Parameter * Global overrides identically-named user profile ** After sign off, user profile returns to global
value |
Description |
AdminMode={no, yes} [admin-username=<encrypted_ username>] [admin-password=<encrypted_ password>] [Username=<username>] [Password=<password>] [Enc-username=encrypted_username] [Enc-password=encrypted_password] |
AdminMode — Default is no. Yes/no option to use the
username and the password to obtain a high thin client configuration
when the privilege parameter level is set to high (Privilege=high). admin-username — Specifies if admin-username=encrypted_username,
then encrypted strings are used for admin-username; no minimum length;
maximum length is 30 characters—15 characters convert to 30 characters
encrypted. admin-password — Specifies if
admin-password=encrypted_password, then encrypted strings are used
for admin-password; no minimum length; maximum length is 30 characters—15
characters convert to 30 characters encrypted. Enc-username — Specifies if the username is encrypted, and
encrypted strings are used for the Enc-username. Enc-password — Specifies if the password is encrypted, and
encrypted strings are used for the Enc-password. NOTE:The
AdminMode items are on the right-click menu. username — Specifies the username; no minimum length; maximum
length is 15 characters. password — Specifies
the password; no minimum length; maximum length is 15 characters. |
BootOrder={PXE, HardDisk, USB} |
BootOrder — Sets the boot order for the BIOS. The boot order
must follow these rules:
The boot order is a list of these
three options separated by a semi-colon (;) or a comma (,).
Every option must be used.
The options must be different.
For example, the following settings are valid: BootOrder=PXE;HardDisk;USB
BootOrder=HardDisk;PXE;USB
BootOrder=USB;PXE;HardDisk However,
the following settings are invalid: BootOrder=PXE;HardDisk
BootOrder=PXE;PXE;USB
BootOrder=PXE;HardDisk;USB;PXE If the first
boot order is not HardDisk, the system restart will boot from the
BIOS setting. |
BootpDisable={no, yes} |
Default is no. BootpDisable — Yes/no
option to disable BOOTP requests. ThinOS supports both DHCP and BOOTP
to obtain the network configurations. In the first two attempts, only
DHCP is requested. Then, both DHCP and BOOTP are requested. For some environments, BOOTP requests will delay obtaining
the IP from the DHCP server. Set BootpDisable=yes will only perform
a DHCP request. This setting is only valid after the next reboot. |
CmosPassword=<password> [encrypt={no, yes}] |
CmosPassword — Specifies the BIOS password on supported platforms;
string up to 8 characters. encrypt — Default
is yes. If encrypt=yes, an encrypted string is used as a password
and the password is encoded by Dell Wyse encrypt tool. |
CustomInfo={yes, no} [Custom1=custom1_str] [Custom2=custom2_str] [Custom3=custom3_str] [Location=location_str] [Contact=contact_str] |
Yes/no option to configure or store custom information. If CustomInfo=yes,
the custom information configured by the following options will be
stored into NVRAM. If CustomInfo=no, the custom information in NVRAM
will be cleared. For example: CustomInfo=yes custom1=11 custom2=2 custom3=3 location=wyse contact=peter NOTE:Maximum
length is 32 characters. |
**DeskColor=”rrr ggg bbb” |
Default is “16 100 36”; where DeskColor =“16 100 36” (green) is the default. Specifies the desktop background
color in RGB string format that must be enclosed in quotes, where
rrr, ggg, and bbb are decimal numbers in the rage of 0 to 255. When
using this parameter in a wnos.ini file, it will be saved to NVRAM
if EnableLocal is set to yes in the wnos.ini file. NOTE:The
MirrorFileServer parameter also supports the DeskColor parameter. |
**Desktop=bitmap file [Layout={center, tile, stretch}] [IconTextColor="rrr
ggg bbb"] |
Desktop — Specifies a bitmap file to be used as wallpaper
for the local desktop. This file could be a 4-bit, 8-bit, or 24-bit
BMP file or a standard GIF file or a standard JPEG file. The file
must be located in the FTP server wnos\bitmap directory. Default is Wyse wallpaper. To disable the parameter, leave value blank
(Desktop=wysedefault). Layout — Default is stretch. Specifies the arrangement on the desktop background
of the bitmap file specified by the Desktop parameter, if auto dial-up
is set, Layout is invalid. For center, the image
is placed in the center of the desktop without image size change.
