Thomas Feb 6, at UTC. Aha, so simple I guess now I know. Thankyou very much. This topic has been locked by an administrator and is no longer open for commenting. Read these next Yes No.
Thank you! Any more feedback? The more you tell us the more we can help. Can you help us improve? Resolved my issue. Clear instructions.
Easy to follow. You can view all the servers in a group as a set of thumbnails, showing live action in each session. Servers can inherit their logon settings from a parent group or a credential store. Thus when you change your lab account password, you only need to change the password stored by RDCMan in one place.
Passwords are stored securely by encrypting with either CryptProtectData using the locally logged on user's authority or an X certificate. Any legacy RDG file opened and saved with this version will be backed up as filename. The Remote Desktop Connection Manager display consists of the menu, a tree with groups of servers, a splitter bar, and a client area. Most work, such as adding, removing, and editing servers and groups, can be accomplished via right-clicking on a tree node.
Servers and groups can be moved using drag-and-drop. Use the [View. Server tree location] menu option to locate the tree at the left or right edge of the window. The server tree can be docked, auto-hidden, or always hidden via the [View.
Server tree visibility] menu option. When the server tree is not displayed, servers can still be accessed through the Remote Desktops menu. When the tree is auto-hidden, the splitter bar remains visible at the left side of the window. Hovering over it will bring the server tree back into view. The client area display depends on the node selected in the tree. If a server is selected, the client area shows the remote desktop client for that server.
If a group is selected, the client area shows a thumbnail of the servers within that group. The size of the client area can be specified via the View menu, as well as resizing the RDCMan window. Use [View. Lock window size] to prevent the window from being resized by dragging the frame.
Caution: Connected servers can receive focus from keyboard navigation of the thumbnail view. It is not always obvious which server has focus, so be careful. There is a setting to control this: [Display Settings.
Allow thumbnail session interaction]. Multiple monitors can be spanned if enabled by the monitor spanning option. You can find the full list of Terminal Services shortcut keys here. Some of these can be configured from the Hot Keys tab. The top-level unit of organization in RDCMan is a remote desktop file group. Servers can't live outside of a group and groups can't live outside of a file.
A group contains a list of servers and configuration information such as logon credentials. Configuration settings can be inherited from another group or the application defaults. Groups can be nested but are homogenous: a group may either contain groups or servers, but not both. All the servers in a group can be connected or disconnected at once. When a group is selected in the tree view, the servers underneath it are displayed in a thumbnail view.
The thumbnails can show the actual server windows or simply the connection status. Global thumbnail view properties can be adjusted via the [Tools. Smart groups are populated dynamically based on a set of rules. All ancestors of sibiling groups of the smart group are eligible for inclusion. When a server is in the connected state, it is automatically added the to Connected virtual group. Servers cannot be explicitly added or removed from the Connected group. There are sometimes situations where a server disconnects and will be intentionally offline for an unspecified length of time, e.
When this is the case, drag the server in question to the Reconnect group. RDCMan will continually attempt to connect to the server until it is successful. The Favorites virtual group is a flat file of your favorite servers.
You can add any server from the server tree. This is helpful when you have many servers in the tree and often work with a handful of servers from different groups. The Connect To Virtual Group contains the servers that are not members of user-created groups. See Ad Hoc Connections for details. Before you start using the client of your choice, there are a few things you'll need to do first. Just as you would with a local computer, you'll need to configure your remote computer before you start accessing it with the client.
If you have any other questions that this article didn't answer, check out the Remote Desktop client FAQ. Skip to main content. This browser is no longer supported. Download Microsoft Edge More info.
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