Unsolved Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow
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@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
The XS Console prompts to provide these services for RDP.
To what do they connect because they would be connecting to the XS machine, not to Windows!
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@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
The XS Console prompts to provide these services for RDP.
To what do they connect because they would be connecting to the XS machine, not to Windows!
I'm not certain but I can only assume that the XenCenter console attempts to pass this information through to the guest VM.
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@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
The XS Console prompts to provide these services for RDP.
To what do they connect because they would be connecting to the XS machine, not to Windows!
Also this is likely why the login time was taking forever. (IE hey I can't find these devices)
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@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
The XS Console prompts to provide these services for RDP.
To what do they connect because they would be connecting to the XS machine, not to Windows!
I'm not certain but I can only assume that the XenCenter console attempts to pass this information through to the guest VM.
That doesn't make sense to me, RDP isn't to the VM but to XS.
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@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
The XS Console prompts to provide these services for RDP.
To what do they connect because they would be connecting to the XS machine, not to Windows!
I'm not certain but I can only assume that the XenCenter console attempts to pass this information through to the guest VM.
That doesn't make sense to me, RDP isn't to the VM but to XS.
No you'd RDP directly to the VM (if you don't have console access).
I'm the only person in the organization that has console access, my vendor nor other IT members have access to the XS console. (or even XenCenter)
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@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
The XS Console prompts to provide these services for RDP.
To what do they connect because they would be connecting to the XS machine, not to Windows!
I'm not certain but I can only assume that the XenCenter console attempts to pass this information through to the guest VM.
That doesn't make sense to me, RDP isn't to the VM but to XS.
No you'd RDP directly to the VM (if you don't have console access).
I'm the only person in the organization that has console access, my vendor nor other IT members have access to the XS console. (or even XenCenter)
Were you seeing issues logging in directly to the console via XenCenter?
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@coliver said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
The XS Console prompts to provide these services for RDP.
To what do they connect because they would be connecting to the XS machine, not to Windows!
I'm not certain but I can only assume that the XenCenter console attempts to pass this information through to the guest VM.
That doesn't make sense to me, RDP isn't to the VM but to XS.
No you'd RDP directly to the VM (if you don't have console access).
I'm the only person in the organization that has console access, my vendor nor other IT members have access to the XS console. (or even XenCenter)
Were you seeing issues logging in directly to the console via XenCenter?
That's what he said when I asked earlier.
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@coliver said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
The XS Console prompts to provide these services for RDP.
To what do they connect because they would be connecting to the XS machine, not to Windows!
I'm not certain but I can only assume that the XenCenter console attempts to pass this information through to the guest VM.
That doesn't make sense to me, RDP isn't to the VM but to XS.
No you'd RDP directly to the VM (if you don't have console access).
I'm the only person in the organization that has console access, my vendor nor other IT members have access to the XS console. (or even XenCenter)
Were you seeing issues logging in directly to the console via XenCenter?
Only while others were complaining about the login performance (which in XC, I know I should just use XO stupid me) would prompt me to pass my devices to the guest. Even if I said no don't pass devices.
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@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@coliver said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
The XS Console prompts to provide these services for RDP.
To what do they connect because they would be connecting to the XS machine, not to Windows!
I'm not certain but I can only assume that the XenCenter console attempts to pass this information through to the guest VM.
That doesn't make sense to me, RDP isn't to the VM but to XS.
No you'd RDP directly to the VM (if you don't have console access).
I'm the only person in the organization that has console access, my vendor nor other IT members have access to the XS console. (or even XenCenter)
Were you seeing issues logging in directly to the console via XenCenter?
Only while others were complaining about the login performance (which in XC, I know I should just use XO stupid me) would prompt me to pass my devices to the guest. Even if I said no don't pass devices.
So you were seeing issues in the console and RDP. That seems to indicate the issue isn't RDP client side passthrough.
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@coliver said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@coliver said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
The XS Console prompts to provide these services for RDP.
To what do they connect because they would be connecting to the XS machine, not to Windows!
I'm not certain but I can only assume that the XenCenter console attempts to pass this information through to the guest VM.
That doesn't make sense to me, RDP isn't to the VM but to XS.
No you'd RDP directly to the VM (if you don't have console access).
I'm the only person in the organization that has console access, my vendor nor other IT members have access to the XS console. (or even XenCenter)
Were you seeing issues logging in directly to the console via XenCenter?
Only while others were complaining about the login performance (which in XC, I know I should just use XO stupid me) would prompt me to pass my devices to the guest. Even if I said no don't pass devices.
So you were seeing issues in the console and RDP. That seems to indicate the issue isn't RDP client side passthrough.
That was my thought.
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@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@coliver said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@coliver said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@scottalanmiller said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
The XS Console prompts to provide these services for RDP.
To what do they connect because they would be connecting to the XS machine, not to Windows!
I'm not certain but I can only assume that the XenCenter console attempts to pass this information through to the guest VM.
That doesn't make sense to me, RDP isn't to the VM but to XS.
No you'd RDP directly to the VM (if you don't have console access).
I'm the only person in the organization that has console access, my vendor nor other IT members have access to the XS console. (or even XenCenter)
Were you seeing issues logging in directly to the console via XenCenter?
Only while others were complaining about the login performance (which in XC, I know I should just use XO stupid me) would prompt me to pass my devices to the guest. Even if I said no don't pass devices.
So you were seeing issues in the console and RDP. That seems to indicate the issue isn't RDP client side passthrough.
That was my thought.
Or he is not truly using the console.
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I was discussing this on ML the other day that I think XC uses RDP for its console. At least on the Server 2003 box I have that is always throwing up a RDP error when I click on console.
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Add more ram?
Not really enough info. What's running on it how much ram/cpu does it have?
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@BRRABill said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
I was discussing this on ML the other day that I think XC uses RDP for its console. At least on the Server 2003 box I have that is always throwing up a RDP error when I click on console.
Yes, that was the discussion and we figured out that it uses RDP. But that doesn't mean that the RDP will pass some of the connections to the VM.
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I dislike using the VM Consoles any longer than necessary, and in cases of networking issues in the VM. RDP and SSH access are so much faster and more flexible than when using the consoles.
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@scottalanmiller said
Yes, that was the discussion and we figured out that it uses RDP. But that doesn't mean that the RDP will pass some of the connections to the VM.
On the 2003 server I have, this is the box that comes up, which lets you uncheck the clipboard option.
On the 2012 server I have, I never see this window, it just goes right through. So, maybe there is a way to turn the option off, as it is probably just sending it on the newer server OSes?
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@BRRABill That is the same prompt I've received, I often just click cancel as I don't need any thing pushed to the server or back.
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@DustinB3403 said in Server 2012 R2 VM RDP Access Logging in Super Slow:
@BRRABill That is the same prompt I've received, I often just click cancel as I don't need any thing pushed to the server or back.
I wonder if you unchecked CLIPBOARD and hit CONNECT if that would make a difference.
Seems like CANCEL does the same thing anyway.