For tile, the image is replicated across the desktop. For stretch,
the image is modified to fill the desktop. NOTE:The
MirrorFileServer parameter also supports the DeskColor parameter. IconTextColor — Specifies the icon
text color in RGB string format that must be enclosed in quotes, where
rrr, ggg and bbb are decimal numbers in the range of 0 to 255. |
Device=cmos [Action={extract,
restore}] [Password=password] [encrypt={no, yes}] [BootOrder={PXE, HardDisk,
USB}] [WakeOnLan={yes, no}] [AutoPower={yes, no}] [BootFromUSB={yes, no}] [USBController={yes, no}] [COMController={yes,
no}] [PopupMenu={yes, no}] [OnboardAudio={yes,
no}] [Bluetooth={yes, no}] [CurrentPassword= password NewPassword = password] [AutoPowerDate={yes,no}]
[AutoPowerTime={hh:mm:ss}
[AutoPowerDays={Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday, Saturday}] [CurrentPassword=password]
[CurrentPasswordEnc=password encrypted]
[NewPassword=password]
[NewPasswordEnc=password encrypted]
|
CMOS management (extract and restore cmos settings). Extract — For extract action, CMOS content is saved to the
file: $PF_cmos.$VER . NOTE:$PF
- Is the name of the platform, including C10, C00, R10, R00, and VL10. $VER - Is the version of the BIOS, such as 1.0B_SPC001(1.0B_SPC001-0407),
1.0B-0407(Zilch), 1.0H_SPC-0T51(R10, R00), 1.19R(VL10). Wyse ThinOS log: "CMOS: extract to $PF_cmos.$VER" Restore — For restore action, CMOS content
is updated from the file: $PF_cmos.$VER Wyse ThinOS log: "CMOS: restore from $PF_cmos.$VER" When using this feature, there should be a special
INI user name such as cmos. The associated ini/cmos.ini should include
one line as Device=cmos Action=extract. NOTE:Do not include Device=cmos
Action=extract in a global INI file such as wnos.ini, as it will take
no effect if it is included in the global INI file. After the administrator configures the CMOS on a template unit, the
administrator should sign on to the cmos account on ThinOS to have
the CMOS content saved to the cmos file on a writable File Server
wnos directory. Then, the wnos.ini should be configured
with Device=CMOS action=restore, so that all target units will be
updated with the same CMOS setting as the template unit after reboot. Once the restore action is finished, both the Device=cmos
Action=extract and Device=CMOS action=restore should be removed from
the related INI files. The usage of other settings
is self-explanatory. The only condition to use the settings is the
BIOS GUI should have such settings. [CurrentPassword= password NewPassword = password]—This option is used to change the device BIOS password. CurrenPassword is required. The maximum count of the password string is 19 bytes. [AutoPowerDate={yes,no}]— This option is used to enable the system to turn on automatically on a scheduled time and day. If the value specified is no, the system does not turn on automatically. If the value specified is yes, the system turns on automatically at the time specified in AutoPowerTime and AutoPowerDays. AutoPowerTime—This option specifies the time for the system to turn on automatically. The value range for hh is 0 - 23 and the range for mm and ss is 0 - 59. AutoPowerDays—This option specifies the day to turn on the system automatically. For example, Device=Cmos AutoPowerDate=yes AutoPowerTime=2:30:30 AutoPowerDays=Sunday;Friday;Saturday [CurrentPasswordEnc=password encrypted]—This option is used to provide encrypted current password. [NewPasswordEnc=password encrypted]—This option is used to provide encrypted new password. Note: Password encrypted will be higher priority. For example, if CurrentPassword and CurrentPasswordEnc are both configured, CurrentPasswordEnc overwrites the CurrentPassword. |
Support matrix
for Device=cmos INI parameter usage |
|
Wyse 5010 thin client/ Wyse
5040 AIO thin client/Wyse 7010 thin client and their PCoIP clients |
Wyse 3030 LT thin client and
their PCoIP clients |
Wyse 5060 thin client and their
PCoIP clients |
Wyse 3020 thin client and their
PCoIP clients |
Password |
Not Supported |
Not Supported |
Not Supported |
Not Supported |
BootOrder |
Supported |
Supported |
Supported |
Not Supported |
WakeOnLan |
Supported |
Supported |
Supported |
Not Supported |
AutoPower |
Supported |
Supported |
Supported |
Supported |
BootFromUSB |
Supported |
Supported |
Supported |
Not Supported |
USBController |
Supported |
Supported |
Supported |
Not Supported |
COMController |
Supported |
Supported |
Supported |
Not Supported |
PopupMenu |
Supported |
Supported |
Supported |
Not Supported |
OnboardAudio |
Supported |
Supported |
Supported |
Not Supported |
Bluetooth |
Not Supported |
Not Supported. But can be enabled
using the corresponding option from the BIOS Interface. |
Not Supported. But can be enabled using the corresponding
option from the BIOS Interface. |
Not Supported |
Device=DellCmos [CurrentPassword=password] [CurrentPasswordEnc=password encrypted] [NewPassword=password] [NewPasswordEnc=password encrypted] [Audio={yes, no}] [AdminLock={yes, no}] [AutoPower={Disable, Daily, Workday, Days}] [AutoPowerTime=hh:mm] [AutoPowerDays={Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday}] [ACRecovery={PowerOff, PowerOn, LastState}] [USBRearPort={yes, no}] [USBFrontPort={yes, no}] [WakeOnLan={Disable, LAN, PXE}] [WakeOnUSB={yes, no}] [USBBootSupport={yes, no}] [PXEBootSupport={yes, no}] Action={extract, restore} |
These INI parameters
are applicable to thin clients with Dell standard BIOS. NOTE: All
DellCmos settings, except CurrentPassword and CurrentPasswordEnc,
take effect after power off restart. CurrentPassword—This option provides the current BIOS password for changing BIOS settings when device's admin password
is available. CurrentPasswordEnc—This option is used to provide encrypted current password. NewPassword—This option is used to change device's password.
