After selecting a connection you can now either use the Connect using Template drop down button in the ribbon or the menu in the context menu: Configure the rest of the connection settings as it was a dedicated web page connection and save the template to a document/folder of your choice. In our example we configure the template to “inject” the URI (which is the host name in our remote desktop connection) in our URL field: The Templates Tokens button on the top, right corner helps you to browse all available tokens from all different connection types. The template settings dialog looks pretty much the same as the usual connection settings dialog but in addition it allows you to insert “replacement tokens” (similar to those in the task configuration). as a host name and further, let’s assume that your iLO interface is reachable under and and so on.Īs mentioned above, the Templates tab has a new drop down button which allows you to create a new connection template: Let’s assume your Remote Desktop connections connect to the primary NIC using WEB01, WEB02, etc. This scenario is hard to manage and a template solves this problem very elegantly. You could create a web page connection for each machine, like this: Imagine you have a couple of hundreds RDP connections in your Royal TS document:Įach of the above connection represents a physical machine which can be managed using a web based iLO interface. Here’s an example to illustrate how this can be help: Example: Create a Web Page connection based on a Remote Desktop connection You can create an “Ad Hoc” connection based on the template settings with tokens injected from the selected connection(s). You can now create a template for each customer or environment and use the template to quickly create a connection with the preconfigured values. This can be very useful if you constantly need different settings, maybe depending on the customer or environment. Using the Add from Template feature populates the Add Connection dialog with the values from the selected template: When you use the standard Add button to create a new connection Royal TS/X is using the Default Setting for the connection type as a starting point. ![]() Here’s what you can do with templates: Add from Template ![]() ![]() Templates can be used for many things and elevates the flexibility of Royal TS/X to a new level. Note: If you’re using Royal TSX (for macOS) you can find the “Add New Template” menu by holding down the option/alt key, then opening the “Actions” menu (or control-/right-clicking a folder).Īlternatively, you can use an existing connection and create a new template based on the selected connection using the Create Template button:
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