1. This is so that any further updates to the Virtual machine can be made. With a new snapshot created, the desktop pool can be updated to use any newer snapshots.

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In the next screen you will be able to select how many virtual machines that you would like to create, how many vCPU’s you want to define, and the amount of RAM assigned to each machine. The defaults are created by what the virtual machine is currently setup with. You are also given the option to select how much capacity is to be assigned to personal vDisk’s, and the drive letter that the personal vDisk will be assigned once the machine is up and running.

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Next you need to select into what Organisational Unit (OU) the Desktop’s Active Directory Machine Accounts will be created. We have created a Computers OU under a Citrix OU in our domain in preparation for this.

You will also be able to select the machine name’s that are created, so we have created a default naming scheme of DMMSW81###, during the creation of the machines the ### will be replaced with an number to ensure that no overlapping machine names are used.

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Finally you will need to create a catalogue name and description and review the summary of what you are about to create:

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Click finish and the machine creation will begin. This may take some time dependant on your infrastructure and the number of machines that you have chosen to create.

The wizard will now create a copy of your master image, create the machines on your virtual infrastructure and create the relevant Active Directory computer accounts

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To finalise the deployment in XenDesktop 7 you now need to create a delivery group and assign some users:

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The first step in creating the delivery group is to select what catalogue of machines you would like to add, for this demonstration we only have the catalogue we created earlier, you will also need to assign the number of desktops from the catalogue that you would like to add.

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Next you need to choose what you are delivering. Shown here we are delivering the full desktop

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Next you will need to assign the users that you require to have access to these desktops.We recommend setting up Active Directory groups for each delivery group but you can add indivdual users if required.

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As we installed Receiver into the base image as part of the VDA installation, a nice new feature is the ability to configure receiver for a Storefront server automatically when creating the delivery groups, as we have not configured Storefront yet, this is not possible, but this can be changed at a later time

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The final screen is the usual summary. You are also given the options to name the delivery group and setup some options that users will see when they log into Storefront/NetScaler

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And that wraps up this part of the demonstration, as you will see you will have a lot more information in the Citrix studio console and you will be able to test the configuration that you have created:

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If you have any questions about the blog post please direct any questions to [email protected]

Installing XenDesktop 7 Part 3 - Installing XenDesktop 7 Virtual Desktop Agent

Before we can continue to create catalogues as part of our XenDesktop 7 installation series we need to have available Virtual Desktops. In this part of the series we will show you how to install the basic Virtual Desktop Agent (VDA). To complete this tutorial we are deploying the VDA to a Vanilla Windows 8.1 (Blue). The process and settings will be the same for any Windows 7 or 8 builds.

So after inserting ISO and progressing through the welcome screen, you will notice everything is greyed out that does not apply to installing on a client OS.

We need to select “Virtual Delivery Agent for Windows Desktop OS”

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As we are going to utilise this a client VM for our XenDesktop 7 Farm, we will select the default “create a master image”

There is a second option to if you will be configuring the VDA for physical machines

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With the many improvements to XenDesktop 7 improved 3D hardware pass through capabilities utilising the likes of Nvidia K2 grid cards, you are offered to the option to utilise HDX3D pro. As we do not have this hardware in our infrastructure we will not be deploying it as part of this demo, so leave the default selection of no

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In the next part of the wizard you will be offered the opportunity to alter the default installation location. You will also be given the option to deploy the latest Version 4 of Citrix Receiver as part of the deployment, you may want to deploy this through third party software management tools such as Microsoft System Centre, but as part of this tutorial we will just install a the standard receiver.

