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User profile disks are available only in pooled virtual desktop collections and session collections-not in personal virtual desktop collections. Some things to remember about user profile disks:
#SMBUP MANAGE USERS FAIL WINDOWS 8#
In pooled virtual desktop collections, user profile disks work with virtual machines running both Windows 8 and Windows 7 with Service Pack 1 (SP1). User profile disks can be stored on Server Message Block (SMB) shares, cluster shared volumes, SANs, or local storage. User profile disks are specific to the collection, so they can’t be used on multiple computers simultaneously.Īdministrators can have granular control of exactly which locations get saved to the virtual hard disk (VHDX). Previously, profiles could be corrupted if used simultaneously on multiple computers. User profiles can be maintained even on pooled virtual desktops that get rolled back after logoff.
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User profile disks offer several advantages:Ĭonfiguration and deployment is simpler than roaming profiles or folder redirection. This provides Admins with the reduced management and storage benefits of pooled virtual desktops while still providing the personalization of personal virtual desktops. User profile disks are completely transparent to the user-users can save documents to their Documents folder (on what appears to be a local drive) and change their background wallpaper and app settings while, at the same time, all personal settings persist when connecting to different computers in a virtual desktop collection or session collection. User profile disks provide an easy way to store the user settings and data on a separate virtual disk that is reattached at logon, so the user data isn’t discarded when the virtual machine rolls back. One of the key challenges to pooled virtual desktop deployments is easily maintaining the user settings and data this is because this information is discarded at logoff when a pooled virtual desktop image is rolled back to its initial state. User profile disks store user and application data on a single virtual disk that is dedicated to one user’s profile. (Of course, these technologies can be used together fruitfully. For Windows Server 2012, we wanted to find a simpler way to manage user data-compared to using roaming profiles, Profile management in Windows Server 2008 R2 In an earlier post, we described the different options for This post describes the new user data management available in Windows Server 2012. I’m a developer working on the Remote Desktop Virtualization team. First published on CloudBlogs on Nov, 13 2012