Thursday, February 27, 2020

VMware Horizon Real-Time Audio-Video (RTAV) Feature Explained


VMware Horizon Real-Time Audio-Video (RTAV) Feature Explained
With the Real-Time Audio-Video feature, you can use the local client system's webcam or microphone in a remote desktop or published application. Real-Time Audio-Video is compatible with standard conferencing applications and browser-based video applications. It supports standard webcams, audio USB devices, and analog audio input.
End users can run Skype, Webex, Google Hangouts, and other online conferencing applications in their remote desktops. This feature redirects video and audio data to the agent machine with a lower bandwidth than can be achieved by using USB redirection. With Real-Time Audio-Video, webcam images and audio input are encoded on the client system and then sent to the agent machine. On the agent machine, a virtual webcam and virtual microphone can decode and play the stream, which the third-party application can use.
No special configuration is necessary, although administrators can set agent-side group policies and registry keys to configure frame rate and image resolution, or to turn off the feature. By default, the resolution is 320 by 240 pixels at 15 frames per second. If needed, administrators can also use client-side configuration settings to set a preferred webcam or audio device.
Note This feature is available only on some types of clients. To find out whether this feature is supported on a particular type of client, see the feature support matrix included in the installation and setup document for the specific type of desktop or mobile client device.
Real-Time Audio-Video (RTAV) Design


Architectural Challenges of Running Real-Time Audio and Video in a VDI Environment
Previously, VoIP and video support in VDI environments was limited by architectural issues that prevented audio and video conferencing from working optimally in a virtual machine. These issues included:
·       Heavy CPU load on data center servers – All processing for VoIP and video chat calls was handled on the data center servers.
·       Media hair-pinning – VoIP and videoconferencing traffic was not sent point-to-point but streamed through the data center network and server.
·       High bandwidth usage – Audio and video traffic was not encoded with standardized codecs but was sent as raw USB traffic, resulting in extremely high bandwidth usage.
·       No quality of service (QoS) – Audio and video traffic was sent inside the display protocol, which did not provide granular QoS policies to prioritize VoIP and videoconferencing traffic.



Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Configuring LDAP Source in VMware vROPS

Configuring LDAP Source in VMware vROPS

1. In vROPS UI, go to Administration, Authentication Sources. Click on the “+” icon to add the new LDAP source



2. Provide the LDAP source details for your domain (e.g. AS.corp.local)


3. Click Ok.
4. Sync users group from the selected LDAP Source


5. Import Active Directory Security Group from the domain (e.g. as.corp.local\vdiadmins).


6. Grant Administrator role and allow access to all the objects.


7. Click Finish.
8. Click Yes to continue

9. Test the login with a domain credential to vROPS UI page.

Adding Nvidia GPU Management Pack in VMware VROPS

Adding Nvidia GPU Management Pack in VROPS

1. In vROPS UI, go to Administration tab, click on Solutions, click + to create a new solution


2. Select the Nvidia vGPU vROPS Management Pack (NVIDIA_vGPU_Management_Pack_1.1.25168221_signed.pak)


3. Click Upload and then click Next


4. Accept the EULA and click Next to start the PAK installation


5. Click Finish the complete the PAK installation


6. Select Nvidia Virtual GPU solution and click the Gear icon to configure


7. Add the vCenter Server for Nvidia and provide the credentials, test the connection and save the settings


8. Click Close to complete the Nvidia GPU Management Pack in VMware vROPS.

Installing and Configuring vROPS Horizon View Broker Agent

Installing and Configuring vROPS Horizon View Broker Agent

1. Login to Horizon View Connection Server (Primary)
2. Launch the Horizon Broker Agent settings wizard (Run as Administrator)

3. Test and Pair the connection server with Horizon Adapter using the pairing credential. Click Next

4. Provide Horizon Administrator credential using the Active Directory Service Account 

5. Enter the Events DB credentials (Use the SQL User account configured for View Events Database

6. Add the App Volumes Managers: (Enter the IP Addres or FQDN of App Volumes Manager instances with a Active Directory Service Account used for AVM integration.

7. Choose default timeout values and click Next

8. Default logging levels for Broker. Default is good for most circumstances

9. Ensure Broker Agent service status shows Running

10. Review the summary and click Finish to complete the configuration wizard.

11. Verify that the View Adapter is now listed as “Collecting” and “Data Receiving”


12. Configuring vROPS Horizon View Broker Agent is complete!

Versions:
VMware Horizon View 7.x
vROPS for Horizon Agent 6.6