There are two ways to print something from XenDesktop: using a locally attached printer on the user's USB port or a network attached printer. Additional options about how printing is used and optimized are controlled through policy settings. In this chapter, we covered how printing works in a virtual environment, which includes locally attached and network attached printers. We showed you how to set and save printing preferences both from the server and the end user device. We covered printer autocreation, how to map printers, and the optimization of printing. Now that you understand how printing works, we will discuss how a USB works in XenDesktop in the next chapter.
Getting Started with XenDesktop 7.x
By :
Getting Started with XenDesktop 7.x
By:
Overview of this book
Table of Contents (27 chapters)
Getting Started with XenDesktop 7.x
Credits
Notice
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Free Chapter
Designing a XenDesktop Site
Installing XenDesktop
Managing Machine Catalogs, Hosts, and Personal vDisks
Managing Delivery Groups
Managing Policies
Managing Printing
Virtualizing USB Support
Virtualizing Storage and Backup
High Definition Experience (HDX)
Application Delivery
Working with the XenDesktop SDK
Working with Citrix ReceiverTM and Plugins
Securing XenDesktop
Managing and Monitoring XenDesktop
VDI in the Cloud
Creating a Domain Certificate Authority
XenDesktop Policy Settings Reference
Creating Self-signed Certificates for NetScaler Gateway
Using Public CA-signed SSL Wildcard Certificates on NetScaler Gateway
Index
Customer Reviews