Disk Cache memory problem

Hello,
I am using 5.5 AF (Mac) my Disk cache memory was full. Whenever i start application I got this massage & its effects on speed. Can some one guide me how do I clear it?
Thanks.

The same answer that I gave you here:
http://www.videocopilot.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=116607

Similar Messages

  • Cache memory problem in Bridge

    I am using PSE 8 on a mac (osx 10.5.8) and having a problem searching with Bridge.  I got a message that "Bridge encountered a problem reading the cache memory.  Go to central cache and purge cache memory."  I did that, but the problem still exists.  All of my items are still visible, with keywords attached.  When I enter a term in the search box, I get the message "No items to display."  I tried to rebuild cache, but maybe I didn't do it correctly.  Can anyone tell me how to proceed?  Thanks in advance.

    Running a separate 8 TB NAS, 10 drives in my main system and 10 or so on
    other various machines; and accessing my hundreds of thousands of images via
    Bridge I have some experience in this matter.
    My recommendation would to ensure that "Automatically Export Cache to
    Folders When Possible" is checked.  If your external 3TB drive has a sleep
    mode (power save) turn it off.  It is likely that you will have to try
    either or both of these options.
    This will not 100% solve your problem.  If you have space within your
    computer for additional drives, and turn off hard drive power save, all will
    be solved.  I would highly recommend a standalone NAS station in mirror mode
    with room to grow.  Myself, those files stored on my NAS generally take 20
    seconds or so to display after a drive has gone to sleep.
    As for the temp files you referenced it is more than likely that yes, they
    can be deleted.  If they are housed in a TMP, Temp, etc. directory then they
    can be deleted.  A good way to check if they can be deleted would be to
    temporarily change the name of the directory and restart your computer.
    Afterwards start up Photoshop and Bridge and edit several files of a
    significant size.  Shut down both and then see if there are any new files.
    Hope this helps.

  • Is SL giving maximum priority on memory usage to disk cache???

    Pretty much every time I need to work with large files - be it video files, archiving or unarchiving large files, or working with VMWare images - the system quickly runs out of memory and starts swapping profusely. The swap file grows to 2-4 gigabytes pretty quickly, the system becomes unresponsive etc...
    I have the latest MacBook Pro 2009 with 4G of RAM, and right after system reboot it shows about 2.8G of free memory, and 0 in swap.
    Then I start VMWare, for example, which only uses about 500-600 megabytes of RAM. After some time working with it, the amount of free memory in Mac OS X steadily decreases, and then it starts swapping, and the swap keeps growing... The system becomes slower and slower, but yet, Activity Monitor is still showing that VMWare is using about 500-600 megabytes of memory. At the same time it shows about 2 gigabytes of Active memory, and about 1G of inactive memory, and about 800 megabytes of "wired" memory...
    Where the **** did all the memory go??? Did system use it all for disk cache, trying to keep all disk images that VMWare is working with, in it at the expense of physical RAM available to other processes? If it is so - that's VERY silly, and while it may give an appearance of "snappiness" with small amount of simple applications that don't do much, it becomes a MAJOR problem for applications that work with large files - iMovie, VMWare, any other media processing application, cause Mac OS X to start swapping and beachballing, and become unresponsive after certain time of work, while the swap file keeps growing, yet the amount of memory used by those applications shown by Activity Monitor staying around 100-500 megabytes.
    I've been working with JES Deinterlacer the other day - trying to convert a 1080i/30fps video into a 720p/60fps one. The file was about 23 gigabytes in size. Besides that I've only had Mail and Safari open. Before I started the deinterlacing process, there was about 1.5G of free memory. After it started, the amount has been going down steadily, until the system started swapping and become unusable after awhile. The deinterlacing process also slowed down significantly (my guess is - again - the system tried to give memory needed by JES Deinterlacer to the disk cache for the file it's been processing). There's no point in caching that file at all - there's 0 chances the application will ever need to jump back to the parts of the file it's already processed! Or to read any parts of the new file it's created!
    What's other people's experience working with large files in Snow Leopard? Any Final Cut users? Or iMovie? Does your system exhibit the same behavior? Have you tried monitoring memory usage while you work with any of the applications that work with large files?

    Having exactly the same issue. However, I cannot even get VMware to start. It gives me a "could not open paging file" message and never opens. I have also had strange random crashes recently where it seems to run out of memory and then the force quick dialogue opens and usually Safari, Entourage, or Aperture are frozen or paused. Really getting to be a big issue.
    I contacted VMware and they looked at all the logs, had me try one change to an internal VM file, but without success. They now are suggesting that based on the logs, it is an OSX paging issue and that I need to do an archive and install!!! No way do I want to do that after just migrating to this new machine and getting everything set up so well!
    Need some alternative ideas. Actually hoping 10.6.2 comes out and solves it!

  • Weblogic 8.1 SP2 + Sybase: Problem with Insufficient Procedure Cache Memory

    Hi all,
    Our Weblogic server(8.1, SP2) encountered a problem this week.
    It connects to Sybase.
    For a particular database query (which involves temporary tables), the DB seems to have run out of "Procedure Cache memory". And as a result, has thrown an exception.
