Prolink Configuration Program
What is RtWLan. exe The. Executable files may, in some cases, harm your computer. Therefore, please read. Home and business telecommunication provider for the nation. Cisco Solutions for a VMware View 4. Environment Design Guide. Table Of Contents. About the Author. Cisco Solutions for a VMware View 4. Environment. Introduction. Prolink Configuration Program' title='Prolink Configuration Program' />ProBlue Adhesive Melters Models P4, P7, and P10 Customer Product Manual Part 102449606 Issued 314 NORDSON CORPORATION DULUTH, GEORGIA USA. ChrisTV Professional ist ein analoges Tool um ber die TVKarte fern zu sehen. Enthaltene Features sind u. Deinterlacing, Aufnahme und Zoom. Beim Aufnehmen lassen. Discover a great range of Routers includes Wifi, portable and wireless at Special Offers from Lazada. Free delivery with 14 Days Free Returns. Buy nowAudience. Document Objectives. Solution Overview. Solution Components and Topology. WANBranch. Internet Edge. Campus. Data Center. Solution ComponentsSoftware Versions. Cisco Solution Overview for VMware View 4. Cisco Application Control Engine. Cisco ACE Virtualization. SSL Offload. SSL URL Rewrite. Session Persistence. Descargar Historia De Bolivia De Carlos Mesa Pdf Files. Allowed Server Connections. Route Health Injection. Health Monitoring. Cisco Wide Area Application Services. Advanced Compression Using DRE and LZ Compression. Transport File Optimizations Common Internet File System Caching Services. Print Services. SSLCisco WAAS Mobile. Advanced Data Transfer Compression. Application Specific Acceleration. Transport Optimization. Cisco ASACisco Network Analysis Module Intelligent Application Performance Analytics. Visibility into WAN Optimized Networks. Network and Application Usage Analysis. Advanced Troubleshooting for Cisco NAMCisco Nexus 1. VVMware View 4. 0 Solution Overview. VMware View 4. 0 Components. View Connection ServerSecurity Server. View Client. View Agent. Solution Design and Implementation Details. General Considerations. Direct Mode and Tunneled Mode. Data Center DeploymentLocation of VMware View Environment. Cisco Nexus 1. 00. VNetwork Connectivity for the VMware View Environment Optimizing the VMware View Environment. Deploying VMware View Security Servers. Deploying Qo. S for VMware View. HQ WAN Router. Branch Router. Configuring the Cisco WAAS Solution. Cisco WAAS Implementation Overview. Validating the VMware View and Cisco WAAS Solution. VMware View Cisco WAAS Mobile. Conclusion. Related Documents. Cisco Solutions for a VMware View 4. Environment Design Guide. Last Updated February 1. Building Architectures to Solve Business Problems. Cisco Validated Design. About the Author. Shannon Mc. Farland, Solutions Architect, CMO ESE, Cisco Systems. Shannon is a solutions architect for data center technologies and enterprise IPv. Ciscos Enterprise Solutions Engineering team. He is currently focused on data center design validation and optimization with an applicationOS focus on Microsoft, VMware and VDI. He has been responsible for his teams enterprise IPv. Shannon has authored many technical papers, been a contributor to Cisco Press books, and is a frequent speaker at Cisco Networkers and other industry conferences. Previously he was a Cisco field systems engineer, supporting enterprise customers and partners. Shannon has been in the networking and application industry for more than 1. He holds CCIE certification 5. Contents Cisco Solutions for a VMware View 4. Environment Introduction VMware View 4. VDI offering that is used by businesses, educational institutions, government bodies, and many other vertical industries. VMware View 4. 0 provides many of the core components that are needed to deploy a scalable, available, and secure VDI implementation. Cisco offers a wide variety of value add solutions that make VMware View 4. VDI experience. Audience This document is intended for network engineers and architects who support VMware View 4. VMware View 4. 0 on a Cisco network. Document Objectives This document provides design and configuration guidance for deploying and optimizing VMware View 4. Cisco data center, campus, branch, and for Internet based users. This document describes VMware View components and various Cisco products and technologies, and explains how combining them increases the availability and performance of the VMware View environment. An overview of the various VMware View components is provided for the reader who may be focused on the network but needs a basic understanding of the VMware View environment. The following are prerequisites for deploying the Cisco solution for VMware View Experience with basic networking and troubleshooting Working knowledge of the Cisco Internetworking Operating System IOS and Nexus OS NX OS Working knowledge of the Cisco Nexus 1. V Series switch Working knowledge of the Cisco Application Control Engine ACE Working knowledge of the Cisco Adaptive Security Appliance ASA Working knowledge of the Cisco Wide Area Application Services WAAS suite of products, including WAAS Mobile Experience with Cisco quality of service Qo. S fundamentals classificationmarking, queuing, policing, and so on Familiarity with VMware Virtual v. Sphere 4. 0 components ESX, Virtual Center, and so on For additional information that might be useful in understanding and deploying this solution, as well as other applications, see the documents listed in the Related Documents section. Solution Overview The Cisco solution for VMware View offers increased application availability, performance, and improved end user experience by leveraging the following technologies and services Cisco ACEThe ACE provides server load balancing, serverapplication health monitoring, and Secure Socket Layer SSL offload for the VMware View Connection Server and Security Server roles if deployed. Cisco WAAS and WAAS MobileWAAS offers an improved end user experience by optimizing the transport protocol used by remote display protocols such as Microsoft Remote Desktop Protocol RDP, and local data caching and compression of duplicate data sent between the VMware View Client and the VMware View Connection Server, Security Server if deployed, andor the View Agent. Cisco ASAThe ASA offers perimeter protection for the VMware View Connection Server and Security Server roles by providing firewall services for traffic destined for the View Connection Server and Security Server if deployed roles. Cisco Nexus 1. 00. VThe Nexus 1. 00. V offers policy based virtual machine VM connectivity as well as mobile VM security by providing VMware View components with consistent network connectivity and policy enforcement between ESX hosts. Cisco Qo. S Classification and markingIdentifies and classifiesmarks VMware View remote display protocol traffic so that it is treated differently than other types of traffic. PolicingEnsures policy conformance to administratively defined traffic rates for VMware View remote display protocol traffic and takes action such as markingremarking or dropping packets if these rates are exceeded. SchedulingqueuingSelectively drops packets as the queues are filling to avoid traffic congestion. Link specific toolsShaping, link fragmentation and interleaving, compression and transmit rings offer non application specific capabilities to smooth and reduce traffic over slow speed WAN links. Solution Components and Topology VMware View 4. A large number of variables and implementation options are available with a VMware View implementation therefore, it is important to break down the various VMware View roles to their basic elements. This document provides a brief overview of three of the main VMware View roles View Agent, View Client, and View Connection Server that were used in the validation of the Cisco solution. Figure 1illustrates the high level view of the design presented in this document. Although not shown in this high level diagram, the Cisco environment is deployed with redundant devices for each role and layer of the network. Figure 1 Cisco Solution for VMware View 4. Lexar Usb Format Zip Drive. High Level Overview The sections that follow briefly describe the components in each area of the diagram in Figure 1.