Current Password is not required if device's admin password is not
available. NewPasswordEnc—This option is used to provide encrypted new password. NOTE:Password encrypted
is of higher priority. For example: If both CurrentPassword and CurrentPasswordEnc are
configured, then CurrentPasswordEnc overwrites the CurrentPassword. Audio—This option enables or disables the integrated audio controller. BIOS default value
is yes. All Dell BIOS settings take effect after the power
off restart. AdminLock—When enabled, this
option prevents user from entering setup when an admin password is set.
Default value is no. AutoPower—This option sets the time of day when you want
the system to automatically turn on. No/Disable—The system does
not automatically power up; Yes/Daily—The system power ups every day at the time specified in AutoPowerTime; Workday—The system power ups Monday through Friday at the time specified in AutoPowerTime;
Days—The system power ups on the days specified in AutoPowerDays; AutoPowerTime—This option specifies the
auto power on time, value range of hh is 0 to 23,
while mm is 0 to 59. AutoPowerDays—This option specifies the days to power up system automatically. For
example, Device=DellCmos AutoPower=Days AutoPowerTime=2:30 AutoPowerDays=Sunday;
Friday; Saturday. ACRecovery—This option specifies how the system behaves when AC power is restored after an
AC power outage. USBRearPort—If yes is specified, devices attached to the rear USB port are enabled,
and available for Operating system. If no is specified, Operating
System cannot detect any devices attached to the
rear USB port. USB keyboard and mouse always work in the BIOS setup irrespective of this setting. USBFrontPort—If yes is specified, devices attached to the front USB port are enabled and available for Operating
ystem. If no is specified, Operating System cannot detect
any device attached to front USB port. USB keyboard and mouse always work in the BIOS setup irrespective of this setting. WakeOnLAN—This option allows the thin client to power up
from the off state when triggered by special LAN signal.Wakeup from
the standby state is unaffected by this setting and must be
enabled in the operating system. This feature only works when the
thin client is connected to AC power supply.
- Disable—Do not allow the system to power on by special LAN signals when it receives a wake
up signal from the LAN or wireless LAN.
LAN—Allows the thin client
to be powered on by special LAN signals.
PXE—A wake up packet sent to the system in either the S4 or S5 state causes the system to wake
up, and immediately boot to PXE.
WakeOnUSB—WakeOnUSB allows the computer to power
up from the off state when triggered by USB signal. Wakeup from the
standby state is unaffected by this setting and must be enabled in
the operating system. This feature only works when the computer is
connected to AC.
- If yes is specified, wake on USB is enabled.
- If no is specified, wake on USB is disabled.
USBBootSupport—If yes is specified, device allows
operating system to boot from USB port. If no is specified, the
operating system cannot boot device from USB port. NOTE:USB, keyboard, and mouse always work regardless
of being specified or not. PXEBootSupport—If yes is specified, device allows operating system to boot from PXE. If no is specified, the operating system cannot boot device from PXE For extract action, CMOS content is saved to
file $PF_cmos.$VER
$PF—name of Dell BIOS platform, including
X10 and A10Q
$VER—version of BIOS, like 1.2.2.
With ThinOS log, CMOS, extract to
$PF_cmos.$VER
For restore action, CMOS content is updated
from file $PF_cmos.$VER
With a syslog, CMOS: restore from
$PF_cmos.$VER
The file is strongly checked and protected from
corruption. The content is wrapped in a file header,
including a field of magic number, checksum, timestamp, length and
platform name.
The content is first checksum and then AES
encrypted during save operation.
During restore operation, if the CMOS timestamp
(stored in nvram) matches the timestamp on the file, the cmos
content is not written every time to avoid wearing out the
cmos chip.
For usage of this feature, there should be a
special INI user name like "cmos". The associated ini/cmos.ini
should include one line as "Device=DellCmos Action=extract"
(Pleaset note: "Device=DellCmos Action=extract" is not suggested to
be written in global INI file, like wnos.ini, and it will take no
effect if it has been written in global INI file). And
"CurrentPassword" is must be required if device's BIOS password is
existed regardless extract or restore action.
e.g: Device=DellCmos CurrentPassword= xxxxx
Action=restore
After the administrator configured the CMOS on
a template unit, the administrator should sign on to "cmos" account
on WTOS to get the CMOS content saved to the cmos file on writable
File Server wnos directory.
