In-Depth
MetaFrame: Enterprise-Class Remote Administration
If Windows 2000 doesn't scale well enough for your enterprise, consider
solutions from the company that originated multi-user Windows technology.
- By Bill Boswell
- June 01, 2002
When designing a remote server administration strategy, it’s often not
enough to simply manage print queues, network connections, file shares
and so forth. Most of the daily grind in our profession involves supporting
applications inconveniently scattered on desktops where they’re out of
reach of standard remote administration tools. One solution to this problem
is to run the applications directly on a terminal server. However, if
you’ve ever tried to support more than a couple of dozen users on a terminal
server, you quickly find that the native management tools and load balancing
features in Windows 2000 don’t scale well. If you need more than one terminal
server, you need a third-party management solution. The most widely known
provider of such a solution is the company that first developed multi-user
Windows technology, Citrix Systems. Its latest product, Citrix MetaFrame
XP, helps you build an enterprise application publishing environment that
has no equal.
MetaFrame uses Citrix’s Independent Computing Architecture (ICA) protocol
to provide a rich client experience with 24-bit color, component redirection
and per-connection bandwidth management. ICA clients are available for
just about any operating system, permitting Mac and Linux and Solaris
users to access Windows applications seamlessly. In addition, nearly every
thin-client terminal includes an ICA client. This means you can buy a
unit no bigger than a paperback and costing less than $500 and use it
to access an entire suite of applications published from a fault-tolerant,
load-balanced server farm. MetaFrame XP contains many features designed
to improve client performance. Per-server and per-processor load balancing
in the server farm ensure that each user gets the necessary CPU cycles
to run their applications. Mouse and keyboard events are buffered at the
client so users don’t get unresponsive screens when a terminal server
gets busy. Bandwidth is managed on a per-connection basis to improve dial-up
performance. As a former IS director of a call center where terminal servers
were used extensively, I can attest that these features dramatically improve
the user experience.
The ICA client also provides access to local drives and peripherals on
the user’s PC from within the terminal server session. The user’s local
time is preserved inside the session, as well. Published applications
are made available on an intranet via a Web-based menu system called NFuse.
Best of all, a new universal printer driver eliminates most of the printer
hassles that plague terminal server administrators.
Most terminal server administrators would agree, though, that where MetaFrame
really shines is in server farm operation. The base product, MetaFrame
XPs, permits publishing individual applications and load balances the
application between servers so that one server can be taken down for maintenance
and the application will still be available. MetaFrame XPa includes automated
application delivery to selected servers in the farm. This permits you
to deploy new applications or upgrades quickly once you finish testing
them.
The enhanced MetaFrame version, Xpe, has SNMP MIBs for integrating a
server farm into management consoles such as HP OpenView and CA Unicenter.
You do pay a price for all this functionality. The first fee goes to
Microsoft. If you use something other than Windows 2000 or XP to connect
to a Win2K terminal server, you must purchase a Terminal Server Client
Access License, or TSCAL. Depending on volume, a TSCAL can cost upwards
of $125 per desktop. Notice I say per desktop, because a TSCAL is assigned
to each machine that makes connection to a terminal server. Retiring a
desktop requires a call to Microsoft to transfer the TSCAL to another
desktop.
The MetaFrame server product itself has no cost. You pay only for connection
licenses. If you build a farm with 10 servers and only one user connects
to it, you need pay for only one client license. MetaFrame client licenses
aren’t exorbitant but they aren’t cheap, either. The price escalates based
on the MetaFrame XP version.
ShopThin, an on-line Citrix reseller, quotes $230 per license for MetaFrame
XPs. For $30/license more, you get a one-year service agreement during
which all upgrades and feature releases are free. An XPa license with
service agreement is $320 and an XPe license with service agreement is
$370. There are substantial volume discounts, but even so, a request to
use MetaFrame XPe to publish a suite of applications to 30,000 users is
bound to get some budget scrutiny.
The real savings come from simplification of support. For example, Peter
Kieren from Baytex Energy in Calgary uses a nine-server MetaFrame farm
to publish applications to hundreds of workers in offices and oil platforms
all over Canada. Kieren and his colleagues can quickly respond to a user
problem without traveling to Alberta or Newfoundland in the middle of
winter. He’s a big fan of terminal-based computing and of Citrix.
If you want to do like Kieren and centralize application deployment for
hundreds or thousands or tens of thousands of users, look at Citrix MetaFrame,
www.citrix.com.