Event ID 1299 — RD Connection Broker Communication
Applies To: Windows Server 2008 R2
Remote Desktop Connection Broker (RD Connection Broker), formerly Terminal Services Session Broker, is a Remote Desktop Services role service in Windows Server 2008 R2 that supports session load balancing between RD Session Host servers in a farm, connections to virtual desktops, and reconnection to an existing session in a load-balanced RD Session Host server farm. For RD Connection Broker to work properly, the RD Session Host server must be able to communicate with the RD Connection Broker server across the network.
Event Details
Product: | Windows Operating System |
ID: | 1299 |
Source: | Microsoft-Windows-TerminalServices-SessionBroker-Client |
Version: | 6.1 |
Symbolic Name: | EVENT_FAIL_SESSION_NOTIFICATION |
Message: | Remote Desktop Connection Broker on server %1 returned error on %2 notification. Session Id : %3 HRESULT = %4 |
Resolve
Identify and fix network connectivity issues or check the RD Connection Broker event source
Network connectivity issues between RD Session Host servers configured in a farm environment and an RD Connection Broker server can prevent the RD Session Host servers from populating the list of RDP sessions associated with the RD Connection Broker server. To resolve this issue, identify and fix any network connectivity problems between the RD Session Host servers configured in a farm environment and the RD Connection Broker server.
Note: The following procedures include steps for using the ping command to perform troubleshooting. Therefore, before performing these steps, check whether the firewall or Internet Protocol security (IPsec) settings on your network allow Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) traffic. ICMP is the TCP/IP protocol that is used by the ping command.
To perform these procedures, you must have membership in the local Administrators group, or you must have been delegated the appropriate authority.
If you cannot successfully ping the RD Connection Broker server by IP address, this indicates a possible issue with network connectivity, firewall configuration, or IPsec configuration.
The following are some additional troubleshooting steps that you can perform to help identify the root cause of the problem:
- Ping other computers on the network to help determine the extent of the network connectivity issue.
- If you can ping other servers but not the RD Connection Broker server, try to ping the RD Connection Broker server from another computer. If you cannot ping the RD Connection Broker server from any computer, first ensure that the RD Connection Broker server is running. If the RD Connection Broker server is running, check the network settings on the RD Connection Broker server.
- Check the TCP/IP settings on the local computer by doing the following:
- Click Start, click Run, type cmd, and then click OK.
- At the command prompt, type ipconfig /all, and then press ENTER. Make sure that the information listed is correct.
- Type ping localhost to verify that TCP/IP is installed and correctly configured on the local computer. If the ping is unsuccessful, this may indicate a corrupt TCP/IP stack or a problem with your network adapter.
- Type ping IP_address, where IP_address is the IP address assigned to the computer. If you can ping the localhost address but not the local address, there may be an issue with the routing table or with the network adapter driver.
- Type ping DNS_server, where DNS_server is the IP address assigned to the DNS server. If there is more than one DNS server on your network, you should ping each one. If you cannot ping the DNS servers, this indicates a potential problem with the DNS servers, or with the network between the computer and the DNS servers.
- If the RD Connection Broker server is on a different subnet, try to ping the default gateway. If you cannot ping the default gateway, this might indicate a problem with the network adapter, the router or gateway device, cabling, or other connectivity hardware.
- In Device Manager, check the status of the network adapter. To open Device Manager, click Start, click Run, type devmgmt.msc, and then click OK.
- Check network connectivity indicator lights on the computer and at the hub or router. Check network cabling.
- Check firewall settings by using the Windows Firewall with Advanced Security snap-in.
- Check IPsec settings by using the IP Security Policy Management snap-in.
If these procedures do not resolve the issue, you should look in the Microsoft-Windows-TerminalServices-SessionBroker event source on the RD Connection Broker server to see if there are any errors listed there.
Verify
To verify that the RD Session Host server can successfully communicate with the RD Connection Broker server:
- On the RD Session Host server, start a new Remote Desktop Services session.
- After the session is established, disconnect the session. Do not log off from the session.
- On a different RD Session Host server, try to reconnect to your existing session. If you are able to reconnect to the existing session, the RD Session Host server is successfully communicating with the RD Connection Broker server.