Then, the wnos.ini should be configured with
"Device=DellCmos action=restore", so all target units will get
updated with the same CMOS setting as template unit after
reboot.
Once the restore action is finished, both the
"Device=DellCmos Action=extract" and "Device=DellCmos
action=restore" must be removed from the related INI
files.
The usage of other settings is
self-explanatory. The only condition to use the setting is the BIOS
GUI has such settings.
|
DEVICE=UsbTrace vid_pid={device
vid/pin hex format} [max_len=500] |
Specify the WTOS
to trace USB device data to ftp or USB disk. For "vid_pid", device
Vendor ID and Product ID hex value, and VID is high 16 bit while Product
ID is low 16 bit. Allows to trace maximum of eight
devices at one time. For "max_len", set a max len for capturing each
USB transfer data. Default value is 128. After you set this,
you need to set option in Trouble shooting to start tracing the USB
device data. |
FactoryDefault={no, yes} |
Default is no. Yes/no option to reset the
system settings to factory default. This parameter, when set to yes,
is only initialized once for each firmware change; however, you can
set to no and then reboot so the option will be initialized again. NOTE:If the FactoryDefault parameter value is changed to yes, the thin
client will reboot without notice to the user. |
*Include=path/filename |
For {username}.ini file only. Specifies to include another
INI file at the position of this parameter. Only one level of including
is allowed (no nesting) and only for a {username}.ini file. |
KeySequence={no, yes} [Ctrl+Alt+Del={no, yes}] [Ctrl+Alt+Up={no, yes}] [Ctrl+Alt+Down={no, yes}] [Ctrl+Alt+Left={no, yes}] [Ctrl+Alt+Right={no, yes}] [Win+L={no,yes}] [Alt+Tab={yes,no}] |
KeySequence — Yes/no option to enable the following supported
combined keys options. KeySequence=yes enables all
of these options, each having a default of yes or no as noted that
you can change individually to the setting desired. KeySequence=no disables all of these options regardless of the individual
settings. Ctrl+Alt+Del — Default is no. Yes/no option to enable Ctrl+Alt+Del to lock the thin client if
the user is logged in with a password. If the user is logged in without
a password, this key sequence does not work. Ctrl+Alt+Up — Default is yes. Yes/no option to enable
Ctrl+Alt+Up to toggle a session between fullscreen and window mode. Ctrl+Alt+Down — Default is yes. Yes/no
option to enable Ctrl+Alt+Down to toggle between task selections. Ctrl+Alt+Left — Default is yes. Yes/no
option to enable Ctrl+Alt+Left Arrow to lock the thin client if the
user is logged in with a password. If the user is logged in without
a password, this key sequence does not work. Ctrl+Alt+Right — Default is yes. Yes/no option to enable
Ctrl+Alt+Right Arrow to lock the thin client if the user is logged
in with a password. If the user is logged in without a password, this
key sequence does not work. Win+L — Default
is no. Yes/no option to enable use of Win+L key to lock the
client. Alt+Tab — Default is yes. This option is used for task selection. |
**Language=code [ManualOverride={yes,no}] [Charset={ISO-8859-1,
ISO-8859-2, ISO-8859-5, ISO-8859-7}] [ImageSuffix={us,
fr, de, gb, b5, jp, ko, la, default] |
Language — Specifies the keyboard language to use. Once specified
in a wnos.ini file, it is saved in non-volatile memory. The code used
must be exactly the same as the character string shown in the keyboard
language list below. ManualOverride— If
you set ManualOverride=yes, all the parameters are only valid in factory
default. It is helpful to configure keyboard setting manually in case
of multiple nationalities within a company. This option must be following
Language=code statement. Charset — Specifies
which ISO option to use: ISO-8859-1— This is Default. Supports part 1 of the standard character encoding of
the Latin alphabet. ISO-8859-2 — Supports the Czech,
Hungarian, Polish, Romanian, and Slovenian languages on the desktop
display. ISO-8859-5 — Supports Cyrillic characters
on the desktop display. ISO-8859-7 — Supports the
Greek language on the desktop display. Keyboard
Language List — Description and Code Arabic
(Saudi Arabia) — Ar_sau Arabic (Iraq) — Ar_ira Arabic (Egypt) — Ar_egy Arabic
(Libya) — Ar_lib Arabic (Algeria) — Ar_alg Arabic (Morocco) — Ar_mor Arabic (Tunisia)
— Ar_tun Arabic (Oman) — Ar_oma Arabic (Yemen) — Ar_yem Arabic (Syria) — Ar_syr Arabic (Jordan) — Ar_jor Arabic
(Lebanon) — Ar_leb Arabic (Kuwait) — Ar_kuw Arabic (U.A.E.) — Ar_uae Arabic (Bahrain)
