Refer to the following screenshot.

Homepage URL to load when KioWare starts (Required)
Click this button to modify which domains and pages can be displayed. See the following screenshot.

If selected, the user is able to link to any domain without restriction.
If selected, a list of domains to which the user is allowed to link; ie, a white list.
If selected, a list of domains to which the user is not allowed to link; ie, a black list.
Click this button to add a new domain entry to the domain list.
Click this button to add a new page entry to the selected domain. By default, pages added to a domain are defined as a revoke page list (ie, black list). To change the page filter type, edit the domain.
To edit a domain, highlight the domain and click the Edit button. You can change the domain name. You can also change the page filter type.
To edit a page, highlight the page and click the Edit button. The page will become editable.
Matches are contains matches:
The domain you enter should not have a 'http://' preceding the name, and you can enter any portion of the domain name depending on how restrictive you wish to be. For example:
If you do not have a web server installed on your kiosk and you need to reference a page on the kiosk, you can. However it can be tricky setting up the access list properly. If the path uses backslashes (\) instead of slashes (/), the entire URL is the domain. For example:
Note: Sometimes the Internet Explorer browser control that KioWare uses will convert your path that has backslashes in it to one that has slashes and put "file://" on the front. To see if this is happening or not, you may need to put an addressbar textbox on a KioWare toolbar so that you can see what the path is being translated to in KioWare.
For instance
"C:\foo\page.htm"
may be converted to
"file:///C:/foo/page.htm"
In that case, normal access list rules apply because slashes were used instead of backslashes. Your domain would be "C:" and the page would be "foo/page.htm".
The path/filename you enter should not have any domain information (ex, http://www.foo.com), and you can enter any portion of the path/filename depending on how restrictive you wish to be. For example:
Note: Pages that are part of a Revoke List will have a red X through their page icon.
For circumstances where you wish to block or allow the home page of a domain, there is a special placeholder: $$$Default$$$. Some sites bring in their home page to other pages on the site. In these cases, it may be very confusing seeing blocked pages saying that TheDomain.com is being blocked. Adding $$$Default$$$ may be the solution.
If checked, when domains are being restricted and a user tries to navigate to a restricted domain, a message can be displayed explaining why the user can't navigate to that domain.
The message to display when a user tries to navigate to a domain that has been restricted. This information is particularly useful when testing domain access lists to see which domain is being blocked.
If checked, when Pages are being restricted and a user tries to navigate to a restricted page, a message can be displayed explaining why the user can't navigate to that page.
The message to display when a user tries to navigate to a page that has been restricted.
This is the recommended way to both set up and deploy your kiosk in regard to the browsing access list. This feature is used to write blocked URLs to the Application event log.
Default - no logging.
Recommended deployment setting - Logs to the event log and blocks the pages.
Recommended testing setting - Logs to the event log but does not block pages.
If checked, KioWare will navigate to the URL in the textbox when a page is blocked.
Click this button to modify which domains and pages can execute KioWare scripting commands. See the following screenshot - refer to Browsing Access instructions (above) for details.
Click this button to modify which protocols can be used in KioWare. Protocols already allowed and do not apply to the access list include:
http, https, file and res
The mailto protocol also does not apply to the access list because it is blocked or allowed else-where in the Config Tool.
It is highly recommended that you set the protocol access list to "Enabled", even if you do not add any entries to the list. That way all unsafe protocols will be blocked. If you do, keep in mind that any pages that may be using an unusual protocol probably will not work correctly.
Note: Protocol entries must end with either : or ://.
Note: The KioWare toolbar address bar will still always put http:// in front of any address typed that does not begin with http:// or https://.
Pressing this button will allow you to specify whether or not to display a message to the user when a protocol is blocked and/or whether to log an event to the event log about the block.
Configuration settings can be saved in an XML file that makes it easy to copy a configuration to multiple installations.
KioWare can also be configured to automatically attempt to load an XML file upon startup. See below.
If checked, the XML file defined below will attempt to be loaded and read by KioWare. Any configuration changes will be made prior to content being displayed, and if the XML file cannot be successfully downloaded, then the existing settings will be used.
The URL or UNC path that defines the location of the XML configuration file.
Note: If you need to edit an XML file by hand (IE. a text editor such as Notepad), keep this in mind. At the top of every XML file you will see something like:
<config type="KioWare" version="6.3.0" guid="{7ACD0729-E09C-427E-B452-95F269B0FA73}">
Inside the quotes of the guid value will need changed each time a change is made to the XML file. If it is not changed KioWare will think that it already has those settings and will not load the XML file. It does not matter what it is changed to, it just needs to be different.
To change the passcode required to exit KioWare, enter the current passcode, then enter the new passcode and re-enter the new passcode. The passcode can consist of any charaters you want, but keep in mind that the current pin pad only supports entering digits.
The default passcode is 3523.
KioWare can be configured to exit via the following actions:
| Allow Mouse Exit | Click the four corners of the screen only |
| Allow Alt+F4 Exit | Type Alt+F4 only |
| Allow Alt+F4/Mouse Exit | Click the four corners of the screen or type Alt+F4 |
When the passcode dialog is displayed, a shutdown button can be displayed that perform the following actions:
| Disabled | No Shutdown button displayed |
| Shutdown w/passcode | Passcode required to shutdown kiosk |
| Shutdown no passcode | Passcode not required to shutdown the kiosk |
| Logoff w/passcode | Passcode required to logoff current user. Use when running a KioWare shell. |
| Logoff no passcode | Passcode not required to logoff current user |
These options enable KioWare to automatically shut down or restart the computer at scheduled times.
Note: Actual event times may vary between 0 and 15 minutes to avoid every kiosk that you have acting at the same time.
This feature is configured just like other scheduled tasks that KioWare performs. There is the option to perform the operation every so many minutes or at certain times of the day each week.
To enable the feature the Shutdown Mode must be set to something other than Disabled.
| Restart KioWare | KioWare will exit and then the watchdog service will start it again. |
| Reboot Kiosk | Reboots the computer. |
| Shutdown Kiosk | Shuts down the computer. |
To configure the computer to autologon on powerup, enter the following information:
If checked, autologon is enabled
The Windows account to logon to
The domain to logon to. Defaults to the local computer name.
Account password
To configure the computer to autologon on powerup, enter the following information:
If checked, KioWare will autostart on computer startup immediately after autologon.
If checked, Windows power saving options are available while KioWare is running.
Note: Configure Windows Media Player properly so that power options settings do not get overridden.
Used to tell KioWare to allow Windows to turn off the monitor at certain times during the week. Keep in mind that KioWare does not turn off the monitor, KioWare simply allows Windows to turn it off. In Windows those settings are usually found in "Control Panel/Power Options".
The sleep schedule has a column of checkboxes on the left used to configure "on" time, and on the right, "off" time. Every on time must have an off time. If no checkboxes are checked, the feature is off.
One of the more complex setups in the display schedule is when off times overlap into the next day. For instance, if you wanted to have the display turn off at midnight on weekdays, and 2:00am on the weekend, it would be set up like so:
| Day | On Time | Off Time |
|---|---|---|
| Sunday | 8:00am | 2:00am |
| Monday-Friday | 8:00am | 12:00am |
| Saturday | 8:00am | 2:00am |
Notice that Sunday and Saturday are set to 2:00am instead of Friday and Saturday because Friday night at 2:00am is actually Saturday morning.