So I always install the Visual C++ 2005 SP1 runtime separetly to make sure the client will work flawlessly and that I get runtime updates via Windows Update.
Plus don’t you need the online and offline plugin installed to stream apps to server ?Īlso, the Citrix Online-Plugin/Receiver use the Microsoft Visual C++ 2005 SP1 Runtime but the dlls that get installed in “%ProgramFiles%\Citrix\ICA Client” are pretty old. I guess it would be better to simply add these settings in a GPP instead. (TCPWindowsSize, TCPTimedWaitDelay) It makes sense to have the same values on the server and the client side for better network throughput. What about using a newer one like 12.1.44 or even better 12.1.70 (Private) ?Īlso keep in mind that when the Citrix plugin get installed, the TCP IP service get optimized since some value are added/modified. I mean that if you are using a newer SG version and an older client, you will get SSL errors on the SG server because the version of sslsdk_b.dll mismatch. It’s always a good practice to match your client with your SG version. Hi Nice Article! I have to slightly disagree with you on that one.ġ1.2 is really old and has many issues as well. These will only steal unnessecarry memory from your system. While you’re at it, make sure you delete any references in Run to Acrobat Assistant 8.0, Adobe Acrobat Speed Lanucher, Adobe ARM, BCSSync and so on.
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Normally the Citrix client is installed on XenApp servers only to allow for ICA in ICA to internal back-end or Cloud hosted applications. So when optimizing you Citrix servers for the highest user density you should consider if you even need some of these new features if any.
The newest Citrix Receiver for Windows 3.0 (13.) requires almost 150% more memory per user than Citrix ICA Client 11.2.