— Ar_bah Arabic (Qatar) — Ar_qat Brazilian — Br Canadian Multilingual — ca_ml Chinese (Simplified) — Gb Chinese
(Traditional) — b5 Croatian — Croat Czech — Cz Czech (Qwerty) — Cz_q Danish — Dk Dutch — Nl Dutch
(Belgian) — Nl_be Dutch (Belgian Comma) — Nl_be_c English (3270 Australian) — au3270 English (Australian) — Au English (New Zealand)
— Nz English (United Kingdom) — Uk English (United States) (default) — Us Estonian (Estonia) — Et_ee Finnish — Fi French (Belgian) — fr_be French (Belgian
Comma) — fr_be_c French (Canadian) — fr_ca French (France) — Fr French (Swiss)
— fr_sf German — De German (IBM)
— de_ibm German (Swiss) — de_sg Greek — el Hungarian — Hu Icelandic
— Is Italian — It Italian (Swiss)
— it142 Latvian (Latvia) — lv_lv Latvian (Qwerty) — lv_lv_q Lithuanian (Standard)
— lt_lt Lithuanian (IBM) — lt_lt_i Lithuanian (MS) — lt_lt_m Japanese — Jp Japanese_109a — Jp_109a Korean — Ko Korean (MS-IME2002) — ko_ime Norwegian
— No Polish (214) — Pl Polish
Programmers — pl_prog Portuguese — Pt Portuguese (Brazil) — Pt2 Romanian —
Ro Russian — Ru Slovakian — Slovak Slovakian (Qwerty) — sk_q Slovenian
— Sloven Spanish — Es Spanish
(Mexican) English — La(us) Spanish (Mexican) Localized
— La Swedish — Se Turkish — Turk Turkish (QWERTY) — turk_q U.S.
International — us_int NOTE:Japanese
refers to Japanese Input system (MS-IME2000), not JP. Russian keyboard
is supported for server input; it is not supported to input locally. ImageSuffix — Localization builds have
different suffixes according to the keyboard language as follows: jp (Japanese) gb (Simplified
Chinese) b5 (Traditional Chinese) ko (Korean) la (Spanish Mexican) By default, with the above keyboard languages, the system will update
the standard image according to the suffixes with the language code.
With other keyboard languages, the system will update the standard
image without the suffix specified. For example,
if you set Language=jp, the system will update the image named C10_wnos.jp
which is the Japanese localization build. If you set Language=us,
the system will update the image named C10_wnos. The option ImageSuffix
can specify the suffix of the image name when you do not want the
default behavior. |
Locale=<value> [load={yes | no}] |
Locale — Specifies the system language. Locale changes the
language for the user logon-experience screens only displayed during
boot-up and logon and not the configuration or administrator screens. Values include: English, us, French, fr, German,
de, Chinese Simplified, gb, Chinese Traditional, b5, Japanese, jp,
Korean, ko, Latin, la. load=yes/no specifies whether
or not to load the language file. The language file must end with
the locale name and be placed under the folder wnos/locale in the
file server. NOTE: For example, if you want to specify French and load
the localized messages, you must place a file named French.msg under
the folder wnos/locale in the file server, and then add Locale=French
load=yes in the INI file. You can use Local=fr instead of Locale=French. NOTE:For Chinese Simplified, Chinese Traditional, Japanese,
and Korean localization, a font file must also be placed under the
folder wnos/font in the file server. For example,
if you want to specify the system language to be Japanese, you must
place a file named Japanese.msg under the folder wnos/locale in the
file server, place a file named Japanese.fnt under the folder wnos/font
in the file server, and then add Locale=Japanese load=yes in the INI
file. If you are under a Wyse maintenance contract,
you can download .fnt and .msg files from your My Downloads page in
the Self-Service Center. If you are not under maintenance
and wish to gain access to these files, you must complete a product
registration. |
LocaleList=<value> |
LocaleList — Specifies a list of locale, so that a user can
switch the system language as needed. Values include:
English, us, French, fr, German, de, Chinese Simplified, gb, Chinese
Traditional, b5, Japanese, jp, Korean, ko, Latin, la. All the values will be displayed in the GUI. To view the GUI, click . Be sure to place the
necessary files, for example German.msg, Japanese.msg, Japanese.fnt,
and so on under the correct folders as described in the Locale parameter
description. |
**Password=<sign-on password> [encrypt={no, yes}] |
Specifies the password as the sign-on password; no minimum length;
maximum length is 64 characters. In a wnos.ini
file — If set to the default password, the system will sign on
automatically and not wait for username, password, and domain entries. In a [username].ini file — Be sure it is the
encrypted password of the user or the system will fail to sign on.
