Performance Guidance for Application Virtualization 5.1

Learn how to configure App-V 5.1 for optimal performance, optimize virtual app packages, and provide a better user experience with RDS and VDI.

Implementing multiple methods can help you improve the end-user experience. However, your environment may not support all methods.

You should read and understand the following information before reading this document.

Note

Some terms used in this document may have different meanings depending on external source and context. For more information about terms used in this document followed by an asterisk \* review the Application Virtualization Performance Guidance Terminology section of this document.

Finally, this document provides you with the information to configure the computer running App-V 5.1 client and the environment for optimal performance. Optimize your virtual application packages for performance using the sequencer, and to understand how to use User Experience Virtualization (UE-V) or other user environment management technologies to provide the optimal user experience with App-V 5.1 in both Remote Desktop Services (RDS) and non-persistent virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI).

To help determine what information is relevant to your environment you should review each section's brief overview and applicability checklist.

App-V 5.1 in stateful* non-persistent deployments

This section provides information about an approach that helps ensure a user will have access to all virtual applications within seconds after logging in. This is achieved by uniquely addressing the often long-running App-V 5.1 publishing refresh. As you'll discover the basis of the approach, the fastest publishing refresh, is one that doesn't have to actually do anything. Many conditions must be met and steps followed to provide the optimal user experience.

Use the information in the following section for more information:

Usage Scenarios - As you review the two scenarios, keep in mind that these are the approach extremes. Based on your usage requirements, you may choose to apply these steps to a subset of users and/or virtual applications packages.

  • Optimized for Performance - To provide the optimal experience, you can expect the base image to include some of the App-V virtual application package. This and other requirements are discussed.

  • Optimized for Storage - If you're concerned with the storage impact, following this scenario helps address those concerns.

Preparing your Environment

  • Steps to Prepare the Base Image - Whether in a non-persistent VDI or RDSH environment, only a few steps must be completed in the base image to enable this approach.

  • Use UE-V 2.1 as the User Profile Management (UPM) solution for the App-V approach - the cornerstone of this approach is the ability of a UEM solution to persist the contents of just a few registry and file locations. These locations constitute the user integrations*. Be sure to review the specific requirements for the UPM solution.

User Experience Walk-through

  • Walk-through - This is a step-by-step walk-through of the App-V and UE-V operations and the expectations users should have.

  • Outcome - This describes the expected results.

Impact to Package Lifecycle

Enhancing the VDI Experience through Performance Optimization/Tuning

Applicability Checklist

Deployment environment

Checklist Deployment environment
Non-persistent VDI or RDSH.
User Experience Virtualization (UE-V), other UPM solutions or User Profile Disks (UPD).

Expected configuration

Checklist Expected configuration
User Experience Virtualization (UE-V) with the App-V user state template enabled or User Profile Management (UPM) software. Non-UE-V UPM software must be capable of triggering on sign-in or Process/Application Start and sign out.
App-V Shared Content Store (SCS) is configured or can be configured.

IT administration

Checklist IT administratio
You may need to update the VM base image regularly to ensure optimal performance or you may need to manage multiple images for different user groups.

Usage Scenario

As you review the two scenarios, keep in mind that these approach the extremes. Based on your usage requirements, you may choose to apply these steps to a subset of users, virtual application packages, or both.

Optimized for Performance Optimized for Storage
To provide the most optimal user experience, this approach uses the capabilities of a UPM solution and requires extra image preparation and can incur some more image management overhead. The following describes many performance improvements in stateful non-persistent deployments. For more information, see the Sequencing Steps to Optimize Packages for Publishing Performance and reference to App-V 5.1 Sequencing Guide in the See Also section of this document. The general expectations of the previous scenario still apply here. However, keep in mind that VM images are typically stored in costly arrays; a slight alteration has been made to the approach. Don't preconfigure user-targeted virtual application packages in the base image. The impact of this alteration is detailed in the User Experience Walkthrough section of this document.

Preparing your Environment

The following table displays the required steps to prepare the base image and the UE-V or another UPM solution for the approach.

Prepare the base image

Optimized for Performance Optimized for Storage
- Install the App-V 5.1 client version of the client.
- Install UE-V and download the App-V Settings Template from the UE-V template Gallery, see the following steps.
- Configure for Shared Content Store (SCS) mode. For more information, see How to Install the App-V 5.1 Client for Shared Content Store Mode.
- Configure Preserve User Integrations on Login Registry DWORD.
- Preconfigure all user- and global-targeted packages, for example, Add-AppvClientPackage.
- Preconfigure all user- and global-targeted connection groups, for example, Add-AppvClientConnectionGroup.
- Prepublish all global-targeted packages.

