Hi Mike,

Thanks for the reply.  I hadn’t made any changes to the default RDP settings 
when I build the machines so assumed that requiring NLA was not enforced…I 
generally don’t turn that on…  Having said, when I checked one of the machines 
all the RDP options were greyed out and NLA was in fact required.

Turns out that since I deployed SCCM it enforced these settings.  After 
changing the SCCM client policy and refreshing them on the server everything is 
working as it should.

Thanks for the help!

Jim



From: Mike Jumper [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, October 20, 2016 12:36 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: RDP Question

On Thu, Oct 20, 2016 at 12:29 PM, Jim Mular 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi,

I’ve got Guacamole up and running.  When I define an RDP connection it works 
great, as long as I specify the credentials to connect to the session with.  I 
would *prefer* that it connect more like a regular RDP session where you get a 
Windows logon screen and have to put in the credentials.

If I leave the username/password/domain blank then when I launch the connection 
I simply get the message “You have been disconnected.” After about 5 seconds.

Any suggestions?


Hi Jim,

Is your RDP server configured to require NLA? If so, that would prevent the 
Windows login screen from displaying if the username/password are blank.

- Mike

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