This can be changed by a user, if allowed, in the Sign-on dialog box. encrypt — Default is no. Yes/no option
to use an encrypted string for a password in the INI file instead
of clear text. If encrypt=yes, the password in the INI is an ecrypted
string instead of cleartext . For example: Password=wyseatc@123 or Password=NCAONIBINMANMLCOLKCNLL \ encrypt=yes |
** PRIVILEGE=[None, Low, High] [LockDown= {no, yes}] [HideSysInfo={no, yes}] [HidePPP={no, yes}] [HidePN={no, yes}] [HideConnectionManager={no, yes}] [EnableNetworkTest={no, yes}] [EnableTrace={no, yes}] [ShowDisplaySettings={no, yes}] [EnableKeyboardMouseSettings={no, yes}] [KeepDHCPRequestIP={no, yes}] [SuppressTaskBar={no, yes, auto}] [EnablePrinterSettings={no, yes}] [CoreDump={ide, disabled] [EnableNetworkSetup={yes, no}] [DisableNetworkOptions={yes,
no}] [EnableSystemPreferences={yes, no, TerminalNameOnly}] [DisableTerminalName={yes, no}] [DisableSerial={yes, no}] [DisableRotate={yes,
no}] [DisableChangeDateTime={yes, no}] [EnableVPNManager={yes, no}] [TrapReboot={yes,
no}] [EnableCancel={yes, no}] [EnablePeripherals={keyboard, mouse, audio, serial, camera, touchscreen,
bluetooth}] [FastDHCP={yes,no}] |
Default is high. Privilege controls operator
privileges and access to thin client resources. See also CCMEnable={yes,
no}. None — This level of access is typical for
kiosk or other restricted-use deployment. The System Setup selection
on the desktop menu is disabled and the Setup submenu is not displayed.
The Connect Manager is disabled by default. The
Connect Manager can be enabled by using the HideConnectionManager=no
option, however, the user cannot create a new connection or edit an
existing connection. The user cannot reset the thin client to factory
defaults. Low — This access level is assigned to
a typical user. The Network selection on the Setup submenu is disabled
and the Network Setup dialog box cannot be opened. The user cannot
reset the thin client to factory defaults. High
— Administrator access level allows all thin client resources to be
available with no restrictions. A user can reset to factory defaults. NOTE:If None or Low is used, the Network Setup dialog box is disabled.
If it is necessary to access this dialog box and the setting None
or Low is not saved into NVRAM, remove the network connector and reboot. LockDown — Default isno. Yes/no
option to allow lockdown of the thin client. If yes is specified,
the system saves the privilege level in flash. If no is specified,
the system clears the privilege level from flash to the default unlocked
state. NOTE:If the thin client is set to LockDown without a High
privilege level, it will disable the G key reset on power-up. LockDown can be used to set the default privilege of
the thin client. For example
- If LockDown=yes, then the privilege is saved in permanent
registry.
if LockDown=no, then the privilege
level is set to the default high in the permanent registry. That
is, the system has a default high privilege level, which is stored
in the permanent registry.
If you do not specify a privilege
in either the wnos.ini file or the {username}.ini file or the network
is unavailable, the setting of LockDown will take effect. It can be
modified by a clause. For example, privilege=<none|low|high>lockdown=yes
in a wnos.ini file or a {username}.ini file sets the default privilege
to the specified level.
HideSysInfo — Default is no. Yes/no option to hide the System Information from view. HidePPP — Default is no. Yes/no option
to hide the Dialup Manager, PPPoE Manager, and PPTP Manager from view. HidePN — Default is no. Yes/no option
to hide the PNAgent or PNLite icon from view on the taskbar. HideConnectionManager — Default is no. Yes/no
option to hide the Connect Manager window from view. NOTE:As
stated earlier, although the Connect Manager is disabled by default
if Privilege=none, the Connect Manager can be enabled by using HideConnectionManager=no;
however, the user cannot create a new connection or edit an existing
connection. EnableNetworkTest — Default
is no. Yes/no option to enable the Network Test. EnableTrace — Default is no. Yes/no option
to enable trace functionality. The active items are added to the desktop
right-click menu in Privilege=Highlevel. ShowDisplaySettings — Default is no. Yes/no option to enable the Display Settings
in a popup menu. EnableKeyboardMouseSettings. Yes/no option to enable the keyboard and mouse configuration preferences. KeepDHCPREquest — Default is no. Yes/no
option to keep the same IP address that is requested from the DHCP
server after a request fails and does not invoke the Network Setup
dialog box. SuppressTaskBar — Default is no. Yes/no/auto option to hide the taskbar. If set to auto the
taskbar will automatically hide/display the taskbar. When using this parameter in a wnos.ini file, it will be saved to
NVRAM if EnableLocal is set to yes in the wnos.ini file. EnablePrinterSettings — Default isno. Yes/no
option to enable printer configurations when a user Privilege=None. CoreDump — The option CoreDump=disabled will
disable the core dump function. EnableNetworkSetup — This option is used to enable and disable the network setup. DisableNetworkOptions — This option is used
to enable and disable the network options. EnableSystemPreferences —If the optional parameter, EnableSystemPreferences=TerminalNameOnly
is set with Privilege=none, then the System Preferences menu is enabled,
and only Terminal Name field can be accessed. DisableTerminalName— This option is used to enable and disable
the terminal name. DisableSerial — This
option is used to enable and disable the serial table in peripherals. DisableRotate — If the optional DisableRotate=yes
is set, the rotate setting in the display setup will be disabled.
