Workspace Weekly – What’s new in Login Enterprise 6.4
December 10, 2025
This week’s Workspace Weekly spotlights the Login Enterprise 6.4 release! For the complete list of changes, improvements, and fixes, check our official Release Notes for Login Enterprise 6.4.
Let’s check out what’s new and why it matters!
Connector Pipes in Custom Connectors: Pass the Right Data at the Right Time
If you are maintaining Custom Connectors today, you probably pass session IDs, URLs, or tokens through brittle parameters or side channels. In 6.4, connector pipes give launchers and custom connectors a built-in channel to securely send and receive structured session information.
You provide the connector with exactly what it needs at runtime and can send key values back into Login Enterprise for logging or follow up steps. The whole flow stays inside the platform with fewer workarounds and temp files, and less manual copy paste.
Keep an eye out as we plan to dive deeper into Connector Pipes, in a future Workspace Weekly. For more information, refer to: Connector Pipes in Custom Connectors
NVIDIA nVector Bundled: GPU Testing Without the Appliance Prep
If you run GPU backed desktops, you should not have to do the appliance installation process before you can prove latency.
In Login Enterprise 6.4, the NVIDIA nVector Agent and the nVector Desktop Prepare workload are bundled into the Login Enterprise appliance, so nVector latency testing works out of the box with a configured Launcher.
You attach the Desktop Prepare workload to a test, run, and start getting consistent GPU and latency measurement directly into Login Enterprise’s platform metrics. There is no separate packaging, no custom image changes, and your appliance stays clean and standard, which keeps security and platform teams happier while speeding time to first latency results.
For more information, refer to: NVIDIA nVector Bundled

Figure 1: NVIDIA nVector Desktop Prepare workload in Login Enterprise
Access Control List (ACL) on Accounts and Account Groups: Show the Right Logins to the Right Teams
Account lists can grow fast. In Login Enterprise 6.4, you can assign roles to Accounts and Account Groups, so each team only sees and uses what is meant for them.
For example, a managed services provider can keep customer A and customer B accounts separate for operators, while another admin still has full view. From the Roles view you can grant access in bulk, and from each Account or Account Group you can see which roles are allowed to use it.
For more information, refer to: ACL on Accounts and Account Groups

Figure 2: Role based access on Accounts and Account Groups
All Events Page: One Place to Search Across Every Event Source
When something goes wrong, you shouldn’t have to guess which test to open first. The new All Events page brings all events into a single, filterable view.
You can filter by time span, test type, test name, event type, event title, description, account, launcher, application, and target host, then adjust columns to show only what matters. It becomes much easier to answer, “what happened to this application in the last hour across all tests”, without hopping between screens.
For more information, refer to: All Events Page

Figure 3: All Events page with filters and configurable columns
Custom Text in Load Test PDF Reports: Tell the Story, not Just Show Charts
Executives and customers rarely want a raw dump of charts; they want context and clear direction. In 6.4, the Load Test PDF generator lets you add custom text to the report.
When you generate a PDF, you can enable a simple text editor to add a short summary, test scope, environment notes, or a conclusion. That text appears at the beginning of the report, just under the introduction, with basic formatting for headings and lists, so your findings tell a story, rather than being a stack of graphs.
For more information, refer to: Custom text in Load Test PDF

Figure 4: Custom text section in the Load Test PDF dialog
Desktop Connector in Load Tests: Treat Physical Endpoints like First Class Citizens
Many teams rely on physical PCs, branch devices, or lab workstations. With 6.4, you can use a desktop connector in a load test and get the same load style benefits on a pre logged in desktop, that you get in virtual environments.
You create a load test, pick the desktop connector, save and execute the connection command to the endpoint. When you run it, that device participates in the load test with EUX and session metrics, using the normal load test views and PDF reports, without any extra gateway or remote access setup.
For more information, refer to: Desktop Connector in Load Tests

Figure 5: Load Test configured with a Desktop connector
VSImax Toggle: Stop Small Tests from Looking Like Failures
Proof concepts and physical endpoint tests often run with only a handful of users. VSImax cannot be calculated cleanly there. Login Enteprise 6.4 adds a VSImax toggle in load test settings. You can keep EUX enabled but turn VSImax off for a test, so results display a clear dash and tooltip, instead of an apparent failure.
You keep EUX for user experience, without having to explain why VSImax is “wrong” in a two-user smoke test.
For more information, refer to: VSImax Toggle

Figure 6: EUX and VSImax toggles in Load Test configuration
Ready to get started using 6.4?
As always, we use our customers’ feedback to make Login Enterprise better for you. We hope you enjoy the value of these new releases.
To set up a new appliance or update an existing one, go to Downloads.
If your Appliance already exists and is internet connected, follow Updating Login Enterprise (There are also additional update steps here). Don’t forget to take a snapshot first.
Stay tuned for more 6.4 release Workspace Weekly feature spotlights, and join our Slack channel #workspace-weekly to share field stories, tips, and interesting finds.
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