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Next you will need to decide how you the VDA will register with the Dedicated Desktop Controllers (DDC) you are given four options:

  1. Do It later – not sure why you may want to do this unless you are creating generic builds for an LaaS solution
  2. Add it manually – here you can manually add the Fully Qualified Domain Names (FQDN) of your delivery controllers, this adds extra burden as a delivery controller change will mean an image update is required
  3. Chose Locations from Active Directory – similar to earlier versions of XenDesktop, you can run a script to create relevant entries in Active Directory (AD) so you can dynamically update the list of DDC’s in AD this was the proffered method in earlier versions of XenDesktop, and remains so if you don’t plan on using Machine Creation Services (MCS) i.e using Provisioning Services (PVS)
  4. Let Machine Creation Services do it automatically – if you utilise MCS the delivery controllers will automatically add in their addresses when creating machines

For this tutorial we are using MCS so we will select option number 4 “Let Machine Creation Services do it automatically”

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The VDA installation process will then offer to setup the following automatically for you

  • Optimize the client, this will go through and disable certain services that are not required and optimize your machine for XenDesktop7
  • It will enable Windows remote assistance, so that you can connect to your clients from Desktop Director giving your support teams flexible assistance options
  • Utilise real time audio transport
  • Enable Personal vDisks,

This is a design decision that needs to be made as part of your solution. As part of this demo we are going to utilise personal vDisks so we are ticking this box.

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Similar to the Desktop Controller installation all of the firewall requirements are listed out for you. If you plan to add them manually, specifically if you do not use the Windows Firewall, the ports are listed as in previous posts.

We do use Windows Firewall so we are going to allow the installer to make these changes to the firewall rules

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Finally you will be presented with a summary of the selections that you have made. We strongly recommend that you read through these and make sure you have set everything up as you intended. As you can see all of the pre-requisites are installed as part of the installer.

Once you are happy click Install.

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The installer will take approximately 10 minutes based on your hardware specs and is surprisingly very quick to complete. All in all the VDA agent took just 6 minutes in our demo environment

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Once the installation has completed it recommended to restart the machine.

And that is it, the VDA agent as you can see is a simple installation process that runs very quickly

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Enjoy

If you have any questions about the blog post please direct any questions to [email protected]

Deploying Citrix XenDesktop 7 Part 2 - Configuring Your Site

In our previous post Installing Citrix XenDesktop 7  Part 1 we showed you how easy the initial installation is of the new Citrix XenDesktop 7 suite of products is. In this second part we are going to run through how to setup your first site ready to start deploying Windows 7 and 8 Virtual Desktops and Windows 2008 R2 and Windows 2012 XenDesktop for application publishing (XenApp).

Further to the existing pre-requisites in the previous post an SQL server is required, for a small deployment SQL 2012 express can be deployed as part of the installation. As before in the previous post we are utilising an existing SQL 2012 server where we have created a blank database called XenDesktop7 with a specified windows service account for authentication.

So the first step is to open the Citrix Studio console and click the getting started link

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The first screen presents you with two options, the first is the most simple deployment and enables you to configure your entire site in a single process, the second option “Create an Empty Site” will give a more granular approach to the deployment, we will select the first option and add a name to our site:

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The first task is to setup the connection to the database, if you have installed SQL express locally the information will be pre-polulated here for you. We are going to provide the fully qualified domain name of our SQL server (or an alias if you plan on moving it) and the name of the database

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Oce you have entered the details for your SQL server and database name (and instance name if required) we reccomend selecting the “test connection” button to ensure you have entered the correct information, because we are using a dedicated service account to access the database that is a different user account tot he one we are currently logged in as for the deployment the wizard will notify you of its lack of ability to connect to the SQL server select “OK”:

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A second popup box will offer you the option to alter the credentials used to access the SQL database go ahead and select “yes”

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You will then be presented with a standard windows security dialogue to enter your service account credentials:

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If you do enter incorrect credentials you will be given a little more help, a nice touch here I entered the credentials of the service account incorrect:

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Once you have the correct credentials and all tests are successful you can move on through the wizard

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The next step is to configure your license server. We have deployed the license server on the same machine so localhost:27000 is correct. You can then either utilise the free 30 day trial to carry on the setup, register a license key code or import an already activated license file.

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We need to configure your hosting infrastructure, here you have three choices, Citrix XenServer, VMware vCenter, or Microsoft System Centre Virtual Machine Manager. We are using XenServer.

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Once the hosting infrastructure is connected you will then be given the opportunity to select the networks that will be used by clients

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The storage will be setup next, by default if the wizard detects shared storage you will be able to choose the LUN’s that you would like to use, in the dropdown you will also see the options to add local storage should you not have any SAN infrastructure. If you want to utilise Personal vDisks (and why wouldn’t you?) you can set them to be hosted on a specific LUN or with the users virtual machines this will be a design decision you will need to make.

