After you install the TS Gateway role service and configure a certificate for the TS Gateway server, you must create Terminal Services connection authorization policies (TS CAPs), computer groups, and Terminal Services resource authorization policies (TS RAPs).
TS CAPs allow you to specify who can connect to a TS Gateway server. You can specify a user group that exists on the local TS Gateway server or in Active Directory Domain Services. You can also specify other conditions that users must meet to access a TS Gateway server. For example, you can specify that all users who connect to a specific terminal server that is hosting a human resources (HR) database through a TS Gateway server must be members of the "HR Users" security group. You can also specify that the client computer that is initiating the connection must be a member of an Active Directory security group in the internal network to connect to the TS Gateway server. By requiring that the computer be a member of a specific Active Directory security group in the internal network, you can exclude users who are attempting to connect to the internal network from kiosks, airport computers, or home computers that are not trusted.
For enhanced security when clients are connecting to the internal network through TS Gateway, you can also specify whether to disable client device redirection for all devices supported by the Terminal Services client, or just for a specific type of device such as a disk drive or supported Plug and Play devices. If you disable client device redirection for all devices supported by the client, all device redirection is disabled, except for audio and smart card redirection.
When you select the option to disable device redirection for specific device types or to disable all device types except for smart cards, the TS Gateway server will send the request back to the client with a list of the device types to be disabled. This list is a suggestion only; it is possible for the client to modify the device redirection settings in the list.
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Because the TS Gateway server relies on the client to enforce the device redirection settings suggested by the server, this feature should not be considered to provide guaranteed security. The suggested device redirection settings can only be enforced for Remote Desktop Connection (RDC) clients; the settings cannot be enforced for clients that do not use RDC. Additionally, it is possible for a malicious user to modify an RDC client so that the client ignores the suggested settings. In such cases, this feature cannot provide guaranteed security, even for RDC clients. |
Additionally, you can specify whether remote clients must use smart card authentication or password authentication to access internal network resources through a TS Gateway server. When both of these options are selected, clients that use either authentication method are allowed to connect.
Finally, if your organization has deployed Network Access Protection (NAP), you can specify that the client must send a statement of health (SoH). For information about how to configure TS Gateway for NAP, see Configuring the TS Gateway NAP Scenario.
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Users are granted access to a TS Gateway server if they meet the conditions specified in the TS CAP. You must also create a TS RAP. A TS RAP allows you to specify the internal network resources (computers) that users can connect to through TS Gateway. Until you create both a TS CAP and a TS RAP, users cannot connect to internal network resources through this TS Gateway server. |
TS RAPs allow you to specify the internal network resources that remote users can connect to through a TS Gateway server. When you create a TS RAP, you can create a computer group (a list of computers on the internal network to which you want the remote users to connect) and associate it with the TS RAP. For example, you can specify that users who are members of the “HR Users” user group be allowed to connect only to computers that are members of the “HR Computers” computer group, and that users who are members of the “Finance Users” user group be allowed to connect only to computers that are members of the "Finance Computers" computer group.
Remote users connecting to an internal network through a TS Gateway server are granted access to computers on the network if they meet the conditions specified in at least one TS CAP and one TS RAP.
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When you associate a TS Gateway-managed computer group with a TS RAP, you can support both fully qualified domain names (FQDNs) and NetBIOS names by adding both names to the TS Gateway-managed computer group separately. When you associate an Active Directory security group with a TS RAP, both FQDNs and NetBIOS names are supported automatically if the internal network computer that the client is connecting to belongs to the same domain as the TS Gateway server. If the internal network computer belongs to a different domain than the TS Gateway server, users must specify the FQDN of the internal network computer. |
Together, TS CAPs and TS RAPs provide two different levels of authorization to provide you with the ability to configure a more specific level of access control to computers on an internal network.