Citrix Receiver 12.7

Product Details

  1. Citrix Receiver For Mac
  2. Citrix Receiver 12.7 For Mac
Citrix Receiver 12.7

SecureLogin integrates tightly with Citrix to deliver a more efficient, simple, and reliable single sign-on solution. It provides a single login experience to users accessing Citrix Published Application, Published Desktop and other VDI environments.

  • The Citrix Receiver version supports HDX Adaptive Transport and DTLS: Receiver for Windows (4.7, 4.8, 4.9), Receiver for Mac (12.5, 12.6, 12.7), Receiver for iOS (7.2, 7.3.x) or Receiver for Linux (13.7) and either of the following also applies.
  • Sep 25, 2017 Configure for anywhere access from your desktop or web access with Safari, Chrome or Firefox. Available Languages. English, German, French, Spanish, Japanese and Simplified Chinese. Ask your help desk for set-up instructions. Receiver 12.7 for Mac. 52.9 MB - (.dmg) Download File.
Citrix

With the latest Citrix Receiver (12.7) and MacOS (10.13 with supplemental update) versions I see the following error. Product Details. SecureLogin integrates tightly with Citrix to deliver a more efficient, simple, and reliable single sign-on solution. It provides a single login experience to users accessing Citrix Published Application, Published Desktop and other VDI environments. In large enterprises and organizations, employees must interact with multiple.

In large enterprises and organizations, employees must interact with multiple applications and access sensitive information. Each application has its own authentication methods that require users to specify different usernames and passwords. This forces the users to maintain and manage different usernames and passwords to each of the numerous applications, which can be inconvenient and difficult.

To resolve these issues, a solution is needed to avoid the necessity of users remembering numerous passwords while simultaneously providing users access to the required sensitive data without compromising on security.

Mac

Citrix Receiver For Mac

Citrix

SecureLogin is a single sign-on product that provides this kind of ease for password management.

SecureLogin utilities and components are designed to enable single sign-on for Windows, DotNet, Web, Java, and terminal emulator applications.

It supports both username and password authentication, and also multi-factor authentication such as smart card, token, or biometric authentication at the network and application levels.

Citrix Receiver 12.7 For Mac

Features:

  • Eliminates the requirement for users to remember multiple usernames and passwords beyond their initial login. It stores usernames and passwords and automatically specifies them for users when required. With this feature, users are no longer required to remember and manually provide their credentials to log in to an application.
  • It quickly retrieves and specifies user credentials, which results in faster login.
  • It helps reduce calls to the Help Desk about locked accounts and forgotten usernames and passwords.
  • It makes use of multiple integrated security systems that provide authentication and single sign-on to networks and applications.
  • It provides a single entry point to the corporate network and its user resources, which increases security and enhances compliance with corporate security policies.
  • It stores and encrypts user credentials in the directory: eDirectory, Active Directory, or other LDAP-compliant directories, and optionally caches them in an encrypted format on the local workstation.
  • With this level of encryption, an administrator with complete rights cannot view a user’s credentials.
  • If required, an administrator can set a new password under some circumstances, such as disaster recovery, but cannot view the existing password.
  • Client Login Extension 3.10.x provides password recovery for network login credentials. The password recovery support through Client Login Extension tool is also available for locked workstations and for workstations in which user operations are controlled by Desktop Automation Services (DAS).

It employs two methods of fault tolerance:

  • It uses local encrypted caching to ensure that the network downtime does not affect the single sign-on performance. If the corporate network is down, caching enables application logins to continue uninterrupted.
  • It uses application definitions to cater to different login conditions and errors during the login.

It maintains single sign-on integrity for all mobile and remote users by locally encrypting the cache regardless of the network connectivity. If permitted, mobile users can update their single sign-on credentials when they are disconnected from the network and update the directory with these details when they attach later.

Because SecureLogin is a directory-enabled product, users can:

Receiver
  • Log in from anywhere and get capabilities as if they were working from their own desks.
  • Log in and log out quickly because they authenticate only to the directory, and not to Windows itself.
  • Roam the enterprise and log in to different machines during the day.
  • Work on a laptop in a disconnected mode because their login credentials are saved to a local, encrypted cache.
  • Securely use a shared, kiosk-type workstation where many people log in temporarily for quick work, then log out.

SecureLogin includes wizards, directory console plug-in, and tools which make it easy to centrally configure for use on the corporate network.

Includes management utilities that allows the administrators and end-users to view their single sign-on details and, if permitted enable single sign-on applications.

I run an application in Citrix XenApp which is accessed using Citrix Receiver. Mac receiver has always been finicky, but now has stopped working all together, in Chrome, Firefox and Safari. In Chrome and Firefox, it downloads the launcher, gets to Launching application... and then nothing happens. Firefox has a server connection error. Safari sometimes launches to this point but more often than not, will not even download the launcher. The Mac OS is Sierra and High Sierra.

I've tried every version of Receiver at this point, though after reading a few posts, I've been switching between 12.6 and 12.7 hoping for some progress. Any input is welcome!