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With the deprecation/retirement of the Citrix streaming profiler, direct integration with App-V 5 management infrastructure is now possible. We will discuss this in more depth in a further post suffice to say the integration is a welcome step and makes publishing App-V applications a hell of a lot easier. For the purposes of this blog we are going select no but this can be changed at a later date:

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You will finally be presented with a final summary detailing your selections we  would recommend running through these and ensuring you selected everything correctly and click finish

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You will then get a progress dialogue detailing what changes are being made

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Once the configuration has completed the next steps will be to create catalogues, configure storefront and setup role based access for your administrators. you will then be ready to deploy your first servers and desktops.

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In Part 3 of this series we will run through some of the basic catalogue configurations for the XenDesktop for applications and of course XenDesktop VDI Clients.

If you have any questions about the blog post please direct any questions to [email protected]

Installing Citrix XenDesktop 7 Part 1 - Dedicated Desktop Controller

With the release of Citrix XenDesktop 7 this yesterday we have been busy updating our Demonstration Environment to showcase the latest technologies and to update some of our Virtual machines to utilise Microsoft Windows 2012 now that it is now a supported platform.

For this tutorial we are going to demonstrate the ease of deployment of your first Citrix XenDesktop 7 Dedicated Desktop Controller (DDC). On this virtual machine we are going to deploy the following components:

  • Citrix XenDesktop 7 Studio – the primary management platform for the new architecture
  • Citrix Desktop Director – the primary monitoring tool and the replacement for Citrix Edge sight
  • Citrix Storefront 2.0 – the updated release of Storefront 1.* and the replacement for the more traditional Web Interface 5.* infrastructure
  • Citrix Licensing server

In a production environment we would almost certainly separate these components onto their own virtual machines, but for this demonstration we will deploy all the required roles onto a single server.

As a minimum recommended specification the virtual machine is configured with the following hardware

Server OS Disk Drive 0 Disk Drive 1 Memory vCPU’s
Windows 2012 C:\ 50GB D:\ 20GB 5GB minimum 2

Citrix lists the full requirements for each separate application on their eDocs site here:

The 5GB minimum recommended requirement is made up of the 3GB requirement for the Desktop Controller and 2GB for Storefront.

After inserting the CD (ISO) and letting the CD auto run you are first presenting with the new start screen this is where your journey begins:

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You are now presented with a list of options dependant on what products you would like to deploy,

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We are going to select “Get Started” and deploy our first delivery controller, as you can see from here you can deploy all of the required components

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If we were deploying a Citrix XenDesktop Delivery Agent we would chose one of the following:

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As you can see the installer has detected we are on a server OS and greyed out the options to install a Desktop OS Agent.

As we said earlier all of the components can be installed individually and these can be selected from the final column “Extended Deployment”

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Once we launch the Getting started column the wizard is a fairly simply run through as we will show you now. As usual with most software these days the first menu is to agree to the terms of the liscensing agreement and click Next:

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Next you are given the option of what location to install the components to by default this is C:\Program Files\Citrix, and what components you would like to install: for the purposes of this demonstration we are going to install all of the components on a single server VM:

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Next you can choose if you would like to install SQL Express Locally on your server for the data store, and whether you would like the Windows Remote Management tools installing to enable shadowing FROM the server you are deploying to. In this instance we already have a SQL 2012 Server with an empty database ready for our deployment so we are not going to install SQL Express locally. If you do install SQL Express and create a local database this can be moved to a full blown SQL installation at a later date. We are also going to install the Windows Remote Management tools as we are deploying Desktop Director on this server and we will want to manage out from this machine.

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The next menu gives you the option to setup any locally installed firewalls, we utilise the inbuilt Microsoft firewall where possible, so we will allow the installer to make the necessary changes, this is a nice improvement as it lists the changes you will need to make if your are running any third party firewall products and gives you the details to manually make the changes.

