Chapter
6.
Menu
Options
(Hint:
If
you
are
connected
over
a
slow
connection
to
the
Internet
you
can
also
pre-install
the
JVM
on
your
administration
machine.
)
Miscellaneous Remote Console Settings
Start
in
Monitor
Mode
Sets
the
initial
value
for
the
monitor
mode.
By
default
the
monitor
mode
is
dis-
abled.
In
case
you
switch
it
on,
the
Remote
Console
window
will
be
started
in
a
read
only
mode.
Start
in
Exclusive
Access
Mode
Enables
the
exclusive
access
mode
immediately
at
Remote
Console
startup.
This
forces
the
Remote
Consoles
of
all
other
users
to
close.
Nobody
else
can
open
the
Remote
Console
at
the
same
time
again
until
you
disable
this
feature
or
log
off.
Mouse Hotkey
Allows
to
specify
a
hotkey
combination
which
starts
either
the
mouse
synchroniza-
tion
process
if
pressed
in
the
Remote
Console
or
is
used
to
leave
the
single
mouse
mode.
Remote Console Button Keys
Button
Keys
allow
simulating
keystrokes
on
the
remote
system
that
cannot
be
gen-
erated
locally.
The
reason
for
this
might
be
a
missing
key
or
the
fact
that
the
local
operating
system
of
the
Remote
Console
is
unconditionally
catching
this
keystroke
already.
Typical
examples
are
“
Alt+Delete
”
on
Windows
and
DOS,
what
is
always
caught,
or
“
Backspace
”
on
Linux
for
terminating
the
X-Server.
The
syntax
to
define
a
new
Button
Key
is
as
follows:
[confirm]
<keycode>[+|-[*]<keycode>]*
“
confirm
”
requests
confirmation
by
a
dialog
box
before
the
key
strokes
will
be
sent
to
the
remote
host.
“
keycode
”
is
the
key
to
be
sent.
Multiple
key
codes
can
be
concatenated
with
a
plus
or
a
minus
sign.
The
plus
sign
builds
key
combinations,
all
keys
will
be
pressed
until
a
minus
sign
or
the
end
of
the
combination
is
encountered.
In
this
case
all
pressed
keys
will
be
released
in
reversed
sequence.
So
the
minus
sign
builds
single,
separate
keypresses
and
-releases.
The
star
inserts
a
pause
with
a
duration
of
100
milliseconds.
For
a
list
of
key
codes
and
aliases
the
V-IP
recognizes
refer
to
Appendix
E
.
Note:
If you need more button keys than shown use the button “ More entries ” . This will
open a list of additional entry fields.
51
Summary of Contents for V-IP
Page 1: ...V IP Installation and User Guide...
Page 6: ...vi...
Page 18: ...Chapter 2 Introduction 10...
Page 22: ...Chapter 3 Installation 14...
Page 30: ...Chapter 4 Configuration 22...
Page 82: ...Chapter 6 Menu Options 74...
Page 88: ...Appendix C V IP Video Modes 80...
Page 90: ...Appendix D Users and Roles 82...
Page 94: ...Appendix E Key Codes 86...
Page 96: ...Appendix F Pin Assignment 88...
Page 98: ...Appendix G Specifications 90...