    What is a bit wierd is that, the Weblogic, slowly, seems to have exhausted all its DB resources, and all the subsequent database queries (even the simple ones) have failed due to some error or the other.
    The weblogic required a re-start for it to acquire back its DB resources.
    Has somebody faced a similar problem before, please?
    On reading the Release Notes for WLS: 8.1, I see that the Service Packs SP4, SP5 seem to have a few bug fixes related to memory leaks (especially, in case a Prepared statement failed).
    [Related CRs are CR233948, CR179600, CR183190].
    Does this mean that an Upgrade to 8.1: SP5 or maybe even SP6 help, please?
    Would welcome any kind of advice/suggestions.
    Thanks you!!!!
    Rhishi.

    Rhishikesh Anandamoorthy wrote:
    Hi Joe,
    Thanks a lot for your reply.
    I should have mentioned in my previous post that the DBA had indeed recommended
    an increase to the Sybase's Procedure Cache Memory size. (We have a separate
    DBA team out here, and I do not have DBA access to my database).
    But I am a bit apprehensive on two counts:
    1. From the DB logs, I see that the query which seems to have failed is something
    which is fired day in and day out (though this involves the usage of temporary tables,
    which might have filled up the Cache). I should also add that the "DB statistics" was
    also being run (automatically) about the same time when the query failed. But again,
    the "DB statistics" is run everyday. So, cant see much of a problem here.Nevertheless, it is an internal DBMS issue.
    2. The CR179600 and CR183190 of the Weblogic Release Notes suggests that: "Under
    certain statement failure conditions, cached statements are leaked without being
    closed, which can lead to DBMS resource problems."
    So, I am just wondering if this is indeed the actual cause. If so, it might mean
    that there is a chance, though slight, that the problem might re-occur.
    There seems to be a fix for this in SP5.I certainly advocate upgrading to 81sp6, but that issue had to do with Oracle,
    which retains DBMS 'cursors' for each open prepared statement. This will have
    no effect on a Sybase DBMS.
    I can certainly upgrade to SP6. But, the application seems to have been pretty
    stable with SP2 for the past 4 years.
    I understand that an upgrade to SP6 may not be such a big change. But, it would
    still be a change.
    And the webapp which the server supports is very critical to our customer
    [which webapp is not? :-) ], and a server-restart again for this issue would
    certainly not be acceptable.
    So, would want to be doubly sure, if an upgrade is indeed the right way out.
    Thank you!!!
    Rhishi.In that case, I would stay comfortable with SP2 if you like. In my professional
    opinion, at this time, it is a purely DBMS-side issue, based on the current
    evidence. Note that the same WLS was fine for these same previous years. The
    problem may have to do with a gradual or recent change in the load or size of
    the DBMS.
    Joe Weinstein at BEA Systems ( nee [email protected] 1988-1996 )

  • Cache Memory Allocator \ Short Term Memory Allocator Issues

    Hi all
    I have a number of identically configured (High School) Servers which are giving me the same memory errors (some more frequently than others) and I've run out of ideas.
    They are all HP Proliant DL360 G6 Servers, NetWare 6.5 sp8 with eDir 8.8 sp5.
    The error messages are :
    "Cache memory allocator out of available memory." followed by "Short term memory allocator is out of memory. xxx attempts to get more memory failed. request size in bytes xxxxxxxx from Module SWEEP.NLM"
    The module referred to is always "SWEEP.NLM" (Sophos Anti-virus). A Server reset solves the problem but it is normally back within a month.
    I've posted below a config.txt and segstats.txt from one of the servers.
    I would be grateful if someone could help me with this as it's now becoming a 'headache'.
    Cheers
    Neil Hughes
    *** Memory Pool Configuration for : KLDSRV1
    Time and date : 10:34:44 AM 01/18/2012
    Server version : NetWare 6.5 Support Pack 8
    Server uptime : 32d 20h 00m 00s
    SEG.NLM version : v1.72
    0xFFFFFFFF --------------------------------------------------------------
