Now Run the “Support.bat” to collect the files to send in and/or look through.For USB or Connection related problems you may need to do things a couple times to show before and after or working and not working. Now you want to do what you need to reproduce your issue this Horizon Agent.And the logs are collecting from this time on. The log levels will now be set at this level.Use the “loglevels” switch after the support.bat.Depending on your situation you could just run Support.bat and the normal log collection may be enough but for me I find myself needing the “Full Debug” more often than not.Change Directory to the Support.bat Path for the Horizon Agent.Launching the Command Prompt as an Administrator.In this deployment command prompt is removed from the Start Menu and “run” has been removed so we must navigate to the System32 directory to start the process.Depending on your CLI restriction policies for Command Prompt and or PowerShell you may see this upon execution.I normally do it from the command line to watch its progress and be able to spot errors along the way without the CLI disappearing when it is done and or errors out.
Windows Horizon Agent C:\Program Files\VMware\VMware View\Agent\DCT Windows Horizon Client C:\Program Files (x86)\VMware\VMware Horizon View Client\DCT
You can get logs from multiple places using “support.bat”. You will find some interesting stuff in these logs about timing, data flow, session policies, reconnections, connections and many other items. You can go through this process below to get the logs you need to open up a support case along with if you want to hunt through for errors too. There will be a time in any deployment when you need to get more logs and VMware has done a great job of making this pretty easy.