This is only valid for C class clients because the rotation performance
in C class may not be desirable. NOTE:If
the optional EnableNetworkSetup=yes is set with Privilege={none, low},
the network setup will be enabled. If the optional
DisableNetworkOptions=yes is set at the same time, the Options table
will be disabled. If the optional EnableSystemPreferences=yes
is set with Privilege={none, low}, the system preferences setup will
be enabled. If the optional DisableTerminalName=yes
is set at the same time, the terminal name field will be disabled. If the optional DisableSerial=yes is set with Privilege={none,
low}, the serial table in peripherals setup will be enabled. DisableChangeDateTime— If the optional DisableChangeDateTime
is set, the function of changing date and time locally will be disabled.
For example, if you right-click the time label in taskbar, nothing
is displayed. The Change Date and Time button in System Preference
will be invisible. EnableVPNManager—If the
optional EnableVPNManager=yes is set with Privilege={none, low}, the
VPN Manager setup is enabled. TrapReboot—
If the optional TrapReboot=yes is set, client reboots after the execution
of the trap. EnableCancel— If the optional
EnableCancel=yes is set with Privilege={none, low}, the counter down
window for reboot or shutdown can be cancelled. The default value
is no. For example, set the following ini, Inactive=1 AutoSignoff=yes Shutdown=yes ShutdownCounter=30 Privilege=none
EnableCancel=yes. After no mouse and keyboard input
in 1 minute, the system will pop up a counter down window to shut
down in 30 seconds. You can cancel it. EnablePeripherals—If the optional EnablePeripherals is set with Privilege=none, the
specified peripherals tab will be enabled. The value of the option
can be a list of any valid value separated with "," or ";". For Camera,
Touchscreen and Bluetooth, they can be enabled only, if the devices
are available. For example, Privilege=none lockdown=yes
EnablePeripherals=mouse,audio,camera,bluetooth, then mouse and audio
tab will be enabled. If there are camera and/or bluetooth devices,
the camera and/or bluetooth tab will be enabled too. The optional
EnableKeyboardMouseSettings=yes can be replaced as: Privilege=none
lockdown=yes EnablePeripherals=keyboard,mouse. FastDHCP— FastDHCP identifies the gateway first. If the gateway is same as the network before disconnection and the previous DHCP information is valid, the same information is used. The default value is yes. |
ResourceURL={yes, no} [Type={Picture}] [URL=_url_path_] [User=_user_name] [Password=_password_] [Encrypt={yes,
no}] |
The resource files have their specified default path in file server,
for example, the pictures for Showing Picture screen saver are from
the folder /wnos/picture in file server (default),
and the bitmap are from /wnos/bitmap. ResourceURL—If this option is set to yes, the
subsequent options are use to configure one or more resource URL.
The system fetches the resource files from the new URL. If this option is set to no, all the subsequent options
are to be ignored. Type—This option specifies
the resource type. Currently, only Picture is supported, which is
for Showing Picture screen saver. URL—This
option specifies a new URL of the resources. User and Password—These options specify the credentials
of the new resource URL. Encrypt—This option
specifies whether or not the password is encrypted. For example, ResourceUrl=yes
type=picture url=ftp://10.151.120.15/pic1 user=pteng password=xxxxxx
encrypt=no |
**ScreenSaver=value{0, 1, 3, 5, 10, 15, 30} [LockTerminal={0, 1, 2,
3}] [Type={0, 1, 2, 3, 4}]
[VideoLink=httplink]
[VideoSpan=no]
[Unit=hour]
[Image=imagefile] [PictureTimer={2-60}] [PictureOrder=random] [PictureCheck=always] [PictureLayout={stretch, tile, center}] [Sleep={0-180}] |
Screensaver— Specifies to put the thin client in a screensaver
state when the time limit for inactivity is reached, that is delay
before starting is reached. Default value is 10. Value and delay before starting the screensaver: 0 — Disabled 1 — 1 Minute 3-
3 Minutes 5 — 5 Minutes 10 —
10 Minutes 15 — 15 Minutes 30
— 30 Minutes The default screen saver value is
10 minutes and the maximization value is 30 minutes. LockTerminal— This is an optional parameter and specifies
to put the thin client in LOCK state when the screen saver is activated.
Default is 0. 0 — Disabled. 1 — Puts the thin client in a LOCK state when the
screen saver is activated. The wallpaper is shown and the user is prompted with an unlock dialog box to enter the sign-on password to unlock the thin client. LockTerminal settings are saved into NVRAM if LockTerminal=1and EnableLocal=yes is set in the wnos.ini file. 2— Puts the thin client in a LOCK state when the screen saver is activated, however, the wall paper cannot be viewed when the user is prompted with an unlock dialog box to enter the sign-on password to unlock the thin client. 3— Puts
the thin client in a LOCK state when the screen saver is activated,
and the username and password are needed to unlock the terminal. The wallpaper is not shown and the Password field in the Unlocking window is invisible until you have entered the username. When you click OK or press the Return key, a message box pops
up to input the username and password to unlock the terminal. NOTE:The
user must be signed on with a password for a Lock action to take effect.