Alternatively,
- Perform a global publishing/refresh.
- Perform a user publishing/refresh.
- Unpublish all user-targeted packages.
- Delete the following user-Virtual File System (VFS) entries.
AppData\Local\Microsoft\AppV\Client\VFS
AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\AppV\Client\VFS
- Install the App-V 5.1 client version of the client.
- Install UE-V and download the App-V Settings Template from the UE-V template Gallery, see the following steps.
- Configure for Shared Content Store (SCS) mode. For more information, see How to Install the App-V 5.1 Client for Shared Content Store Mode.
- Configure Preserve User Integrations on Login Registry DWORD.
- Preconfigure all global-targeted packages, for example, Add-AppvClientPackage.
- Preconfigure all global-targeted connection groups, for example, Add-AppvClientConnectionGroup.
- Prepublish all global-targeted packages.

Configurations

For critical App-V Client configurations and for a little more context and how-to, review the following information:

Shared Content Store (SCS) Mode
  • Configurable in PowerShell using Set-AppvClientConfiguration -SharedContentStoreMode, or
  • During installation of the App-V 5.0 client.

When running the shared content store only publishing data is maintained on the hard disk; other virtual application assets are maintained in memory (RAM). This helps to conserve local storage and minimize disk I/O per second (IOPS).

This is recommended when low-latency connections are available between the App-V Client endpoint and the SCS content server, SAN.

PreserveUserIntegrationsOnLogin
  • Configure in the Registry under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\AppV\Client\Integration.
  • Create the DWORD value PreserveUserIntegrationsOnLogin with a value of 1.
  • Restart the App-V client service or restart the computer running the App-V Client.

If you haven't preconfigured (Add-AppvClientPackage) a specific package and this setting isn't configured, the App-V Client deintegrates the persisted user integrations, then reintegrate. For every package that meets the above conditions, effectively twice the work is done during publishing/refresh.

If you don't plan to preconfigure every available user package in the base image, use this setting.

MaxConcurrentPublishingRefresh
  • Configure in the Registry under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\AppV\Client\Publishing.
  • Create the DWORD value MaxConcurrentPublishingRefresh with the desired maximum number of concurrent publishing refreshes.
  • The App-V client service and computer don't need to be restarted.

This setting determines the number of users that can perform a publishing refresh/sync at the same time. The default setting is no limit.

Limiting the number of concurrent publishing refreshes prevents excessive CPU usage that could impact computer performance. This limit is recommended in an RDS environment, where multiple users can sign in to the same computer at the same time and perform a publishing refresh sync. If the concurrent publishing refresh threshold is reached, the time required to publish new applications and make them available to end users after they sign in could take an indeterminate amount of time.

Configure UE-V solution for App-V Approach

We recommend using Microsoft User Experience Virtualization (UE-V) to capture and centralize application settings and Windows operating system settings for a specific user. These settings are then applied to the different computers that are accessed by the user, including desktop computers, laptop computers, and virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI) sessions. UE-V is optimized for RDS and VDI scenarios.

For more information, see Getting Started With User Experience Virtualization 2.0.

Note

Without performing an additional configuration step, the Microsoft User Environment Virtualization (UE-V) will not be able to synchronize the Start menu shortcuts (.lnk files) on the target computer. The .lnk file type is excluded by default.

UE-V will only support removing the .lnk file type from the exclusion list in the RDS and VDI scenarios, where every user's device has the same set of applications installed to the same location and every .lnk file is valid for all the users' devices. For example, UE-V wouldn't currently support the following two scenarios, because the net result will be that the shortcut will be valid on one but not all devices.

  • If a user has an application installed on one device with .lnk files enabled and the same native application installed on another device to a different installation root with .lnk files enabled.

  • If a user has an application installed on one device but not another with .lnk files enabled.

Important

This article describes how to change the Windows registry by using Registry Editor. If you change the Windows registry incorrectly, you can cause serious problems that might require you to reinstall Windows. You should make a backup copy of the registry files (System.dat and User.dat) before you change the registry. Microsoft cannot guarantee that the problems that might occur when you change the registry can be resolved. Change the registry at your own risk.

Using the Microsoft Registry Editor (regedit.exe), navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\UEV\Agent\Configuration\ExcludedFileTypes and remove .lnk from the excluded file types.

Configure other User Profile Management (UPM) solution for App-V Approach

The expectation in a stateful environment is that a UPM solution is implemented and can support persistence of user data across sessions and between logins.