    | Kernel Reserved Space |
    | |
    | Size : 180,355,071 bytes (172.0 MB) |
    | |
    0xF5400000 --------------------------------------------------------------
    | User Address Space (L!=P) |
    | |
    | User Pool Size : 884,998,144 bytes (844.0 MB) |
    | High Water Mark : 2,936,012,800 bytes (2.73 GB) |
    | |
    0xC0800000 --------------------------------------------------------------
    | Virtual Memory Cache Pool (L!=P) |
    | |
    | VM Pool Size : 1,082,130,432 bytes (1.01 GB) |
    | Available : 1,049,260,032 bytes (1000.7 MB) |
    | Total VM Pages : 1,047,080,960 bytes (998.6 MB) |
    | Free Clean VM : 1,025,097,728 bytes (977.6 MB) |
    | Free Cache VM : 21,983,232 bytes (21.0 MB) |
    | Total LP Pages : 0 bytes (0 KB) |
    | Free Clean LP : 0 bytes (0 KB) |
    | Free Cache LP : 0 bytes (0 KB) |
    | Free Dirty : 0 bytes (0 KB) |
    | VM Pages In Use : 2,179,072 bytes (2.1 MB) |
    | NLM Memory In Use : 1,066,545,152 bytes (1017.1 MB) |
    | NLM/VM Memory : 1,050,394,624 bytes (1001.7 MB) |
    | Largest Segment : 16,240,640 bytes (15.5 MB) |
    | High Water Mark : 1,535,295,488 bytes (1.43 GB) |
    | |
    0x80000000 --------------------------------------------------------------
    | File System Cache Pool (L==P or L!=P) |
    | |
    | FS Pool Size : 2,141,048,832 bytes (1.99 GB) |
    | Available : 252,231,680 bytes (240.5 MB) |
    | Largest Segment : 10,547,200 bytes (10.1 MB) |
    | |
    | NSS Memory (85%) : 1,043,554,304 bytes (995.2 MB) |
    | NSS (avail cache) : 958,324,736 bytes (913.9 MB) |
    | |
    0x00623000 --------------------------------------------------------------
    | DOS / SERVER.NLM |
    | |
    | Size : 6,434,816 bytes (6.1 MB) |
    | |
    0x00000000 --------------------------------------------------------------
    Top 6 Memory Consuming NLMs
    NLM Name Version Date Total NLM Memory
    ================================================== ==============================
    1. DS.NLM 20219.15 12 May 2009 242,957,527 bytes (231.7 MB)
    2. NSS.NLM 3.27.03 7 Jun 2010 225,471,568 bytes (215.0 MB)
    3. SERVER.NLM 5.70.08 3 Oct 2008 197,615,392 bytes (188.5 MB)
    4. SWEEP.NLM 4.73 1 Dec 2011 104,793,570 bytes (99.9 MB)
    5. DBSRV6.NLM 6.00.04 16 May 2001 38,735,938 bytes (36.9 MB)
    6. XMGR.NLM 27610.01.01 30 Mar 2009 32,184,593 bytes (30.7 MB)
    Logical Memory Summary Information
    ================================================== ==============================
    File System Cache Information
    FS Cache Free : 63,897,600 bytes (60.9 MB)
    FS Cache Fragmented : 188,334,080 bytes (179.6 MB)
    FS Cache Largest Segment : 10,547,200 bytes (10.1 MB)
    Logical System Cache Information
    LS Cache Free : 138,153,984 bytes (131.8 MB)
    LS Cache Fragmented : 364,015,616 bytes (347.2 MB)
    LS Cache Uninitialized : 333,455,360 bytes (318.0 MB)
    LS Cache Largest Segment : 16,240,640 bytes (15.5 MB)
    LS Cache Largest Position : 34490000
    Summary Statistics
    Total Free : 202,051,584 bytes (192.7 MB)
    Total Fragmented : 552,349,696 bytes (526.8 MB)
    Highest Physical Address : DF62E000
    User Space : 1,065,353,216 bytes (1016.0 MB)
    User Space (High Water Mark) : 2,936,012,800 bytes (2.73 GB)
    NLM Memory (High Water Mark) : 1,535,295,488 bytes (1.43 GB)
    Kernel Address Space In Use : 2,475,212,800 bytes (2.31 GB)
    Available Kernel Address Space : 754,401,280 bytes (719.5 MB)
    Memory Summary Screen (.ms)
    ================================================== ==============================
    KNOWN MEMORY Bytes Pages Bytes Pages
    Server: 3747295616 914867 Video: 8192 2
    Dos: 111232 27 Other: 131072 32
    FS CACHE KERNEL NLM MEMORY
    Original: 3743006720 913820 Code: 48136192 11752
    Current: 252231680 61580 Data: 28098560 6860
    Dirty: 0 0 Sh Code: 40960 10
    Largest seg: 10547200 2575 Sh Data: 20480 5
    Non-Movable: 0 0 Help: 172032 42
    Other: 1890455552 461537 Message: 1249280 305
    Avail NSS: 958328832 233967 Alloc L!=P: 957685760 233810
    Movable: 8192 2 Alloc L==P: 14991360 3660
    Total: 1050394624 256444
    VM SYSTEM
    Free clean VM: 1025097728 250268
    Free clean LP: 0 0
    Free cache VM: 21983232 5367
    Free cache LP: 0 0
    Free dirty: 0 0
    In use: 2179072 532
    Total: 1049260032 256167
