I often use a citrix website to then initiate a Remote Desktop application, in order to then use Remote Desktop Client by citrix to remote in to a work computer.
I always use it full screen, (so that things like Windows key, Start key etc are passed to the remote pc, not my local pc).
however it often happens to where I need to, as I say, "bust out" of my citrix remote pc without closing it. (there is no way to minimize or restore it).
in the past I've used the Internet button on my keyboard. It works great - it basically force-activates my local pc and opens the internet, thus busting out of my remote screen.
I've since changed to a simpler keyboard which doesn't have that magic "open internet" button.
I tried making a Google shortcut on my local pc's desktop, and attaching F3 to it, pressing f3 unfortunately did not have any effect...
Can you think of a way to do anything on my local pc which might mimic this effect? Thanks in advance
If this is Windows, Ctrl+Alt+Delete should do it. It's supposed to only be recognized by Windows, so the guest session shouldn't get it.
Related
Question:
How can I emulate pressing CTRL+ALT+PAUSE in my Linux VM using AutoKey?
I tried a script that has
keyboard.send_keys("<ctrl>+<alt>+<pause>")
in it. But it does not work.
Background:
I'm using Windows 10 and RDP to log into a Fedora Linux. Switching 100 times a day.
The RDP connection runs in Windows all the time.
If the RDP window is not in the background but active, I can press CTRL+ALT+PAUSE to go into the VM (Fullscreen). If I am inside the VM I can press CTRL+ALT+PAUSE to go back to Windows.
So far so good. I want only one button. Preferably PAUSE. Windows part is ready already with following script
Pause::
If !WinExist("RDP Tool Name")
MsgBox No Window found
WinShow, RDP Tool Name
WinActivate, RDP Tool Name
Send ^!{CtrlBreak}
Return
Is the Linux part maybe not possible because the key combination is cached somewhere before my Linux system can even notice it? Any ideas?
I solved it without any other new script. I just had to edit the RDP settings: Keyboard -> Use Windows-Hotkeys -> On this Computer
A really simple but dragged me many days that I cannot figure out how:
I've setup synergy on my Mac as a client, using Ubuntu as the server.
But now I wanted to switch to use Mac as server and Ubuntu as client.
The question now I'm facing is that synergy settings page never show up, each time I try to open it, it just appears in less than 0.1 second, then it disappeared.
Because I've set it up already and I don't need the reconfigure the Ip addresses etc.
This is convenient.
But now I wanted to switch server/client roles, I need to reconfigure it, however the settings page of synergy never shows up to let me configure it, does anyone have the same issue?
I tried to uninstall synergy on my Mac, but when I reinstall it back, it automatically configures itself again and quickly disappears and runs in the background.
It's been a pain for me.
You can't start the Server on Yosemite, because you need to grant access to the process (Synergy) to control your computer:
http://mizage.com/help/accessibility.html
doing that with Synergy should work.
I am writing scripts which will install UFT and do all the configuration setting require to run the UFT scripts. My UFT scripts are browsing some urls etc.
I want to know if I do it in Virutal Machines then is it possible to run the UFT scripts on those servers as they won't have mouse and keyboards attached.
Want to run automatically on machines without logging into the machines.
In case if you are simulating mouse & keyboard actions (like hitting ENTER, Clicking on particular coordinate etc) in your script, It will work fine even if mouse and keyboards are not connected to a computer. Basically you are simulating mouse and keyboard clicks w/o actually using them.I assume you have verified your scripts in your local machine. If it works fine, Then it will also work fine in your VM.(assuming your VM has enough permissions/all the prerequisites installed/configured etc).
It works. I use it every day. You can even use analog recording in the VM with a Remote Connection to the VM with no problems as well.
I have couple of machines on which I wish to schedule exceutions. I need to access these machines remotely for exceution. Whenever I start exceution from these machines and minimize the session my script fails. So just curious to know whether QTP scripts can be executed while keeping sessions minimized. If yes what changes needs to be made in script. Thanks.
When you minimize this window, the operating system switches the remote session to a GUI-less mode and does not display windows and controls. As a result, the tests are unable to interact with the tested application’s GUI as the GUI doesn’t actually exist in this case.
