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30 kwi 2020 · I simply want to keep my RD session alive until I intentionally disconnect it. There must be some way, some hack, some tool, something that actually works. Please help.
- How do I keep an RDP session alive from the client side?
You can try to enable RDP keep alive functionnality in the...
- Stay logged in while RDP session is over - Super User
There is a command which disconnects you from remote session...
- How do I keep an RDP session alive from the client side?
11 lis 2016 · You can try to enable RDP keep alive functionnality in the registry: In regedit.exe as admin: Go to the location HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Terminal Server. Create or edit the DWORD value of KeepAliveEnable. Set it to 1. Save and quit. Otherwise, try talking to the IT at your job to change this:
Using "rdpwrap" on Github, you can have an unlimited number of terminal sessions. RDP sessions will become "deactivated" when there is not a connection to them. Programs will still run, but anything that depends on GUI interaction will break badly.
13 maj 2011 · Configure the following time-out settings as appropriate: In End a disconnected session, select the maximum amount of time that a disconnected session remains on the server. When the time limit is reached, the disconnected session ends. When a session ends, it is permanently deleted from the server.
25 lis 2010 · I think this would work, connect from the remote machine with the /admin option like so... mstsc /v:windows7machine /admin. And then when you go to disconnect, you can run this command from the client to keep the session alive and redirect the session to the console... tscon 1 /dest:console.
17 wrz 2020 · The relevant settings are: Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > Remote Desktop Services > Remote Desktop Session Host > Session Time Limits. End session when time limits are reached. Set time limit for active but idle Remote Desktop Services connections.
30 mar 2014 · There is a command which disconnects you from remote session and reconnects that session to the remote computer's console. In human language: it closes your RDP session and "route" it to the console of the logged user so the user stays "connected" and there's no need to manually fill the password again.