    Memory Configuration (set parameters)
    ================================================== ==============================
    Auto Tune Server Memory = OFF
    File Cache Maximum Size = 2147483648
    File Service Memory Optimization = 1
    Logical Space Compression = 1
    Garbage Collection Interval = 299.9 seconds
    VM Garbage Collector Period = 300.0 seconds
    server -u<number> = 884998144
    NSS Configuration File:
    C:\NWSERVER\NSSSTART.CFG
    /AllocAheadBlks=0
    /MinBufferCacheSize=20000
    /MinOSBufferCacheSize=20000
    /CacheBalanceMaxBuffersPerSession=20000
    /NameCacheSize=200000
    /AuthCacheSize=20000
    /NumWorkToDos=100
    /FileFlushTimer=10
    /BufferFlushTimer=10
    /ClosedFileCacheSize=100000
    /CacheBalance=85
    DS Configuration File:
    SYS:\_NETWARE\_NDSDB.INI
    preallocatecache=true
    cache=200000000
    Server High/Low Water Mark Values
    ================================================== ==============================
    NLM Memory High Water Mark = 1,535,295,488 bytes
    File System High Water Mark = 435,727 bytes
    User Space Information:
    User Space High Water Mark = 683,339,776 bytes
    Committed Pages High Water Mark = 91 pages
    Mapped VM Pages High Water Mark = 5,870 pages
    Reserved Pages High Water Mark = 692,325 pages
    Swapped Pages High Water Mark = 5,710 pages
    Available Low Water Mark = 882,774,016
    ESM Memory High Water Mark = 949 pages
    Novell File Server Configuration Report For Server: KLDSRV1
    Novell File Server Configuration Report Created: Wed, Jan 18, 2012 11:15 am
    Novell File Server Configuration Report. [Produced by CONFIG.NLM v3.10.17]
    Novell NetWare 5.70.08 October 3, 2008
    (C) Copyright 1983-2008 Novell Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Server name...............: KLDSRV1
    OS Version................: v5.70
    OS revision number........: 8
    Product Version...........: v6.50
    Product Revision Number...: 8
    Server Up Time(D:H:M:Sec).: 32:20:51:12
    Serial number.............: XXXXXXXX
    Internal Net. Addr........: 00000000h
    Security Restriction Level: 1
    SFT Level.................: 2
    Engine Type...............: NATIVE
    TTS Level.................: 1
    Total Server memory.......: 3573.81 MB or 3747406848 Bytes
    Processor speed rating....: 197582
    Original cache buffers....: 913820
    Current Cache Buffers.....: 292534
    LRU Sitting Time(D:H:M:S).: 32:20:51:12
    Current FSP's.............: 12
    Current MP FSP's..........: 378
    Current Receive Buffers...: 3000
    Directory cache buffers...: 0
    Workstations Connected....: 1136
    Max Workstations Connected: 1528
    Server language...........: ENGLISH (4)
    Timesync active...........: Yes
    Time is synchronized......: Yes
    Total Processors..........: 4
    Server DOS Country ID.....: 44
    Server DOS Code Page......: 850
    Boot Loader...............: DOS
    Top of Modules List 312 Modules Loaded.
    ACPIASL.NLM v1.05.16 Jan. 16, 2007 ACPI Architecture Services Layer for ACPI compliant systems
    ACPICA.NLM v1.05.16 Jan. 16, 2007 ACPI Component Architecture for ACPI compliant systems
    ACPICMGR.NLM v1.05.16 Jan. 16, 2007 ACPI Component Manager for ACPI compliant systems
    ACPIDRV.PSM v1.05.19 Jan. 16, 2007 ACPI Platform Support Module for ACPI compliant systems
    ACPIPWR.NLM v1.05.16 Jan. 16, 2007 ACPI Power Management Driver for ACPI compliant systems
    AFREECON.NLM v5.00 Jul. 22, 2005 AdRem Free Remote Console (NCPE)
    APACHE2.NLM v2.00.63 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache Web Server 2.0.63
    APRLIB.NLM v0.09.17 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache Portability Runtime Library 0.9.17
    AUTHLDAP.NLM v2.00.63 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache 2.0.63 LDAP Authentication Module
    AUTHLDDN.NLM v1.00 Nov. 9, 2005 LdapDN Module
    BROKER.NLM v3.00.12 Feb. 20, 2008 NDPS Broker
    BSDSOCK.NLM v6.82.02 Dec. 23, 2009 Novell BSDSOCK Module
    BTCPCOM.NLM v7.90 Jul. 9, 2003 BTCPCOM.NLM v7.90.000, Build 253
    BTRIEVE.NLM v7.90 Mar. 21, 2001 BTRIEVE.NLM v7.90.000
    CALNLM32.NLM v6.01.03 Aug. 26, 2008 NetWare NWCalls Runtime Library
    CCS.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 Controlled Cryptography Services from Novell, Inc.
