On 8/30/05, Audrius
On 8/30/05, Stephen Carter
wrote: Audrius
08/30/05 11:52 AM >>> On 8/30/05, IntegraGen wrote: I was sure that my server comes with 5 clients... It is OEM server with 5 clients... But maybe it is "client license" not "RDP client license"? How can I now that? Where I can find in MS Server 2003 what type of licences do I have? Sorry for questions about MS products... I have SuSE SLES and SLOX servers - with them I do not have such troubles... Audrius
I thought OEM should be fine, although if it wasn't a volume license version that was installed, the server will need to be activated with Microsoft. A pop-up with a key icon in the system tray would have warned you of this condition every time you logged into it. You can confirm if this is the problem by logging on locally and checking the event logs for license errors.
For Terminal Services, by default Windows 2003 server comes with 2 Remote Administration licenses built-in, which allows 2 concurrent licenses for remote connections, as the name suggests, for administration purposes.
If after connecting to the box you clicked the x to close down the session instead of logging off, it may be that the connection is still in a 'disconnected' state which you should be able to see by running the Terminal Services Manager when logging onto the box locally, and from there you can clear the 'dead' connections.
Your password may also have simply expired? Trying to log on would tell you this though, and you would have received warnings, by default, within 14 days of your password expiring.
Just my friend came to visit me and with his laptop with Windows XP I connected with RDC to my server with my name and passw without trouble...? Why...? What the hell...! No complains about expiration or other things...
Audrius
As has been said, you need CALs for the Terminal Server (TSCAL), these are seperate/different than the CALs used to access the Windows 2003 server. Man what a racket, a license to access Windows as a fat client and a license to access it as a term client. The exception, if you have the Terminal Server setup as remote admin access, then you get 2 TSCALs for access, for remote admin only of course. As for your friend's XP box, there are certain versions of XP that can access Windows 2003 Terminal Server without need for the TSCAL. Microsoft grandfathered them in as having the TSCAL already because they shipped before Windows 2003. Newer versions of XP are suppossed to require the TSCAL. As for the timeout, check out the settings on the Windows 2003 box. It's kicking you out probably due to what it sees as an inactive session or expired logon. BTW, this app, are you the only one who needs to use it? If so, then look at Win4Lin, VMware, or wine and see if you can do away with the Term Server and CALs issue. John