{"id":321,"date":"2012-10-15T05:35:00","date_gmt":"2012-10-15T05:35:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/atumvirtwordpress.azurewebsites.net\/?p=321"},"modified":"2012-10-15T05:35:00","modified_gmt":"2012-10-15T05:35:00","slug":"my-experience-with-citrix-edgesight-xendesktop-xenapp-license-monitoring-and-troubleshooting","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/avtempwp.azurewebsites.net\/2012\/10\/my-experience-with-citrix-edgesight-xendesktop-xenapp-license-monitoring-and-troubleshooting\/","title":{"rendered":"My Experience with Citrix Edgesight, XenDesktop, XenApp License Monitoring and Troubleshooting"},"content":{"rendered":"
Recently I ran into an issue no Citrix XenDesktop or XenApp admin wants to face – license exhaustion. \u00a0Users were having trouble logging in. \u00a0At first glance, it wasn’t quite clear why, either. \u00a0We had 45 Virtual desktops powered on and ‘ready’, only 22 were ‘In use’, and only 16 XenApp users. \u00a0Despite all this, our 100 concurrent XenDesktop licenses were exhausted. \u00a0Checking in XenDesktop Desktop Studio confirmed — 100\u00a0licenses\u00a0used, somehow. \u00a0In rapid response mode, I mentioned the issue in #Citrix and went about troubleshooting with the help of the excellent contributors in IRC. <\/p>\n
The initial triage searches led to ‘lmstat<\/a>‘ which is located on the licensing server to determine the exact license count. \u00a0Upon receiving the output, I saw, clearly, there were 100 licenses issued. \u00a0In the mean time, I tried shutting down unused VMs and logging on the 4 users who were stranded in the immediate and looked at Edgesight.<\/p>\n