    CDBE.NLM v6.01 Sep. 21, 2006 NetWare Configuration DB Engine
    CDDVD.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Loadable Storage System (LSS) for CD/UDF (Build 212 MP)
    CERTLCM.NLM v28200902.26 Feb. 26, 2009 Novell SASL EXTERNAL Proxy LCM 2.8.2.0 20090226
    CERTLSM.NLM v28200902.26 Feb. 26, 2009 Novell SASL EXTERNAL LSM 2.8.2.0 20090226
    CHARSET.NLM v1.01 Jun. 4, 2003 Display Character Set Support For NetWare
    CIOS.NLM v1.60 Feb. 12, 2008 Consolidated IO System
    CLBACKUP.NLM v8.00 Sep. 22, 2010 NetWare Client Backup
    CLBROWSE.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 NetWare Client Browse
    CLIB.NLM v5.90.15 Mar. 10, 2008 (Legacy) Standard C Runtime Library for NLMs
    CLNNLM32.NLM v6.01.03 Aug. 26, 2008 NetWare NWClient Runtime Library
    CLRESTOR.NLM v8.00 Mar. 31, 2009 NetWare Client Restore
    CLXNLM32.NLM v6.01.03 Aug. 26, 2008 NetWare NWCLX Runtime Library
    COMN.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Common Support Layer (COMN) (Build 212 MP)
    CONFIG.NLM v3.10.17 Feb. 12, 2008 NetWare Server Configuration Reader
    CONLOG.NLM v3.01.02 Aug. 8, 2006 System Console Logger
    CONNAUD.NLM v3.17 May. 10, 2005 NLS - Connection Metering
    CONNMGR.NLM v5.60.01 Sep. 7, 2006 NetWare Connection Manager NLM
    CPQBSSA.NLM v8.20 Jan. 29, 2009 HP Insight Management Base System Agent
    CPQCI.NLM v1.06 Oct. 17, 2005 hp ProLiant iLO Management Interface Driver
    CPQDASA.NLM v8.20.01 Feb. 24, 2009 HP Management Array Subsystem Agent
    CPQHMMO.NLM v3.92 Jun. 10, 2003 Compaq HMMO Services Provider for NetWare
    CPQHOST.NLM v8.20 Jan. 29, 2009 HP Insight Management Host Agent
    CPQHTHSA.NLM v8.20 Jan. 29, 2009 HP Insight Management Health Agent
    CPQNCSA.NLM v8.20 Dec. 11, 2008 HP Insight NIC Agent
    CPQRISA.NLM v8.20 Jan. 29, 2009 HP Insight Management Remote Insight Agent
    CPQSSSA.NLM v8.20.01 Feb. 24, 2009 HP Management Storage Box Subsystem Agent
    CPQTHRSA.NLM v8.20 Jan. 29, 2009 HP Insight Management Threshold Agent
    CPQWEBAG.NLM v8.20 Jan. 29, 2009 HP Web Based Management Agent
    CPUCHECK.NLM v5.60.01 Dec. 6, 2007 NetWare Processor Checking Utility
    CRLSM.NLM v2.08.01 Oct. 28, 2008 Challenge Response LSM v2.8.1.0
    CSL.NLM v2.06.02 Jan. 13, 2000 NetWare Call Support Layer For NetWare
    CSLIND.NLM v4.21 Dec. 7, 1999 TCPIP CSL INDEPENDENCE MODULE 7Dec99 7Dec99
    CVAPPMGR.NLM v8.00 Nov. 22, 2010 AppManager
    CVARCH.NLM v8.00 Nov. 10, 2010 Archive Library
    CVD.NLM v8.00 Apr. 13, 2011 Communications Service
    CVJOBCL.NLM v8.00 Nov. 10, 2010 Job Client
    CVLIB.NLM v8.00 Apr. 13, 2011 Library for NetWare
    CVLZOLIB.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 LZO Compression Library
    CVNETCHK.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 Network Check
    CVSIM.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 Software Installation Manager
    CVSMS.NLM v8.00 Sep. 28, 2009 NetWare SMS Interface
    DBEXTF6.NLM v6.00.04 Sep. 12, 2000 Sybase Adaptive Server Anywhere External Library
    DBNET6.NLM v1.45.02 Mar. 16, 2006 Debug Network IO Support
    DBSRV6.NLM v6.00.04 May. 16, 2001 Sybase Adaptive Server Anywhere
    DFSLIB.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 DFS Common Library (Build 212 MP)
    DHOST.NLM v10010.97 Sep. 18, 2006 Novell DHost Portability Interface 1.0.0 SMP
    DIAG500.NLM v3.04.03 Oct. 31, 2007 Diagnostic/coredump utility for NetWare 6.x
    DM.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Directory Manager
    DMNDAP.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Directory Manager NDAP Provider
    DPLSV386.NLM v1.15.03 Apr. 16, 2010 NetWare 6.x Distributed Print Library - DPLSV386
    DPRPCNLM.NLM v3.00.17 Oct. 10, 2006 Novell NDPS RPC Library NLM
    DS.NLM v20219.15 May. 12, 2009 Novell eDirectory Version 8.8 SP5 SMP
    DSAPI.NLM v6.00.04 Jan. 27, 2006 NetWare NWNet Runtime Library
    DSEVENT.NLM v6.01.03 Aug. 26, 2008 NetWare DSEvent Runtime Library
    DSLOADER.NLM v20219.15 May. 12, 2009 Novell eDirectory Version 8.8.0 Loader SMP
    DSLOG.NLM v20219.15 May. 12, 2009 DS Log for Novell eDirectory 8.8.0
