Using a Terminal Server Scheduler
The
Scheduler
tab page in the
Terminal Servers
view allows you to reboot or temporarily disable servers according to a schedule.
To create a new scheduler task or modify an existing one:
-
In the RAS Console, navigate to
Farm
/ <server-name> /
Terminal Servers.
-
In the right pane, click the
Scheduler
tab.
-
To create a new task, click
Add
in the
Tasks
drop-down menu and select a desired task from the following options:
-
Disable Server
-
Disable Server Group
-
Reboot Server
-
Reboot Server Group
To modify an existing task, right-click it and select
Properties
in the context menu. To delete a task, right-click it and select
Delete
.
-
The schedule properties dialog will have slightly different options depending on the task type that you choose in the
Tasks
>
Add
drop-down menu. The differences are described in the following steps.
-
Select
Enable Schedule
to enable the task.
-
Specify the task name, target server (or server group if you've selected a group task), and an optional description.
-
Specify the start date and time, duration, and the scope (the
Repeat
property). If you select
Never
in the
Repeat
drop-down box, the task will run only once.
-
The
Notify Users Message
box allows you to type a message that will be sent to the users before the task is executed (you can select the time period using the
Send message
[ ]
before action is triggered
drop-down list).
-
The
Options
section will have different options depending on the task type:
-
If a task is
Disable Server
or
Disable Server Group
, the available option is
On Disable
. You can use it to specify how the active session states should be handled.
-
If a task is
Reboot Server
or
Reboot Server Group
, the available options are
Enable Drain Mode
and
Force Server Reboot After
(the options work together). If you enable the drain mode, the following will happen. When the task triggers, new connections to a server will be refused but active connections will continue to run. A server will be rebooted when all active users end their sessions or when it's time to force reboot it, whichever comes first. For active users not to lose their work, specify a message in the
Notify Users Message
box advising them to save their work and log off. Please also see the
Terminal Server Drain Mode Examples
subsection below.
-
Click
OK
to save the changes and close the dialog.
Terminal Server Drain Mode Examples
Example 1: Scheduling a server group for reboot without the drain mode
A server group contains 3 servers: A, B, C
-
Date: 7/24/2015
-
Start Time: 10:45am
-
Send Message: 2 minutes before
Users with active sessions are notified 2 minutes before the server rebooting task is triggered.
Example 2: Scheduling a server group for reboot with the drain mode enabled
A server group containing 3 servers: A, B, C
-
Date: 7/24/2015
-
Start Time: 10:45am
-
Drain mode: enabled
-
Force reboot after: 3 hours
-
Send Message: 2 minutes before
The session users are notified 2 minutes before the server rebooting task is triggered.
When the task is triggered:
-
The drain mode is enabled on the servers.
-
Server A and B have no active or disconnected sessions, so they are restarted immediately.
-
Server C still has open/disconnected sessions, so it continues to run until all users end their sessions. If the server still has active sessions in three hours, the sessions are terminated and the server is restarted.
Note:
Computer Configuration / Administrative Templates / Windows Components / Remote Desktop Services / Remote Desktop Session Host / Connection / Allow users to connect remotely using remote desktop services
must be set to
Not configured,
otherwise it takes precedence.
|