Frank, also note that you can set a policy to not show the Disconnect option
in a TS session. My hunch is that these admins are just closing the window,
not actually clicking the Disconnect button. That said, removing that option
might help a little. (I also remove the Shutdown option from the Star
1 AM
> To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
> Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT: disconnecting remote TS session on DC
>
> I think you can set this setting in GPO. If you go to
> Computer Configuration\Administrative Templates\Windows
> Components\Terminal Services\Sessions and there
I think you can set this setting in GPO. If you go to Computer Configuration\Administrative Templates\Windows Components\Terminal Services\Sessions and there you can enable "Set time limit for disconnected ssessions" and set it to 1 minute. Sullivan Tim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Normally what
Normally what I will do is use the console switch (if they
are 2003 servers) and free up the 2 in use connections. So its basically I
use a 3rd allowed RDP connection.
Start, then run: mstsc /v:servername
/console
But there are definetly GPO settings you can put in place
to help with thi
Title: Message
Hi
Frank
Are
they not able to click Start > Logoff from the TS session? If they forget to do this then configure a GPO to reset a disconnected TS session after
x minutes/hours/days
cheers
Dave
-Original Message-From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROT
Why not just keep them from doing it in the first
place or set a policy to end their disconnected session after x minutes?
That way the others will be able to logon after the disconnected
session is terminated in x minutes. If you are running 2003 there are
a few policy options that you ca
You could try giving them full control permissions over the RDP-Tcp connection object in tscc.msc (Terminal Services Configuration MMC).
Have you considered the other settings in there regarding idle session limits and such...??
Teo
On 2/6/06, Frank Abagnale <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I have