tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1492436440038408053.post8489672695224729665..comments2024-03-11T16:18:52.884+05:30Comments on Mohana's D365 Business Central & NAV Blog: How to Kill Session in NAV2013Mohanahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18444553810609906473noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1492436440038408053.post-23989629527182186422013-12-12T20:57:33.292+05:302013-12-12T20:57:33.292+05:30In previous NAV versions the user must be a member...In previous NAV versions the user must be a member of either the sysadmin or processadmin SQL Server server rolls to delete sessions. I guess it is the same in NAV 2013. <br />I couldn't delete the session with the hack above and I didn't have this security role.Caponenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1492436440038408053.post-79188830423615274702013-05-01T04:13:14.176+05:302013-05-01T04:13:14.176+05:30We just encountered problem in sessions administra...We just encountered problem in sessions administration in NAV 2013 as well. What we realised was that the Session List page was meant for debugging use. Furthermore, opening Session List page actually takes up one more user license even though you are already in a RTC session. That kinda make session administration difficult for small customers with just 3 user license (the starter pack).<br /><br />The workaround - to kill off sessions, we can launch the Active Session table and this does not take up one more user license. Delete will also work in Active Session table. We can create a page for the customer to use this and do their own session administration.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com