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The wizard will then show a summary of your selections it is always worth double checking that everything is as required and then simply click install. As you can see all of the pre-requisites are handled with the installer so Visual C++ 2008 runtime, IIS and the Remote Support features will all be installed as part of the product installation.

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The program will begin installing the components as can be seen it is estimated to take 10 minutes or so.

All in all the installation took 5 minutes and once it is complete you can then launch Citrix Studio and configure your site

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And that is it for installing CItrix XenDesktop 7, it takes 7 mouse clicks (coincidence or planned???)

Once the Studio has launched you will be presented with several options for configuring your site:

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We will create a new post detailing the configuration options and what is required to complete the initial configuration to get you site up and running in a future post. Check back soon for an update.

If you have any questions about the blog post please direct any questions to [email protected]

Running Windows Multicast Network Load Balancing (NLB) on XenServer 5+6 guests

We have recently been implementing Windows Network Load Balancing (NLB) on a few clients sites for the Citrix Web Interface and Storefront services, and the implementation on XenServer guests posed a few issues where once the NLB was enabled connectivity would fail.

There are a lot of sites with information regarding Unicast and creating static ARP entries but this we found was not relevant.

The default configuration for XenServer and likely Open vSwitch in general sets multicast to off on the guest virtual machines. Re-enabling Multicast resolved our issues so we set this up on a per machine basis. It is possible to alter this setting globally for all machines which I will show you later, but we cannot confirm what adverse effects this may have.

To begin with locate the XenServer host which your Virtual machine is currently running on and SSH to it.

Once you have logged in as root run the following command to locate the VIF if of the virtual machine:

xe vm-list name-label=<VM NAME Goes here> params=dom-id

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You will then see the DOM-ID of the VIF associated with your Virtual machine, in the above example this is 21

To first check that multicast is not enabled run the following command:

ifconfig vif<DOMID>.0

As canbe seen below there is no multicast listed

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To setup multicsat on your VIF run the following command:

ifconfig vif<DOMID>.0 multicast

To confirm this has worked run the same command as above

ifconfig vif<DOMID>.0

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And you should now see Multicast in the configuration of the VIF.

You can enable multicast for all virtual machines, although as this is not the default unless you have a specific need we would not necesarily recommend this but it is possible by editing the the following file on all of your XenSerer hosts:

/etc/xensource/scripts/vif

Locate the add_to_bridge section within this file and put a # in front of the following line:

${IP} link set “${dev}” multicast off               || logger -t scripts-vif “Failed to ip link set ${dev} multicast off”

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If you have any questions about the blog post please direct any questions to [email protected]

vmware vCenter 5.1 Update 1a Available

VMware Logo

Iconic as vmware partners, are pleased to announce vCenter 5.1 Update 1a, released May 2013. This is the release that we, at Iconic, have been waiting for, as full official support of Windows Server 2012 as a vCenter Host is finally here.

As soon as the latest release was available we immediately downloaded it and upgraded both of our vCenter servers - Live and Demo Environments. We are pleased to report that all has worked flawlessly and operations are as expected - although ote if doing an in place Windows 2008 R2 Upgrade see our additional blog of minor issues we found - but nothing to worry about as long as you do it in the right order ! If you do encounter issues and require our help please contact us at [email protected]

The ability to utilise the latest Windows 2012 Operating System has been welcome as Iconic were early adopters of Windows 2012 throughout our network..

A brief feature list has been included below to let our customers know what is included in this release.

What’s New

This release of VMware vCenter Server 5.1 Update 1a offers the following improvements:

vCenter Server is now supported on Windows Server 2012

vCenter Server now supports the following databases.

  • Microsoft SQL Server 2012
  • Microsoft SQL Server 2008 R2 SP2

vCenter Server now supports customization of the following guest operating systems:

  • Windows 8
  • Windows Server 2012
  • Ubuntu12.04
  • RHEL 5.9

vCenter Essentials no longer enforces vRAM usage limit of 192 GB

With vSphere 5.1 Update 1, the Essentials and Essentials Plus licenses no longer restrict virtual machine power-on operations when the vRAM usage limit of 192 GB is met.

Full details of this release and important information can be found here

If you have any questions about the blog post please direct any questions to [email protected]