If set in KeySequence, users can lock the thin client at any time
by pressing Ctrl+Alt+Left arrow or Ctrl+Alt+Right arrow. Unit — This parameter converts the screen saver timer value from minutes to hours to set longer time. Type — Specifies which type of screensaver
to use. 0 — Blank the Screen 1 — Flying Bubbles 2 — Moving Image 3 — Showing Pictures 4 — Playing Video VideoLink — Specifies the video link address of the video file. Links with only http are supported. The mp4 video format is supported. VideoSpan — Specifies the video displayed mode in the screen. If the dual head is in span mode and VideoSpan=yes, it is spanned across all the screens. If VideoSpan=no, it is displayed in the main screen. Imagefile — This is an optional parameter and specifies an image file residing
in the bitmap sub-folder under the home folder to be used as
a Moving Image screensaver. If Type is set
to 2 and no image file is present then the default Dell Wyse logo
is used. If Type is set to 3, pictures residing
in picture subfolder under the home folder are displayed. If SelectGroup=yes, then the pictures residing
in the picture subfolder under the group folder are displayed.
For example, /wnos/ini/{group_dir}/picture If group pictures do not exist, global pictures are used. Supported
formats include JPG, GIF, PNG and BMP. PictureTimer — Specifies the interval to wait in seconds to display another picture.
Default value is 6 seconds. PictureOrder — Specifies the order of picture files to display. The default
is to use the order of sort from A to Z. If set to random, pictures
are displayed randomly. PictureCheck — Specifies
whether to check for picture files servers or not. NOTE: If
set to always, the picture files in file servers are checked when
the screen saver starts every time. By default, the system checks
for picture files only when the screen saver starts for the first
time to decrease network traffic. PictureLayout— The optional parameter is used to specify the arrangement on the
desktop when pictures are displayed. For the tile selection, the image
is replicated across the desktop. For the center selection, the image
is placed at the center of the desktop without any image size change.
For the stretch selection, the image is either expanded or shrinked
to fill the desktop. The default value is stretch. Sleep—The optional parameter is used to specify the interval
minutes to stop soft screen saver and turn off monitor. After the
specified minutes, since software screen saver starts up, the software
screen saver is stopped and turns off the monitor until screen saver
is off. The value range is 0 to 180. The value 0 is default which
disables this function. |
**ShutdownCount={0 to 60} (seconds) or **ShutdownCounter={0 to 60}
(seconds) |
ShutdownCount or ShutdownCounter — Specifies the number
of seconds to count down before the shutdown sequence starts upon
using the thin client power button when there are active sessions. The default value is 10, however, to commence
shutdown immediately and prevent the display of the countdown dialog
box, set the value to 0. |
ShutdownInfo={no, yes} |
Yes/no option to display various information such as System Version,
Terminal Name, IP Address, and MAC Address in shutdown window. |
S10WDMFlash=flash size |
Specifies the flash size. This value will be saved into NVRAM and
then eported to the WDM server. NOTE:This
statement guarantees that all S10 thin clients function with DDC regardless
of flash size. |
TimeServer=server_list [TimeFormat={24-hour format, 12-hour format}] [DateFormat={yyyy/mm/dd, mm/dd/yyyy, dd/mm/yyyy}] [GetBiosDT={no, yes}] |
TimeServer — Specifies the SNTP time servers to use for time
retrieval. If a time server is not defined, the client CMOS/ BIOS
internal clock will be used as a reference. TimeFormat — Default is 24-hour format. Specifies the
time format to use. DateFormat — Default
is yyyy/mm/dd. Specifies the date format to use. NOTE:The
TimeFormat and DateFormat settings in a wnos.ini file will be saved
into NVRAM if EnableLocal=yes is set in the wnos.ini file. GetBiosDT — Default is no. Yes/no option
to obtain time from BIOS/CMOS when the timeserver is not available
or cannot be contacted. For Example: TimeServer=time.nist.com\TimeFormat=24-hour formatDateFormat=mm/dd/yyyy or TimeServer=time.nist.gov\
TimeFormat=24-hour format\
DateFormat=mm/dd/yyyy |
WakeOnLAN={yes, no} |
Default is yes. Wake-on-LAN allows a thin
client to be turned on or woken up by a network message. If WakeOnLAN=yes, ThinOS will respond for the Wake-On-LAN
packet for a remote wake up. If WakeOnLAN=no, ThinOS
will not respond for the Wake-On-LAN packet. NOTE:To
use the WakeOnLAN parameter with a C10LE, the C10LE must use BIOS
version 1.0B_SPC001 or later. |