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Troubleshooting Citrix Xendesktop

You're reading from   Troubleshooting Citrix Xendesktop The ultimate troubleshooting guide for clear, concise, and real-world solutions to a wide range of common Citrix XenDesktop problems

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785280139
Length 274 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Gurpinder Singh Gurpinder Singh
Author Profile Icon Gurpinder Singh
Gurpinder Singh
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started – Understanding Citrix XenDesktop® and its Architecture FREE CHAPTER 2. Troubleshooting Toolkit for Citrix XenDesktop® 3. Getting Around Installation Issues 4. Overcoming VDA Registration Problems 5. Conquering Citrix Session Launch Difficulties 6. Surpassing XenDesktop® Service Issues 7. Troubleshooting Performance 8. Solving Printing Issues 9. Getting the Better of HDX™ MediaStream Challenges 10. Taming MCS and PVS™ Setbacks Gracefully 11. Troubleshooting NetScaler® Integration Issues 12. Dealing with Known Issues in Citrix XenDesktop® Index

Configuring logging for XenDesktop®

To troubleshoot all the issues arising in the XenDesktop environment, you should be aware of what is cooking under the hood of the XenDesktop architecture. For this purpose, enabling service logging, VDA agent logging, and Controller logging is very essential and the key point here.

Service-based logging can be enabled via the command line or by using Citrix Scout, which is installed by default on XenDesktop 7.5 and later versions. Citrix Scout lacks some feature logging capability; it doesn't enable Citrix Broker Service agent logging.

So, it's always better to enable your environment's service-based logging using the command line or PowerShell:

Note

An example command to enable Citrix Broker Service log is as follows:

BrokerService.exe –Logfile "C:\XDLogs\Citrix Broker Service.log"

You need to run this command from the CMD prompt while in the appropriate service directory, which is C:\Program Files\Citrix\Broker\Service...

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