Book Image

Getting Started with Citrix XenApp 6

By : Guillermo Musumeci
Book Image

Getting Started with Citrix XenApp 6

By: Guillermo Musumeci

Overview of this book

<p>XenApp 6 is the leader in application hosting and virtualization delivery, allowing users from different platforms such Windows, Mac, Linux, and mobile devices to connect to their business applications. It reduces resources and costs for application distribution and management. Using Citrix XenApp 6, you can deploy secure applications quickly to thousands of users.</p> <p><em>Getting Started with Citrix XenApp 6</em> provides comprehensive details on how to design, implement, and maintain Citrix farms based on XenApp 6. Additionally, you will learn to use management tools and scripts for daily tasks such as managing servers, published resources, printers, and connections.</p> <p><em>Getting Started with Citrix XenApp 6</em> starts by introducing the basics of XenApp such as installing servers and configuring components, and then teaches you how to publish applications and resources on the client device before moving on to configuring content redirection. Author Guillermo Musumeci includes a use case throughout the book to explain advanced topics like creating management scripts and deploying and optimizing XenApp for Citrix XenServer, VMware ESX, and Microsoft Hyper-V virtual machines. It will guide you through an unattended installation of XenApp and components on physical servers. By the end of this book you will have enough knowledge to successfully design and manage your own XenApp 6 Farms.</p>
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Getting Started with Citrix XenApp 6
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Understanding sessions


Each time we establish a session to a XenApp server, we use a protocol called Citrix ICA (Independent Computing Architecture), created by Citrix. ICA uses virtual channels to transmit keyboard strokes and mouse movements, printing, video and audio traffic, and more from the client machine to the XenApp server and the response back from the XenApp server to the client machine.

ICA uses port 1494 by default, but when we enable the XenApp Session Reliability feature in our XenApp farm, port 2598 is used instead of port 1494.

When a client machine initiates communication to the XenApp server with an ICA client and the user is successfully authenticated against the XenApp farm, a session is created on the server. The session is the core of the XenApp experience.

We can find a session in three main states: active, idle, and disconnected:

Let's use an example to understand these states. Our friend William Empire at Brick Unit Construction starts a session in XenApp. He opens...