The requirements for the UPM solution are as follows.

To enable an optimized sign-in experience, for example the App-V 5.1 approach for the user, the solution must be capable of:

  • Persisting the below user integrations as part of the user profile/persona.

  • Triggering a user profile sync on sign-in (or application start), which can guarantee that all user integrations are applied before publishing/refresh begin, or,

  • Attaching and detaching a user profile disk (UPD) or similar technology that contains the user integrations.

    Note

    App-V is supported when using UPD only when the entire profile is stored on the user profile disk.

    App-V packages aren't supported when using UPD with selected folders stored in the user profile disk. The Copy on Write driver does not handle UPD selected folders.

  • Capturing changes to the locations, which constitute the user integrations, prior to session sign out.

With App-V 5.1 when you add a publishing server (Add-AppvPublishingServer) you can configure synchronization, for example refresh during sign-in and/or after a specified refresh interval. In both cases, a scheduled task is created.

In previous versions of App-V 5.1, both scheduled tasks were configured using a VBScript that would initiate the user and global refresh. With Hotfix Package 4 for Application Virtualization 5.0 SP2 the user refresh on sign-in was initiated by SyncAppvPublishingServer.exe. This change was introduced to provide UPM solutions a trigger process. This process delays the publish /refresh to allow the UPM solution to apply the user integrations. It exits once the publishing/refresh is complete.

User integrations

Registry - HKEY_CURRENT_USER

  • Path - Software\Classes

    Exclude: Local Settings, ActivatableClasses, AppX*

  • Path - Software\Microsoft\AppV

  • Path - Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\App Paths

File locations

  • Root - "Environment Variable" APPDATA

    Path - Microsoft\AppV\Client\Catalog

  • Root - "Environment Variable" APPDATA

    Path - Microsoft\AppV\Client\Integration

  • Root - "Environment Variable" APPDATA

    Path - Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs

  • (To persist all desktop shortcuts, virtual and nonvirtual)

    Root - "KnownFolder" {B4BFCC3A-DB2C-424C-B029-7FE99A87C641}FileMask - *.lnk

Microsoft User Experience Virtualization (UE-V)

Additionally, we recommend using Microsoft User Experience Virtualization (UE-V) to capture and centralize application settings and Windows operating system settings for a specific user. These settings are then applied to the different computers that are accessed by the user, including desktop computers, laptop computers, and virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI) sessions.

For more information, see Getting Started With User Experience Virtualization 1.0 and Sharing Settings Location Templates with the UE-V Template Gallery.

User experience walk-through

This following is a step-by-step walk-through of the App-V and UPM operations and the expectations users should expect.

Optimized for Performance

After implementing this approach in the VDI/RDSH environment, on first sign-in:

  • (Operation) A user-publishing/refresh is initiated. (Expectation) If this is the first time a user has published virtual applications (for example, non-persistent), this takes the usual duration of a publishing/refresh.
  • (Operation) After the publishing/refresh, the UPM solution captures the user integrations. (Expectation) Depending on how the UPM solution is configured, this may occur as part of the sign out process. This incurs the same/similar overhead as persisting the user state.

On subsequent logins:

  • (Operation) UPM solution applies the user integrations to the system prior to publishing/refresh.
  • (Expectation) There will be shortcuts present on the desktop, or in the Start menu, which works immediately. When the publishing/refresh completes (that is, package entitlements change), some may go away.
  • (Operation) Publishing/refresh will process unpublish and publish operations for changes in user package entitlements. (Expectation) If there are no entitlement changes, publishing1 will complete in seconds. Otherwise, the publishing/refresh will increase relative to the number and complexity* of virtual applications.
  • (Operation) UPM solution captures user integrations again at sign out. (Expectation) Same as previous.

ยน The publishing operation (Publish-AppVClientPackage) adds entries to the user catalog, maps entitlement to the user, identifies the local store, and finishes by completing any integration steps.

Outcome: Because the user integrations are entirely preserved, there will be no work for example, integration for the publishing/refresh to complete. All virtual applications are available within seconds of sign-in. The publishing/refresh will process changes to the users entitled virtual applications, which impact the experience.

Optimized for storage

After implementing this approach in the VDI/RDSH environment, on first sign-in:

  • (Operation) A user-publishing/refresh is initiated. (Expectation)
    • If this is the first time a user has published virtual applications (for example, non-persistent), this takes the usual duration of a publishing/refresh.
    • First and subsequent logins are impacted by preconfiguring of packages (add/refresh).