You need to change Registry keys on your computer (that is, the computer from which you connect to a remote QTP workstation). Here is a step-by-step description:
Close Remote Desktop sessions opened on your computer.
Click Start and select Run. In the Run dialog box, type regedit and press Enter. Registry Editor starts
Locate any of the following Registry keys:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Terminal Server Client\
(if you want to change the RDC settings for your user account)
-- or --
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Terminal Server Client\
(if you want to change the RDC settings for all accounts)
Create a new DWORD value in this key named RemoteDesktop_SuppressWhenMinimized. Specify 2 as the value data.
That’s all. Now minimizing the Remote Desktop Connection window on your computer will not affect the remote computer’s GUI and the GUI will still be available to your automated GUI tests.
This was taken from: http://blog.smartbear.com/post/10-10-11/testcomplete-tip-running-tests-in-minimized-remote-desktop-windows/
The problem you're facing is that if you minimize your display the remove machine knows that it doesn't have a display and ignores any questions about control locations and requests to move the mouse. In some cases QTP runs tests using device replay which means that the test will fail.
To work around this you need to have the remote machine think that it still has someone attached to it. One way is (obviously) to not minimize or close the remote desktop session. Another way is to use a remote access program that doesn't inform the remote machine when it's minimized a free example of such program is VNC, if I remember correctly you can even close the VNC session (not just minimize it) and the test will still run successfully.
Is it possible to automatically launch an application from a USB flash drive (bypassing windows prompt asking user what he wants to do)? on windows XP or vista.
I looked into "autorun.inf" and "open" entry seems to work only for CD drives for Windows XP SP2+ and Vista. Is it possible to launch program automatically on all windows versions?
I don't care if autorun is disabled by user in Windows settings.
First of all, some people choose to disable autorun for security reasons; but Windows computers up to Vista have it enabled. Edit: Apparently the functionality was removed from Windows 7 onwards.
Put a file named autorun.inf in the root of your USB flash drive. This is what's in mine:
[Autorun]
Open=PStart.exe
Action=Start portable apps
Icon=diskicon.ico
What it does: when you insert this disk, starts PStart.exe
On older computers, the program specified in Open= will launch automatically.
On most modern computers (Windows XP SP2+, Vista), dialog "what do you want to do" will be displayed (for security reasons), but what you have in autorun.inf will display as the selected default, with Icon= as icon and Action= as description. If you want to launch it, just click the "OK" button in the dialog.
So, although I'm not aware of any way to start the application (e.g. PStart) immediately, it is possible to insert flash disk with this configuration and start application by clicking OK.
Tested on different computers, running Windows XP without a SP, also on Windows XP sp 1, sp2, sp3, and on various Vistas (not sure which types, but should work all the way from Vista Home Basic to Vista Enterprise Super-Mega-Premium-Extended Edition) and "Windows 7". Also works on Windows 2000 (although autorun on Win2000 for removable drives is not enabled in default configuration).
Note that some applications, in addition, may trigger the "unknown/unsigned exacutable" security dialog, as if you opened them manually.
Edit: For more details, see also:
Autoplay in Windows XP: Automatically Detect and React to New Devices on a System
I've had something set up on my USB keys for a while now. Using the autorun.inf file will work, depending on your system's settings for autorun. Some disable it altogether after that little debacle with Sony a couple years back installing rootkit software on peoples' machines. Here're a couple articles to check out.
Label a Flash Drive with Your Name and Number
Have Your Lost USB Drive Ask For Help (1) or 2
you need UseAutoplay to let this work on usb.
and if you take ShellExecute instead of open you can also open scripts/documents/...
[Autorun]
ShellExecute=System\something.exe
UseAutoplay=1
there are also U3 usb sticks arround, they will be reconised as cdrom drives in windows.
if you put an a autorun.inf on one of those, it will get executed without the user being questioned.
regards morla
I found the solution in this blog
How To Auto-Launch Apps With A USB Stick [Windows]
It worked fine for me
(the article explains how to do it with AutoIT, a 3rd party app that must be installed on the host computer)