[windows2000] Re: RDP in a web page

  • From: "Sullivan, Glenn" <GSullivan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 13 Dec 2006 09:04:27 -0500

Do you ever wonder if Microsoft reads this list?
 
Take a look at the section titled "TS Gateway Servers" here:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/925876
 
Exactly what I was looking for...
 

Glenn Sullivan, MCSE+I MCDBA
David Clark Company Inc. 

 

________________________________

From: windows2000-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:windows2000-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Sullivan, Glenn
Posted At: Monday, May 15, 2006 1:42 PM
Posted To: Windows 2000
Conversation: [windows2000] Re: RDP in a web page
Subject: [windows2000] Re: RDP in a web page


Nope... that is really just the standard RDP 5.1 client, only with no
GUI.  If you set up a page using that, it downloads and installs the
client automatically, but still tries to use port 3389 to connect to the
named server.  If port 3389 doesn't map through, the connection fails.
 
I'm think more of a web based client completely.  i.e., I know that
there is a commercially available Java client that I can drop onto a web
page, and, through a web page (over port 80) a person can interact with
a web server, and the web server then establishes the 3389 connection on
it's own internal network.  So a machine that has NO inbound port
mappings to it (say my mail server) can still be connected to, because
my internal mapping of Port 80 brings me in to my web server, and the
web server has unrestricted access via port 3389 to the mail server...
 
Maybe what I want to do doesn't exist... I thought for sure that the
TSAC (the page you referred me to) was designed for this, but if you
look at this page:
http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=270897
 
It makes it pretty clear that you still need port 3389 access to the
server in question...
 
Glenn Sullivan, MCSE+I  MCDBA
David Clark Company Inc. 


________________________________

From: windows2000-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:windows2000-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Jim Kenzig
http://ThinHelp.com
Posted At: Monday, May 15, 2006 1:10 PM
Posted To: Windows 2000
Conversation: [windows2000] Re: RDP in a web page
Subject: [windows2000] Re: RDP in a web page


You mean this? 
 http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/downloads/tools/rdwebconn.mspx
 
 
Jim Kenzig <mailto:web at kenzig.com>  
CEO The Kenzig Group
http://www.kenzig.com <http://www.kenzig.com/> 
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----- Original Message ----
From: "Grant, Lachlan ISMC:EX" <Lachlan.Grant@xxxxxxxxx>
To: windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Monday, May 15, 2006 12:11:59 PM
Subject: [windows2000] Re: RDP in a web page


i believe you are looking for this.. you need the rdp activex client.
 
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyID=33AD53D8-9ABC-4
E15-A78F-EB2AABAD74B5&displaylang=en

        -----Original Message-----
        From: windows2000-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:windows2000-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Sullivan, Glenn
        Sent: May 15, 2006 9:03 AM
        To: windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
        Subject: [windows2000] Re: RDP in a web page
        
        
        I don't want to have to change the TS port for multiple
machines... I have 4 servers at my house, and I want to TS into each one
of them.  I have an Apache Server already set up to reverse proxy a web
site directory to another machine.
         
        I just want to have 4 different web pages, each with an embedded
control, and have the communications be between the Web Client and the
web server, and have the web server speak RDP to the remote server...
         
        Otherwise, I'd have to map a different port on my firewall to
each server, and then set up RDP files to connect to those off ports...
         
        TIA,
         
        Glenn Sullivan, MCSE+I  MCDBA
        David Clark Company Inc. 


________________________________

        From: windows2000-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:windows2000-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Jim Kenzig
http://ThinHelp.com
        Posted At: Monday, May 15, 2006 11:56 AM
        Posted To: Windows 2000
        Conversation: [windows2000] Re: RDP in a web page
        Subject: [windows2000] Re: RDP in a web page
        
        
        Cant you just create an RDP file and put it on the server and
make a link to that file on the web page?
         
        Jim Kenzig <mailto:web at kenzig.com>  
        CEO The Kenzig Group
        http://www.kenzig.com <http://www.kenzig.com/> 
        Sponsorships Available!
<http://www.kenzig.com/217/227/index.html> 
        Blog: http://www.techblink.com <http://www.techblink.com/> 
        Terminal Services Downloads: http://www.thinhelp.com
<http://www.thinhelp.com/> 
        Windows Vista: http://www.VistaPop.com
<http://www.vistapop.com/> 
        Virtualization: http://www.virtualize-it.com
<http://www.virtualize-it.com/> 
        Games: http://www.stressedpuppy.com
<http://www.stressedpuppy.com/> 


        ----- Original Message ----
        From: "Sullivan, Glenn" <GSullivan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
        To: windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
        Sent: Monday, May 15, 2006 9:37:20 AM
        Subject: [windows2000] RDP in a web page
        
        
        I thought I knew how to do what I want...
        
        I want a web page that can display an RDP session to a computer
that is
        local to the web server, but not accessible to the web client.
        
        I though that is what the TSWeb package does, but not quite...
The TSWeb
        package only provides the facility to remotely download the RDP
Client,
        but then the RDP ports have to be accessible from the remote
client to
        the server.
        
        What I'd like is:
        
        Web Client <-Port 80 -> Web Server <-Port 3389-> Some Other
Server.
        
        Is this possible?  I can't seem to find a tool to accomplish
it...
        
        Glenn Sullivan, MCSE+I MCDBA
        David Clark Company Inc. 
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