(Operation) After the publishing/refresh, the UPM solution captures the user integrations. (Expectation) Depending on how the UPM solution is configured, this may occur as part of the sign out process. This incurs the same/similar overhead as persisting the user state.

On subsequent logins:

  • (Operation) UPM solution applies the user integrations to the system prior to publishing/refresh.
  • (Operation) Add/refresh must preconfigure all user-targeted applications. (Expectation)
    • This may increase the time to application availability significantly (on the order of tens of seconds).
    • This increases the publishing refresh time relative to the number and complexity* of virtual applications.
  • (Operation) Publishing/refresh will process unpublish and publish operations for changes to user package entitlements.

Outcome: Because the add/refresh must reconfigure all the virtual applications to the VM, the publishing refresh time on every sign-in will be extended.

Impact to Package Life Cycle

Upgrading a package is a crucial aspect of the package lifecycle. To help guarantee users have access to the appropriate upgraded (published) or downgraded (unpublished) virtual application packages, it's recommended you update the base image to reflect these changes. To understand why review the following section:

App-V 5.0 SP2 introduced the concept of pending states. In the past,

  • If an administrator changed entitlements or created a new version of a package (upgraded) and during a publishing/refresh that package was in-use, the unpublish or publish operation, respectively, would fail.

  • If a package is in use the operation will be pended. The unpublish and publish-pend operations will be processed on service restart or if another publish or unpublish command is issued. In the latter case, if the virtual application is in use otherwise, the virtual application remains in a pending state. For globally published packages, a restart (or service restart) often needed.

In a non-persistent environment, it's unlikely these pended operations will be processed. The pended operations, for example tasks are captured under HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\AppV\Client\PendingTasks. Although this location is persisted by the UPM solution, if it isn't applied to the environment prior to sign-in, it will not be processed.

Enhancing the VDI experience through performance optimization tuning

The following section contains lists with information about Microsoft documentation and downloads that may be useful when optimizing your environment for performance.

Windows Server

Server performance tuning guidelines for

Server Roles

Windows client (guest OS) performance tuning guidance

Sequencing steps to optimize packages for publishing performance

Several App-V features facilitate new scenarios or enable new customer deployment scenarios. These following features can impact the performance of the publishing and launch operations.

Removing FB1

Step Consideration Benefits Tradeoffs
No Feature Block 1 (FB1, also known as Primary FB) No FB1 means the application launches immediately and stream fault (application requires file, DLL and must pull down over the network) during launch. If there are network limitations, FB1 will: - Reduce the number of stream faults and network bandwidth used when you launch an application for the first time.
- Delay launch until the entire FB1 has been streamed.
Virtual application packages with FB1 configured will need to be resequenced.

Removing FB1 doesn't require the original application installer. After completing the following steps, it's suggested that you revert the computer running the sequencer to a clean snapshot.

Sequencer UI - create a new virtual application package

  1. Complete the sequencing steps up to Customize, Streaming.

  2. At the Streaming step, don't select Optimize the package for deployment over slow or unreliable network.

  3. If desired, move on to Target OS.

Modify an existing virtual application package

  1. Complete the sequencing steps up to Streaming.

  2. Don't select Optimize the package for deployment over a slow or unreliable network.

  3. Move to Create Package.

PowerShell - update an existing virtual application package

  1. Open an elevated PowerShell session.

  2. Import-module appvsequencer

  3. Update-AppvSequencerPackage -AppvPackageFilePath

    "C:\Packages\MyPackage.appv" -Installer

    "C:\PackageInstall\PackageUpgrade.exe empty.exe" -OutputPath

    "C:\UpgradedPackages"

    Note

    This cmdlet requires an executable (.exe) or batch file (.bat). You must provide an empty (does nothing) executable or batch file.

Creating a new virtual application package on the sequencer

Step Considerations Benefits Tradeoffs
No SXS Install at Publish (Pre-Install SxS assemblies) Virtual Application packages don't need to be resequenced. SxS Assemblies can remain in the virtual application package. The SxS Assembly dependencies won't install at publishing time. SxS Assembly dependencies must be preinstalled.

During sequencer monitoring, if an SxS Assembly (such as a VC++ Runtime) is installed as part of an application's installation, SxS Assembly is automatically detected in the package. The administrator is notified and will have the option to exclude the SxS Assembly.

Client Side

When publishing a virtual application package, the App-V Client detects if a required SxS dependency is already installed. If the dependency is unavailable on the computer and it's included in the package, a traditional Windows Installer (.msi) installation of the SxS assembly will be initiated. As previously documented, simply install the dependency on the computer running the client to ensure that the Windows Installer (.msi) installation won't occur.