    DTS.NLM v3.01.05 Sep. 8, 2008 Transaction Server 3.1.0 - Netware
    EHCIDRV.CAD v1.05 Feb. 26, 2008 Novell Universal Serial Bus EHCI driver
    EPWDLSM.NLM v27000508.12 Aug. 12, 2005 Novell Enhanced Password LSM 2.7.0.0 20050812
    ETADVLSM.NLM v27000508.03 Aug. 3, 2005 Novell Entrust LSM 2.7.0.0 20050803
    ETHERTSM.NLM v3.90 Mar. 20, 2006 Novell Ethernet Topology Specific Module
    EVENTMGR.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Event Manager
    EVMGRC.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 Event Manager Client
    EXPIRES.NLM v2.00.63 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache 2.0.63 Expires Module
    FATFS.NLM v1.24 Aug. 27, 2007 FAT Filesystem Module for NetWare
    FILESYS.NLM v5.14 Apr. 16, 2008 NetWare File System NLM
    FSBRWSE.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 NetWare File System Browser
    GALAXY.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 Loader
    GAMS.NLM v2.00.01 Sep. 2, 2008 Graded Authentication Management Service
    HBNNSP.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier GetHostByName Name Service Provider
    HEADERS.NLM v2.00.63 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache 2.0.63 Headers Module
    HOSTMIB.NLM v5.03.01 Dec. 1, 2006 NetWare 5.x/6.x Host Resources MIB
    HPASMXL.NLM v1.14 Jan. 25, 2009 HP ProLiant Embedded Health Driver
    HPQCISS.HAM v1.16.01 Mar. 3, 2009 HP SAS/SATA Unified RAID driver
    HTTPSTK.NLM v4.03 Sep. 4, 2008 Novell Small Http Interface
    HWDETECT.NLM v1.19.05 Feb. 20, 2003 Novell Hardware Insertion/Removal Detection
    IDEATA.HAM v4.34 May. 5, 2007 Novell IDE/ATA/ATAPI/SATA Host Adapter Module
    IFACE.NLM v7.05.04 Dec. 1, 2011 SAV Interface for NetWare
    IFOLDER.NLM v2.04 Feb. 19, 2007 ifolder
    IFOLDERU.NLM v2.04 Feb. 19, 2007 ifolderu
    IMGSERV.NLM v7.00 Jan. 12, 2009 ZENworks Imaging Server
    IPCTL.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Transport Layer
    IPMCFG.NLM v1.01.16 Oct. 22, 2005 Web Interface for IP Address Management
    IPMGMT.NLM v1.03.01 May. 29, 2007 TCPIP - NetWare IP Address Management
    IPPSRVR.NLM v4.02.02 Jun. 16, 2010 Novell iPrint Server
    JAVA.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 java.nlm (based on 1.4.2_18) Build 08101613
    JNCPV2.NLM v1.10 Nov. 13, 2003 Native Wrapper Java Class Libraries for NetWare
    JNET.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 Java jnet (based on 1.4.2_18)
    JSMSG.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 Jetstream Message Layer (Build 212 MP)
    JSOCK.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 Support For Java Sockets (loader)
    JSOCK6X.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 NetWare 6.x Support For Java Sockets (JDK 1.4.2)
    JSTCP.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 Jetstream TCP Transport Layer (Build 212 MP)
    JVM.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 Java Hotspot 1.4.2_18 Interpreter
    JVMLIB.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 Java jvmlib (based on 1.4.2_18)
    KEYB.NLM v2.10 Jul. 26, 2001 NetWare National Keyboard Support
    LANGMANI.NLM v10212.02 Mar. 10, 2009 Novell Cross-Platform Language Manager
    LBURP.NLM v20216.02 Mar. 10, 2009 LDAP Bulkload Update/Replication Protocol service extension for Novell eDirectory 8.8
    LCMCIFS2.NLM v2.00.09 Sep. 14, 2007 Windows Native File Access Login Methods (Build 91 SP)
    LCMMD5.NLM v28000806.23 Jun. 23, 2008 Novell SASL DIGEST-MD5 Proxy LCM 2.8.0.0 20080623
    LDAPSDK.NLM v3.05.02 Apr. 12, 2009 LDAP SDK Library (Clib version)
    LDAPXS.NLM v3.05.01 Apr. 12, 2009 (Clib version)
    LFS.NLM v5.12 Sep. 21, 2005 NetWare Logical File System NLM
    LIB0.NLM v5.90.15 Mar. 10, 2008 Novell Ring 0 Library for NLMs
    LIBC.NLM v9.00.05 Oct. 3, 2008 Standard C Runtime Library for NLMs [optimized, 7]
    LIBCCLIB.NLM v6.00 Oct. 23, 2002 LibC to CLib Shim for NLMs [optimized, 0]
    LIBCVCL.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 Cryptography Library
    LIBNICM.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Base Services
