Since, this group is displayed separately, the number of licenses will not be deducted directly from the 2012 RDS CAL group. This is to make admins visible that 2012 licenses were issued for older terminal servers for which no dedicated (in this case the 2008 R2) RDS CALs are installed. Here, in this case it is just a reporting mechanism to tell that these number of users have logged in without an appropriate CAL.
Starting with Windows Server 2012 R2 license server, when only Windows Server 2012 RDS CALs are installed and a user logs on to a Windows Server 2008 R2 RDS Server, the "Built-in OverUsed" group is displayed and the user gets a 2008 R2 "Built-In Overused" RDS CAL. Why are the "Built-In Overused" RDS CALs “issued” counted but not the “total” and “remaining” too? If the most appropriate RDS CAL is not available, a license server running Windows Server 2008 R2 issues a Windows Server 2008 R2 RDS CAL, if available, to a client connecting to a terminal server running Windows Server 2003 or Windows Server 2000. For example, a license server running Windows Server 2008 R2 tries to issue a Windows Server 2008 R2 RDS CAL for clients connecting to an RD Session Host server running Windows Server 2008 R2, and a Windows Server 2003 TS CAL for clients connecting to a terminal server running Windows Server 2003. Why are Windows Server 2008 R2 RDS CALs not deducted from the installed Windows Server 2012 RDS CALs?īy default, a license server attempts to provide the most appropriate RDS CAL for a connection. After the applicable licenses get installed, this group goes away and the number of licenses issued gets synchronized with the installed license group.
This was an indication for admins that they must install licenses. The "Built-In Overused" group was also used in earlier operating systems if the licensing mode was being set to Per User but no "per user" CALs were installed on the license server and the users will still connect to the terminal servers. What is the "Built-in OverUsed" group and is it ok to have it? Additionally, the issued RDS CAL amount is not deducted from the total Windows Server 2012 RDS CALs. The "Total" and "Available" values remain 0. However, when a user connects to a Windows Server 2008 R2 RDS Server, a Windows Server 2008 R2 "Built-in OverUsed" RDS CAL category appears and shows the value only for the issued RDS CAL. When a user connects to a Windows Server 2012 R2 Session Host, a Windows Server 2012 "per User" RDS CAL is issued. In the case above, the license server is used to issue RDS CALs to users when they connect to both Windows Server 2008 R2 and Windows Server 2012 R2 Session Host Servers. Under “License Program” you then see “Built-in Overused”. Under these circumstances, you may see a line item in your 2012 R2 license manager that says “Windows Server 2008 or Windows Server 2008 R2 -Installed TS or RDS Per User CAL”. Hello AskPerf! My name is Prachi Singh and today I will be talking about a behavior that can occur when users attempt to pull licenses from a 2012 R2 License server via a 2008 R2 Session Host.
However, since Teramind Cloud is licensed per user, you will need to take into account the total number of users (ones on your Terminal Server plus any additional users you want to monitor on their individual computers).First published on TECHNET on May 07, 2015 If you are a Cloud customer, you do not need to buy a separate Terminal Server License. A Teramind Server License cost is equivalent to 30 endpoint licenses.
If you are a Teramind On-Premise/Private Cloud customer, you will need to buy a separate Terminal Server License anytime you use Windows Remote Desktop Services/Terminal Services. If you search for terms such as ' Benefits of Using Remote Desktop Services' you will find many online resources that will explain the benefits of such a server. Teramind Agent can be installed on such a server to monitor all users on it.Īs to when you should use a Terminal server depends on your needs.
For example, a Windows Server configured with Remote Desktop Services is a Terminal Server. A Terminal Server is a server where multiple users can log in and work simultaneously.