A higher value can use more bandwidth but provides less jitter, which allows smoother transitions in changing images such as video. You can specify a value between 1 and 120 frames per second. Use the Maximum Frame Rate value to manage the average bandwidth consumed per user by limiting the number of screen updates per second. The Minimum Image Quality value cannot exceed the Maximum Initial Image Quality value. A value of 80 or lower best utilizes the available bandwidth. Unchanged regions of the image progressively build to a lossless (perfect) quality regardless of this value. A higher value increases the image quality of content changes and increases peak bandwidth requirements. A lower value reduces the image quality of content changes and decreases peak bandwidth requirements. You can specify a value between 30 and 100. Use the Maximum Initial Image Quality value to reduce the network bandwidth peaks required by PCoIP by limiting the initial quality of the changed regions of the display image. When network bandwidth is not constrained, PCoIP maintains maximum quality regardless of this value. A higher value provides higher image quality, but with potentially lower frame rates when network bandwidth is constrained. A lower value allows higher frame-rates, but with a potentially lower quality display. Use the Minimum Image Quality value to balance image quality and frame rate for limited-bandwidth scenarios. The Minimum Image Quality, Maximum Initial Image Quality, and Maximum Frame Rate values interoperate to provide fine control in network-bandwidth constrained environments. When this setting is modified during an active PCoIP session, the new setting takes effect immediately.Ĭontrols how PCoIP renders images during periods of network congestion. When the setting is not configured or deactivated, the default event log verbosity level is 2. When this setting is activated, you can set the verbosity level from 0 to 3.
The values range from 0 (least verbose) to 3 (most verbose). When this policy is deactivated or not configured, the default event log cleanup is 7 days.
A setting of 0 indicates that no file cleanup by time takes place. For a non-zero setting of n, log files older than n days are automatically and silently deleted.
When this policy is configured, the setting controls how many days can pass before the log file is cleaned up. A change to the setting is not applied until the next session.Ĭonfigure PCoIP event log cleanup by time in daysĪctivates the configuration of the PCoIP event log cleanup by time in days.
The log file cleanup is performed once at session startup. When this policy is deactivated or not configured, the default event log cleanup by size is 100 MB. A setting of 0 indicates that no file cleanup by size takes place. For a non-zero setting of m, log files larger than m MB are automatically and silently deleted. When this policy is configured, the setting controls how large a log file can grow before it is cleaned up. PCoIP General Policy Settings SettingĬonfigure PCoIP event log cleanup by size in MBĪctivates the configuration of the PCoIP event log cleanup by size in MB. The PCoIP ADMX template file contains group policy settings that configure general settings such as PCoIP image quality, USB devices, and network ports.Īll of these settings are in the Computer Configuration > Policies > Administrative Templates > PCoIP Session Variables > Overridable Administrator Defaults folder in the Group Policy Management Editor.Īll of these settings are also in the User Configuration > Policies > Administrative Templates > PCoIP Session Variables > Not Overridable Administrator Settings folder in the Group Policy Management Editor.