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1.1 Glossary

This document uses the following terms:

Active Directory: The Windows implementation of a general-purpose directory service, which uses LDAP as its primary access protocol. Active Directory stores information about a variety of objects in the network such as user accounts, computer accounts, groups, and all related credential information used by Kerberos [MS-KILE]. Active Directory is either deployed as Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS) or Active Directory Lightweight Directory Services (AD LDS), which are both described in [MS-ADOD]: Active Directory Protocols Overview.

American National Standards Institute (ANSI) character set: A character set defined by a code page approved by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI). The term "ANSI" as used to signify Windows code pages is a historical reference and a misnomer that persists in the Windows community. The source of this misnomer stems from the fact that the Windows code page 1252 was originally based on an ANSI draft, which became International Organization for Standardization (ISO) Standard 8859-1 [ISO/IEC-8859-1]. In Windows, the ANSI character set can be any of the following code pages: 1252, 1250, 1251, 1253, 1254, 1255, 1256, 1257, 1258, 874, 932, 936, 949, or 950. For example, "ANSI application" is usually a reference to a non-Unicode or code-page-based application. Therefore, "ANSI character set" is often misused to refer to one of the character sets defined by a Windows code page that can be used as an active system code page; for example, character sets defined by code page 1252 or character sets defined by code page 950. Windows is now based on Unicode, so the use of ANSI character sets is strongly discouraged unless they are used to interoperate with legacy applications or legacy data.

clearing house: A Microsoft central authority for activating a license server and registering client access licenses (CALs).

client: A computer on which the remote procedure call (RPC) client is executing.

Client Access License (CAL): A license that gives a user the right to access the services of a server. To legally access the server software, a CAL can be required. A CAL is not a software product.

client license: See client access license (CAL).

grace period: The duration of time during which a terminal server allows clients to connect without requiring a CAL. The grace period ends either when the duration is complete or when the terminal server receives the first permanent license from the license server.

license encryption key: A shared symmetric key generated by both the server and client that is used to encrypt licensing message data.

license server: A server that issues CALs.

license server certificate: An X.509 certificate used for signing CALs.

license store: A client-side database that stores CALs issued by a terminal server.

MD5 digest: A 128-bit message hash value generated as output by the MD5 Message-Digest algorithm. See [RFC1321].

Message Authentication Code (MAC): A message authenticator computed through the use of a symmetric key. A MAC algorithm accepts a secret key and a data buffer, and outputs a MAC. The data and MAC can then be sent to another party, which can verify the integrity and authenticity of the data by using the same secret key and the same MAC algorithm.

object identifier (OID): In the context of a directory service, a number identifying an object class or attribute. Object identifiers are issued by the ITU and form a hierarchy. An OID is represented as a dotted decimal string (for example, "1.2.3.4"). For more information on OIDs, see [X660] and [RFC3280] Appendix A. OIDs are used to uniquely identify certificate templates available to the certification authority (CA). Within a certificate, OIDs are used to identify standard extensions, as described in [RFC3280] section 4.2.1.x, as well as non-standard extensions.

permanent license: A CAL issued to authenticated clients.

personal terminal server: In general context, refers to a client SKU target machine that hosts remote desktop sessions. From a terminal service licensing perspective, the behavior of a personal terminal server is similar to that of a terminal server in remote administration mode. Thus any behavioral reference to a personal terminal server in this document essentially implies that the particular behavior is valid for a terminal server in remote administration mode as well. The term personal terminal server is therefore used to encompass all connections where either the end point is a client SKU operating system or is a terminal server running in remote administration mode.

premaster secret: A 48-byte random number used in license encryption key generation.

RC4: Means Rivest Cipher 4 invented by Ron Rivest in 1987 for RSA Security. It is a variable key-length symmetric encryption algorithm stream cipher that operates on a stream of data byte by byte. It's simple to apply, does not consume more memory, and works quickly on very large pieces of data such as WEP/WPA for wireless network encryption and SSL/ TLS for internet security. RC4 stream ciphers cannot be implemented on small streams of data. RC4 weaknesses make it vulnerable to various cryptographic attacks. For more information, see [SCHNEIER] section 17.1.

remote administration mode: A terminal server can function in remote administration mode if either the terminal services role is not installed on the machine or the client used to invoke the session has enabled the /admin switch. The administrator can log in to the terminal server in the remote administration mode by using the following command from any Remote Desktop client (with Terminal Services Client version 6.0 or 6.1). "mstsc /admin <remote machine name>"

Remote Desktop client: A device that connects to a terminal server and renders the user interface through which a user interacts with a remote session.

Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP): A multi-channel protocol that allows a user to connect to a computer running Microsoft Terminal Services (TS). RDP enables the exchange of client and server settings and also enables negotiation of common settings to use for the duration of the connection, so that input, graphics, and other data can be exchanged and processed between client and server.

server: A computer on which the remote procedure call (RPC) server is executing.

session encryption key: A shared key used for confidential exchange of data between the client and the server.

SHA-1 hash: A hashing algorithm as specified in [FIPS180-2] that was developed by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the National Security Agency (NSA).

temporary license: A type of CAL issued by a terminal server to a client in situations in which a permanent license is not available.

terminal server: The server to which a client initiates a remote desktop connection. The server hosts Remote Desktop sessions and enables interaction with each of these sessions on a connected client device.

terminal server certificate: A certificate that is to be used to authenticate a terminal server.

Unicode string: A Unicode 8-bit string is an ordered sequence of 8-bit units, a Unicode 16-bit string is an ordered sequence of 16-bit code units, and a Unicode 32-bit string is an ordered sequence of 32-bit code units. In some cases, it could be acceptable not to terminate with a terminating null character. Unless otherwise specified, all Unicode strings follow the UTF-16LE encoding scheme with no Byte Order Mark (BOM).

MAY, SHOULD, MUST, SHOULD NOT, MUST NOT: These terms (in all caps) are used as defined in [RFC2119]. All statements of optional behavior use either MAY, SHOULD, or SHOULD NOT.