Štruktúra kurzu
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Course Introduction
- Review course goals
- Review course objectives
- Review the course outline
- Find additional resources after this course
Introduction to VMware Horizon
- Recognize the features and benefits of VMware Horizon
- Identify the major function of each VMware Horizon component
- Define a use case for your virtual desktop and application infrastructure
View Connection Server
- Identify the VMware vSphere® requirements for a connection server
- Describe the network and firewall configurations for View Connection Server
- License VMware Horizon components
- Configure View Connection Server
VMware Horizon Desktops
- Outline the process and choices in setting up VMware Horizon virtual machines
- Compare the remote display protocols that are available in VMware Horizon
- List the ports that must be opened in the machine’s firewall for VMware Horizon operations
- Outline the configuration choices when installing Horizon Agent
VMware Horizon Desktop Pools
- Identify the steps to set up a template for desktop pool deployment
- List the steps to add desktops to the View Connection Server inventory
- Define desktop entitlement
- Describe how information on the Users and Groups page can be used to control and monitor View users
- Explain the hierarchy of global policies, pool-level policies, and user-level policies
- List the View Group Policy administrative template files
Horizon Client Options
- Describe the requirements for a Horizon Client installation
- Explain USB redirection and options
- Describe the power states for desktops
- Define and compare a thin client with a system running Horizon Client
- Discuss the benefits of Virtual Printing
- Explain the Virtual Printing architecture
- Describe the configuration options for Virtual Printing
- Explain the location-based printing feature
Creating Automated Pools of Full Virtual Machines
- Recognize how an automated pool operates
- Compare dedicated-assignment and floating-assignment pools
- Outline the steps to create an automated pool
- Examine the entitlement of desktops in automated pools
Creating and Managing Linked-Clone Desktop Pools
- Describe the VMware linked-clone technology
- Explain why both a parent virtual machine and a snapshot must be used to create linked clones
- Outline the system requirements for View Composer
- Describe the relationship between a persistent disk and the system disk
- Outline the steps necessary to set up a desktop pool that uses linked clones
- Compare the purpose of the parent and the replica virtual machines
- Compare the linked-clone management operations
- Describe the management operations for persistent disks
Creating and Managing Instant-Clone Desktop Pools
- Identify the advantages of instant clones
- Distinguish View Composer clones from instant clones
- Identify the requirements of instant clones
- Describe the types of instant-clone virtual machines
- Explain how folders are used to delegate pool administration
- Outline the steps to set up an automated pool that uses instant clones
- Describe instant-clone limitations in VMware Horizon
- Describe the creation of instant clones
- Set up an automated pool of instant clones
VMware Horizon Authentication
- Compare the authentication options that View Connection Server supports
- Explain the purpose of roles and privileges in VMware Horizon
- Outline the steps to create a Horizon administrator and a custom role
- List some of the best practices for configuring Horizon administrators
Managing VMware Horizon Security
- Compare tunnels and direct connections for client access to desktops
- Compare the benefits of using VMware Unified Access Gateway™ in the DMZ
- Explain a direct connection
- List the advantages of direct connections
- Discuss the benefits of using Unified Access Gateway
- Compare how Unified Access Gateway and the security server are deployed
- List the two-factor authentication options that are supported by Unified Access Gateway
- Describe the situations in which you might deploy Unified Access Gateway with one, two, or three network interfaces
Profile Management Using User Environment Manager
- Identify the User Environment Manager functional areas and their benefits
- List User Environment Manager components
- Describe User Environment Manager and its architecture
- Identify User Environment Manager profile management and its features
- Describe User Environment Manager smart policies
Creating RDS Desktop and Application Pools
- Explain the difference between an RDS desktop pool and an automated pool
- Describe how a user can access a single application by using the RDS application pool
- Describe the relationship between an RDS host, a farm, and an application pool
- Create an RDS desktop pool and an application pool
- Explain how the View Composer linked-clone technology can automate the build-out of RDS server farms
- Use View Composer linked-clone technology and instant-clone technology to automate the build-out of RDSH farms
- Describe the default and alternative load-balancing feature for RDS hosts that optimizes placement of sessions
Using App Volumes to Provision and Manage Applications
- Explain how App Volumes works
- Identify the features and benefits of App Volumes
- Identify the interface elements of App Volumes
- Install and configure App Volumes
Command-Line Tools and Backup Options
- Describe key View Connection Server features that are available as command-line options with the vdmadmin command
- Explain the purpose of kiosk mode for client systems and how it is configured
- Identify the log locations for each VMware Horizon component
- Describe the backup options for VMware Horizon databases
- Explain the potential problems if the databases are not synchronized
VMware Horizon Performance and Scalability
- Describe the purpose of a replica server
- List several best practices for multiserver deployment in a pod
- Describe the benefits of the Cloud Pod Architecture feature for large-scale VMware Horizon deployments
- Describe the purpose of interpod communication and the View InterPod API
- Explain how global entitlements can benefit a single-pod environment