    LIBNSS.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 Generic Library used by NSS (Build 212 MP)
    LIBPERL.NLM v5.00.05 Sep. 13, 2005 Perl 5.8.4 - Script Interpreter and Library
    LIBXML2.NLM v2.06.26 Aug. 27, 2006 libxml2 2.6.26 (LIBC) - The XML C parser and toolkit of Gnome
    LIBXTREG.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Base Services
    LLDAPSDK.NLM v3.05.02 Apr. 12, 2009 LDAP SDK Library (LibC version)
    LLDAPSSL.NLM v3.05.01 Apr. 12, 2009 NetWare SSL Library for LDAP SDK (LibC version)
    LLDAPX.NLM v3.05.01 Apr. 12, 2009 NetWare Extension APIs for LDAP SDK (LibC version)
    LOCNLM32.NLM v6.00.04 Nov. 29, 2005 NetWare NWLocale Runtime Library
    LSAPI.NLM v5.02 Jan. 7, 2003 NLS LSAPI Library
    LSL.MPM v5.70 Feb. 15, 2006 lsl Memory Protection Module
    LSL.NLM v4.86 Feb. 2, 2006 Novell NetWare Link Support Layer
    LSMAFP3.NLM v2.00.11 Sep. 14, 2007 Macintosh Native File Access Login Methods (Build 118 SP)
    LSMCIFS2.NLM v2.00.07 Sep. 14, 2007 Windows Native File Access Login Methods (Build 103 SP)
    LSMMD5.NLM v28000806.23 Jun. 23, 2008 Novell SASL DIGEST-MD5 LSM 2.8.0.0 20080623
    MAL.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Media Access Layer (MAL) (Build 212 MP)
    MALHLP.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Configure help messages (Build 212 MP)
    MANAGE.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Management Functions (Build 212 MP)
    MASV.NLM v2.00.01 Sep. 2, 2008 Mandatory Access Control Service
    MATHLIB.NLM v4.21 Oct. 14, 1999 NetWare Math Library Auto-Load Stub
    MM.NLM v3.22.08 Apr. 24, 2009 ENG TEST - NetWare 6.5 Media Manager
    MOD_IPP.NLM v1.00.04 Jun. 7, 2006 iPrint Module
    MOD_JK.NLM v1.02.23 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache 2.0 plugin for Tomcat
    MOD_XSRV.NLM v3.01.04 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Server (Apache2 Module)
    MOMAPSNW.NLM v4.00 May. 7, 2010 4.0 Build: 492 NW FC AB 2010-05-07 NW
    MONDATA.NLM v6.00 Jul. 18, 2003 NetWare 5.x/6.x Monitor MIB
    MONITOR.NLM v12.02.02 Apr. 4, 2006 NetWare Console Monitor
    MSM.NLM v4.12 Aug. 22, 2007 Novell Multi-Processor Media Support Module
    N1000E.LAN v10.47 Oct. 6, 2007 HP NC-Series Intel N1E Ethernet driver
    NBI.NLM v3.01.01 Jul. 13, 2007 NetWare Bus Interface
    NCM.NLM v1.15.01 Oct. 20, 2004 Novell Configuration Manager
    NCP.NLM v5.61.01 Sep. 30, 2008 NetWare Core Protocol (NCP) Engine
    NCPIP.NLM v6.02.01 Sep. 30, 2008 NetWare NCP Services over IP
    NCPL.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Base Services
    NCPNLM32.NLM v6.01.03 Aug. 26, 2008 NetWare NWNCP Runtime Library
    NDPSGW.NLM v4.01.02 Mar. 2, 2010 NDPS Gateway
    NDPSM.NLM v3.03.02 May. 18, 2010 NDPS Manager
    NDS4.NLM v3.01.60 Apr. 9, 2008 Novell XTier NDS4 Authentication Provider
    NDSAUDIT.NLM v2.09 May. 22, 2003 Directory Services Audit
    NDSIMON.NLM v20216.12 Apr. 15, 2009 NDS iMonitor 8.8 SP5
    NEB.NLM v5.60 Sep. 27, 2004 Novell Event Bus
    NETDB.MPM v5.70 Feb. 15, 2006 netdb Memory Protection Module
    NETDB.NLM v4.11.05 Jan. 6, 2005 Network Database Access Module
    NETLIB.NLM v6.50.22 Feb. 12, 2003 Novell TCPIP NETLIB Module
    NETNLM32.NLM v6.01.03 Aug. 26, 2008 NetWare NWNet Runtime Library
    NIAM.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Identity Manager
    NICISDI.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 Security Domain Infrastructure
    NILE.NLM v7.00.01 Aug. 20, 2007 Novell N/Ties NLM ("") Release Build with symbols
    NIPPED.NLM v1.03.09 Jul. 11, 2006 NetWare 5.x, 6.x INF File Editing Library - NIPPED
    NIPPZLIB.NLM v1.00.01 Nov. 28, 2005 General Purpose ZIP File Library for NetWare
    NIRMAN.NLM v1.06.04 Sep. 18, 2007 TCPIP - NetWare Internetworking Remote Manager
    NIT.NLM v5.90.15 Mar. 10, 2008 NetWare Interface Tools Library for NLMs
    NLDAP.NLM v20219.14 May. 13, 2009 LDAP Agent for Novell eDirectory 8.8 SP5
    NLMLIB.NLM v5.90.15 Mar. 10, 2008 Novell NLM Runtime Library
    NLSADPT2.NLM v2.00 Sep. 9, 2003 NLS and Metering adapter for iManager 2.0 plugin
