
Chapter 1
Figure 1.7: All published applications are listed in the Citrix Management Console.
After an application is published, this console is the place you’ll go to do any application
management that becomes necessary: copying the application, making an .ica or .html file out of
it (for publishing in a Web browser), deleting it, renaming it, or creating load-balancing rules for
it as we’ll discuss in the “Load Evaluators” section.
Citrix Administrators
The Citrix Administrators tool in the console is for adding user accounts to the list of those
authorized to use the Citrix Management Console. Only those explicitly permitted to use the
console may do so—no matter what groups you’re in, this permission isn’t an automatic right.
Even the Administrator account will be shut out if it’s not added.
In the course of installing the console, you’ll be prompted for the name of someone authorized to
log on to the console—by default, the person logged on to install MetaFrame. Don’t forget who
this person is because every time you use the console—even from the console of the terminal
server itself—you’ll need to manually log on with the account name of a person authorized to
manage the server farm. (Having to log on to the console each time you want to use it is a pain.
However, requiring logons means that you can install the console on a client machine that is
open to people allowed to use that machine but who aren’t allowed to manage MetaFrame
servers.) Assuming that you want more than one person to be able to manage MetaFrame XP
servers, the Citrix Administrators tool is the tool you’ll use to make that possible.
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