Reflection X Advantage can be operated in either "Standalone" or "Domain" mode.
Standalone mode
Standalone mode is provided by a single application—X Manager, which is installed by default. In this mode you use one application, Getting Started.
to access X hosts and clients, configure and share sessions, and monitor session status — all from your own desktop. For a quick introduction to client and session configuration, seeDomain mode
Running Reflection X Advantage in Domain mode provides access to all the features in standalone mode, and also provides access to additional domain services. Domain administrators run the Reflection X Advantage Domain Administration.
to configure and manage Reflection X domains, and to handle load balancing, optimizing performance for a group of X sessions. Domain users run to access X hosts and clients. These applications connect to a central domain controller, which runs the Reflection X service and stores session definitions in a shared database. As an authorized domain user, you can start, join, leave, and share a running X session. You can use all public definitions created by administrators, as well as create private definitions available only to you. For information on setting up and configuring a Reflection X Advantage domain, see
|
Standalone Mode (X Manager) |
Domain Mode (X Manager for Domains) |
---|---|---|
Launch and interact with an X client application |
✗ |
✗ |
XDMCP |
✗ |
✗ |
X session sharing |
✗ |
✗ |
X11 Extensions support |
✗ |
✗ |
Improved performance over slow networks |
✗ |
✗ |
Integrated Secure Shell |
✗ |
✗ |
FIPS 140-2 support |
✗ |
✗ |
X.509 certificate authentication |
✗ |
✗ |
Native IME support |
✗ |
✗ |
Centralized configuration of settings |
|
✗ |
Leave and rejoin X sessions |
|
✗ |
Fault tolerance for X sessions |
|
✗ |
Domain authentication services |
|
✗ |
Load balancing |
|
✗ |