On Thu, Apr 23, 2020 at 5:19 AM Joachim Lindenberg <[email protected]>
wrote:

> I think that´s a bad idea as you would have to turn of NLA.
> Best Regards, Joachim
>
>

Just to add a little more detail to this - NLA is required, by default, on
Windows RDP servers, and integrates the authentication of a RDP connection
with the connection itself.  Thus, the Windows logon screen is not
displayed when NLA is used.  To force the Windows logon screen to show up
you have to disable NLA on the Windows Server side, and then possibly
adjust the security setting on the Guacamole connection.  As Joachim
mentions, this is not recommended - Microsoft has a reason for forcing NLA
on everyone, so best to stick with NLA.  You could also use TLS encryption
if you really need the logon screen to show up.

-Nick

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