Windows 2003 server remote desktop session
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Hi Danny, Since you can get to one machine and not the others then it is either a firewall policy or a security policy setting. Then check that your account is allowed to RDP into those machines. If those all check out then you will need to look into the firewall or other security policy settings. I have a problem in that sometimes I lose the connection to RDP while I have a live session, then I am unable to connect to my server again.
The only option left for me is a hard reboot, which is not ideal. The server is setup in a way that only allows one RDP session. Hi Davi, There is nothing you can do if you are all admins on the box. Just try and set up a policy for everyone to follow such as check with whoever is logged on before killing their session. Hi: I am running a small monitoring program for an external disk drive on my Windows R2 server.
Problem is, I occasionally also log in a normal i. This starts a second copy of the. My question: how can I get the. Toggle navigation Microsoft Jeff Widmer's Blog. Home About Sign In. And if someone want to connect in session mode with windows xp pro? Thanks Drewskie!!!
This is when the logoff scripts are activated. If you can find a way to script a graceful shutdown of the software then it will solve the issue. Office Office Exchange Server. Not an IT pro? Windows Server TechCenter. Sign in. United States English. Ask a question. Quick access. Search related threads. Check the RDP client settings to see if that is allowed.
There is a similar setting on the Terminal Server that may also be overriding this policy. So you need to check both places. DigitalMan: Thats it Once the rdpclip. To continue this discussion, please ask a new question. If you don't mind my asking what is the application? Another option is turning it into a service. I'm not sure if you have it running in a console window because you want to be able to see some output, which would negate this - but there are several apps that will package any app as a service.
Another option is to remote desktop over to that machine using another account, then take over the administrator session. This should force it to connect to the console session. In fact I have separate RDP shortcuts set up for connecting to the console session and for connecting to a normal session.
Even though you disconnect from the console session, the user remains logged in and any programs running in that session continue to run, so what's the problem with disconnecting? Why do you want it to not behave like that, as you say? The process name is typically the same as the file name, without the.
Save that to a file, scriptName. PS1, and run that when you logon. You need to enable running PowerShell scripts if you have not already done that, or you will get an error. One note - to see all the running processes on the server, you need administrator permissions, which the user account you are using seems to have. Sign up to join this community.