![]() ![]() This means the install file is being hosted on the web interface server now. Now when you go to the web interface in your browser, you will notice the green Install button is there but there is also a little check box underneath that says “I agree with the Citrix license agreement”. You don’t have to do an iisreset as the change should be instant but for good measure, you can:ġ0. ![]() This will give users the option to install the Citrix Receiver instead of a legacy Online Plugin:ĩ. embeded, you can uncomment this line and instead of “CitrixOnlinePluginWeb.exe” type “CitrixReceiver.exe”. Since Citrix Receiver 3.0 that is currently shipping with XenApp 6.5 has the Online Plugin version 13. Scroll down till you get to the ICA clients section which is commented out by default.Ĩ. By default this is unchecked and that is fine if you don’t want to give them an option to update just yet.Īnd open the nf file in Notepad. Make sure “Offer upgrades for clients” is checked if you want users to be prompted to upgrade their clients when they hit the WI and are detected to be running an old version. Now go to the Web Interface console and click Client Deployment on your XenApp website. ![]() Once everything is copied, go into the Windows folder and you will see all the clients listed:ĥ. You can also copy over the Java, Linux, and Mac folders if you support those clients but in this example, I am only copying over the Windows clients.Ĥ. Copy the “Windows” folder into the “ c:\Program Files (x86)\Citrix\Web Interface\5.4.0\Clients” folder. Now go to your XenApp 6.5 media/install files and drill down to the Windows clients folder:ģ. Just edit the path below to regular “Program Files” if you are using a 32 bit OS.Ĭ:\Program Files (x86)\Citrix\Web Interface\5.4.0\ClientsĢ. I installed on XenApp 6.5 and Web Interface 5.4 on a Server 2008 R2 for this example so these are 64 bit paths. So instead, you can host the web plugins for the different OSes on your web interface server itself just like previous editions of Web Interface. This is a horrible end user experience because they don’t know what to download and can get confused and frustrated. Where they have to dig around and find the proper plugin. The problem is when you click on this install button, it takes the user to: ![]()
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