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Learning VMware App Volumes

You're reading from   Learning VMware App Volumes Deliver applications to virtual desktop environments in seconds and at scale with the click of a button

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785884382
Length 494 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Peter von Oven Peter von Oven
Author Profile Icon Peter von Oven
Peter von Oven
Peter V Oven Peter V Oven
Author Profile Icon Peter V Oven
Peter V Oven
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to App Volumes 2. Architectural and Feature Overview FREE CHAPTER 3. Designing and Building an App Volumes Deployment 4. Installing and Configuring the App Volumes Software 5. A Guided Tour of the Management Console 6. Working with AppStacks 7. Working with Writable Volumes 8. Delivering ThinApp Packages with App Volumes 9. Horizon View Integration 10. Deploying App Volumes in a Citrix XenDesktop Environment 11. Deploying App Volumes in a RemoteApp Environment 12. Deploying App Volumes in a Citrix XenApp Environment 13. Deploying App Volumes in a Horizon View Hosted Apps Environment 14. Advanced Configuration and Other Options Index

Summary

In this chapter, we have worked through the complete process of how to deploy App Volumes within a Citrix XenApp environment, in order to deliver applications that are part of an AppStack rather than being installed on the server. As we discussed, the use case for doing this enables you to build stateless XenApp farms, making it far easier to scale up, scale down, and, more importantly, be able to manage the applications as one entity.

We started by looking at the architecture of how it all fits together. Once familiar with the architecture, we went on to build a provisioning machine to provision our RDSH AppStack for Office 2013, before going on to build a XenApp Server, which was assigned the Office AppStack and then configured to publish some of the core Office applications.

Finally, we tested the solution to make sure it behaved as expected and that end users could log in and launch their applications.

In the next chapter, we are going to continue the theme of publishing applications...

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