Adobe Acrobat 11 has been assigned to a user. VM25 already has Adobe Acrobat 11 and is natively installed.
What happens when the user logs on to VM25?
Adobe Acrobat 11 has been assigned to a user. VM25 already has Adobe Acrobat 11 and is natively installed.
What happens when the user logs on to VM25?
When a user logs on to VM25, the App Volume package does not get attached because the natively installed Adobe Acrobat 11 takes priority. This is a common behavior to prevent conflicts and ensure efficient integration with the operating system and other applications on the virtual machine. Since the application is already present on VM25, there is no need to attach the App Volume package.
not sure the wording of this question is complete or correct, but the following is true. Same AppStack on the Desktop: If you assign an AppStack to a user and the user logs in to a computer that already has the same AppStack attached, the user-assigned AppStack does not get attached to the user.
The app package takes president.
Yes, that statement is accurate. In VMware Horizon, when a user-assigned application is already natively installed on the virtual machine (VM), the natively installed application takes precedence over the App Volume package. Consequently, the App Volume package for the user-assigned application will not be attached or mounted to the VM. The system recognizes that the application is already present on the VM, and this behavior is designed to prevent conflicts and ensure efficient integration with the operating system and other applications on the VM. If you encounter any issues related to App Volumes, you can refer to VMware’s documentation for troubleshooting guidance.
A is incorrect because, this option is not accurate. The App Volume package does not automatically attach when the user logs in. The AppStack (App Volume package) is only attached when the user launches the application from the shortcut.