Terminal Server Licensing Model and Workflow
Terminal Services
provides the ability to host multiple, simultaneous client sessions on Windows
Server. A client access
licensed is issued to every type of client that will access the Windows Server
2003 Terminal Services (From now Terminal Services will be referred as TS).
There are 2 types
of TS Licensing:
· Per
Device Licensing
· Per
User Licensing
Per Device Licensing Model:
If your
infrastructure is configured with Per Device License for a Terminal server,
below are the 3 scenarios where a client connection gets validated.
User
(X) connecting to an application hosted on a TS server for the First time from
his device
(M):
Since the user is trying to establish the TS session for the very first
time, the client device will not have the locally installed TS cals. However,
the terminal server still accepts the connection and sends the same request to
TS License server.
For all the scenarios, let’s assume TS Licensing server is up and running
fine and responding to all the requests from TS server.
Since, the user is launching the hosted application for the very first time
from that device, the TS license server issues a 90 day Temp cal for that
particular device. Thus session initialization continues and the user has
successfully bi-passed the TS Licensing channel for the first time from that device
with a temp cal stored under the client registry key: HKLM\Software\Microsoft\MSLicensing.
2
User(X
or Y2 or Z3) connecting to an application hosted on a TS server for the from
the same device(M)
In this scenario the condition is, user who tries to establish the TS
connection can be either same or different user. But, the client device is
already used to establish the TS session for 1 time and already has a Temp cal
installed for a period of 90 days.
When the TS server identifies that the incoming client connection has
already a 90 day Temp cal installed, it sends the request to TS Licensing
server. Now, the TS License server must grant a new Permanent License to the
Client device.
License server picks any random expiration date between 52 to 89 days from
the requested time.
The details of the expiration dates of TS client cals are recorded in
licensing databases. Once this is completed, the available TS cals gets
decremented by 1 in the License store. Later, the TS Licensing server transmits
the TS Licensing cals from TS server to the client Device(M) which again stores
under the client registry key: HKLM\Software\Microsoft\MSLicensing.
3
User(X
or Y2 or Z3) connecting to an application hosted on a TS server from the same device(M) for N+2nd time.
In this scenario the condition is, user who tries to establish the TS
connection can be either same or different user. But, the client device is
already used to establish the TS session for N+2 times and already has a permanent
License with the random expiration between 52 to 89 days.
·
If
the client cal expiry period is greater than 7 days, session initialization
continues and the user has successfully bi-passed the TS Licensing channel.
·
If
the client cal expiry period is lesser than 7 days, the terminal server again
attempts to contact the TS Licensing server to request the new permanent
Licenses and the process repeats as described in Step2.
Per User Licensing Model:
Per User
Licensing model is simpler and easier as compared to Per Device Licensing.
The
user tries to attempt to launch an application hosted on a TS server. The TS
server with per user configured then connects to TS License server. It then
grants 1 license to that userID and decrements the license count by 1 in the
License store and transmits back to the TS server and to the client computer
for a successful session initialization.
2 Once
the user logs off from the hosted application, the client license is added back
to the License pool.
3 This
is a concurrent user license, based on the number of simultaneous user
connections.
What if TS License server is down?
·
In
all the above scenarios we had considered the TS license server to be up and
running fine and all the network communications between TS server and TS
License server is as expected.
·
Now,
let’s assume the License server is either down or there is a breakdown in
the network communications between TS
server and TS License server
·
In all the cases, except for Per-device Licensing cal which has an expiration
period of greater than 7 days, TS server will try to contact TS Licensing
server.
·
If a
Terminal Server cannot locate a license server, it will still allow unlicensed
client devices to logon using the Grace period.
·
Grace
period = 120 Days.
·
Definition
of Grace periodà Grace
period is the duration of time where First unlicensed client device tries to
contact the TS server to a period of 120 days.
What if TS Licenses are exhausted or license
renewal is not done?
·
If
the licenses are out of stock or if license renewal is not done, it will begin
to grant a 90-day temporary license certificates to client devices.
·
There
is no limit to the number of temporary licenses that a license server can
grant.
·
This
90 day timer can be different for different clients. i.e. it is client
specific. Different temporary licenses can expire on different days—even if
they were all granted by the same license server.
TS Licensing Dashboard:
Terminal Services
configuration settings on one of the TS server:
No comments:
Post a Comment