Ok now I've gotten somewhere. With NLA enabled on the remote host, I can connect if I Ignore Certificates, and also specify the username and password. Previously, I was just specifying a username, assuming I'd be prompted for a password like the Windows client does. Only when I selected "NLA" or "Any" explicitly did the log tell me that the password was missing.

I'd rather have the password be prompted; disabling NLA on the Host setting the security to "TLS" explicitly made things work as expected. (Connected successfully, shown a Windows logon screen)

I guess the moral of the story is don't leave "Security mode" blank! I wonder if it would be worthwhile to describe these behaviors more explicitly in the documentation?

Many thanks, Nick.

Aram

On 6/26/2019 6:29 PM, Nick Couchman wrote:

On Wed, Jun 26, 2019 at 6:35 PM Aram Akhavan <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Hi Nick,

    My testing was done with "Ignore Certificates" enabled. It still
    doesn't work.

    With NLA disabled on the remote host, guacd logs show:


What happens if you:
- Leave NLA enabled on the remote host
- Set encryption mode in Guacamole to either NLA or Any
- Make sure Ignore Certificates is checked

?

-Nick

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