Disabling a Dynamic Configuration using PowerShell

Step Considerations Benefits Tradeoffs
Selectively Employ Dynamic Configuration files - The App-V 5.1 client must parse and process these Dynamic Configuration files.
- Be conscious of size and complexity (script execution, VREG inclusions/exclusions) of the file.
- Numerous virtual application packages may already have User- or computer-specific dynamic configurations files.
- Publishing times improve if these files are used selectively or not at all. - Virtual application packages would need to be reconfigured individually or via the App-V server management console to remove associated Dynamic Configuration files.
  • For already published packages, you can use Set-AppVClientPackage -Name Myapp -Path c:\Packages\Apps\MyApp.appv without the -DynamicDeploymentConfiguration parameter.

  • Similarly, when adding new packages using Add-AppVClientPackage -Path c:\Packages\Apps\MyApp.appv, don't use the -DynamicDeploymentConfiguration parameter.

For documentation on How to Apply a Dynamic Configuration, see:

Determining what virtual fonts exist in the package

Step Considerations Benefits Tradeoffs
Account for Synchronous Script Execution during Package Lifecycle - If script collateral is embedded in the package, Add (PowerShell) may be slower.
- Running of scripts during virtual application launch (StartVirtualEnvironment, StartProcess) and/or Add+Publish will impact the perceived performance during one or more of these lifecycle operations.
- Use of Asynchronous (Non-Blocking) Scripts ensure that the lifecycle operations complete efficiently. - This step requires working knowledge of all virtual application packages with embedded script collateral, which have associated dynamic configurations files and which reference and run scripts synchronously.
Remove Extraneous Virtual Fonts from Package - Most applications investigated by the App-V product team contained a few fonts, typically fewer than 20. - Virtual Fonts impact publishing refresh performance. - Desired fonts need to be enabled/installed natively. For instructions, see Install or uninstall fonts.
  • Make a copy of the package.

  • Rename Package_copy.appv to Package_copy.zip

  • Open AppxManifest.xml and locate the following:

    <appv:Extension Category="AppV.Fonts">
    
    <appv:Fonts>
    
    <appv:Font Path="[{Fonts}]\private\CalibriL.ttf" DelayLoad="true"></appv:Font>
    
    </appv:Fonts>
    

    Note

    If there are fonts marked as DelayLoad, those will not impact first launch.

Excluding virtual fonts from the package

Use the dynamic configuration file that best suits the user scope - deployment configuration for all users on computer, user configuration for specific user or users.

  • Disable fonts with the deployment or user configuration.
<Fonts Enabled="false" />

App-V 5.1 performance guidance terminology

The following terms are used when describing concepts and actions related to App-V 5.1 performance optimization.

  • Complexity - Refers to one or more package characteristics that may impact performance during preconfigure (Add-AppvClientPackage) or integration (Publish-AppvClientPackage). Some example characteristics are: manifest size, number of virtual fonts, number of files.

  • De-Integrate - Removes the user integrations

  • Re-Integrate - Applies the user integrations.

  • Non-Persistent, Pooled - Creates a computer running a virtual environment each time they sign in.

  • Persistent, Personal - A computer running a virtual environment that remains the same for every sign-in.

  • Stateful - For this document, implies that user integrations are persisted between sessions and a user environment management technology is used with non-persistent RDSH or VDI.

  • Stateless - Represents a scenario when no user state is persisted between sessions.

  • Trigger - (or Native Action Triggers). UPM uses these types of triggers to initiate monitoring or synchronization operations.

  • User Experience - In the context of App-V 5.1, the user experience, quantitatively, is the sum of the following parts:

    • From the point that users initiate a sign-in to when they're able to manipulate the desktop.

    • From the point where the desktop can be interacted with to the point a publishing refresh begins (in PowerShell terms, sync) when using the App-V 5.1 full server infrastructure. In standalone instances, it's when the Add-AppVClientPackage and Publish-AppVClientPackage Powershell commands are initiated.

    • From start to completion of the publishing refresh. In standalone instances, this is the first to last virtual application published.

    • From the point where the virtual application is available to launch from a shortcut. Alternatively, it is from the point at which the file type association is registered and will launch a specified virtual application.

  • User Profile Management - The controlled and structured approach to managing user components associated with the environment. For example, user profiles, preference and policy management, application control and application deployment. You can use scripting or third-party solutions configure the environment as needed.

Microsoft Application Virtualization 5.1 Administrator's Guide