    NLSAPI.NLM v5.02 Aug. 7, 2003 NLSAPI
    NLSLRUP.NLM v4.01.07 May. 10, 2005 NLS - Usage Metering
    NLSLSP.NLM v5.02 May. 25, 2005 NLS - License Service Provider
    NLSMETER.NLM v3.43 May. 10, 2005 NLS - Software Usage Metering Database
    NLSTRAP.NLM v5.02 Feb. 19, 2004 NetWare License Server Trap
    NMAS.NLM v33200904.07 Apr. 7, 2009 Novell Modular Authentication Service 3.3.2.0 20090407
    NMASGPXY.NLM v33200904.07 Apr. 7, 2009 NMAS Generic Proxy 3.3.2.0 20090407
    NMASLDAP.NLM v33200904.07 Apr. 7, 2009 NMAS LDAP Extensions 3.3.2.0 20090407
    NPKIAPI.NLM v3.33 Apr. 16, 2009 Public Key Infrastructure Services
    NPKIT.NLM v3.33 Apr. 16, 2009 Public Key Infrastructure Services
    NSCM.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Security Context Manager
    NSNS.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Simple Name Service
    NSPDNS.NLM v6.20.03 Sep. 8, 2003 NetWare Winsock 2.0 NSPDNS.NLM Name Service Providers
    NSPNDS.NLM v6.20 Nov. 12, 2001 NetWare Winsock 2.0 NSPNDS.NLM Name Service Provider
    NSPSLP.NLM v6.20.04 Dec. 6, 2007 NetWare Winsock 2.0 NSPSLP.NLM Name Service Provider
    NSS.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS (Novell Storage Services) (Build 212 MP)
    NSSIDK.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Pool Configuration Manager (Build 212 MP)
    NSSWIN.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS ASCI Window API Library (Build 212 MP)
    NTFYDPOP.ENM v2.00.03 Feb. 26, 1999 Directed Pop-Up Delivery Method
    NTFYLOG.ENM v2.00.03 May. 25, 1999 Log File Delivery Method
    NTFYPOP.ENM v2.00.03 May. 21, 1999 Pop Up Delivery Method
    NTFYRPC.ENM v2.00.03 Feb. 26, 1999 RPC Delivery Method
    NTFYSPX.ENM v2.00.03 Feb. 26, 1999 SPX Delivery Method
    NTFYSRVR.NLM v3.00.05 May. 10, 2005 NDPS Notification Server
    NTFYWSOC.ENM v2.00.03 Feb. 26, 1999 Winsock Delivery Method
    NTLS.NLM v20510.01 Mar. 11, 2009 NTLS 2.0.5.0 based on OpenSSL 0.9.7m
    NWAIF103.NLM v7.94 Nov. 30, 2001 nwaif103.nlm v7.94, Build 251 ()
    NWBSRVCM.NLM v7.90 Mar. 20, 2001 NWBSRVCM.NLM v7.90.000, Build 230
    NWENC103.NLM v7.90 Feb. 24, 2001 NWENC103.NLM v7.90.000 (Text Encoding Conversion Library)
    NWIDK.NLM v3.01.01 Sep. 19, 2003 CDWare Volume Module
    NWKCFG.NLM v2.16 Jun. 24, 2005 NetWare Kernel Config NLM
    NWMKDE.NLM v7.94 Dec. 11, 2001 NWMKDE.NLM v7.94.251.000
    NWMON.NLM v1.20 Dec. 14, 2005 NetWare Monitoring Software
    NWPA.NLM v3.21.02 Oct. 29, 2008 NetWare 6.5 NetWare Peripheral Architecture NLM
    NWPALOAD.NLM v3.00 Jul. 10, 2000 NetWare 5 NWPA Load Utility
    NWSA.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS NetWare Semantic Agent (NWSA) (Build 212 MP)
    NWSNUT.NLM v7.00.01 Jul. 11, 2008 NetWare NLM Utility User Interface
    NWTERMIO.NLM v1.00 Sep. 11, 2006 NetWare Terminal Emulation
    NWTRAP.NLM v6.00.05 Jun. 6, 2005 NetWare 5.x/6.x Trap Monitor
    NWUCMGR.NLM v1.05 Mar. 14, 2001 NWUCMGR.NLM v1.5 Build 230
    NWUTIL.NLM v3.00.02 Aug. 20, 2007 Novell Utility Library NLM (_NW65[SP7]{""})
    PARTAPI.NLM v2.00 Apr. 17, 2002 Partition APIs for NetWare 6.1
    PDHCP.NLM v2.08 Oct. 20, 2003 Di-NIC Proxy DHCP Server
    PKI.NLM v3.33 Apr. 16, 2009 Novell Certificate Server
    PKIAPI.NLM v2.23.10 Nov. 20, 2004 Public Key Infrastructure Services
    PMAP.NLM v2.01.04 Mar. 6, 2008 ZENworks Port Mapper Service
    PMLODR.NLM v1.26 Oct. 7, 2005 PMLodr for NW65
    PMPORTAL.NLM v2.16 Nov. 21, 2003 NetWare License Information Portal
    POLIMGR.NLM v6.27 Nov. 3, 2005 NetWare License Policy Manager
    PORTAL.NLM v4.03 Sep. 22, 2008 Novell Remote Manager NLM
    PROCMODS.NLM v8.00 Nov. 5, 2010 PipeLine Procedure Module
    PSVCS.NLM v251.00 Nov. 30, 2001 Portability Services
    PVER500.NLM v3.00 Feb. 1, 2007 NetWare 6.XX Version Library
    PWDLCM.NLM v28000806.23 Jun. 23, 2008 Novell Simple Password Proxy LCM 2.8.0.0 20080623
    PWDLSM.NLM v28000806.23 Jun. 23, 2008 Novell Simple Password LSM 2.8.0.0 20080623
    QUEUE.NLM v5.60 May. 24, 2001 NetWare Queue Services NLM
    REGSRVR.NLM v3.00.06 May. 10, 2005 NDPS Service Registry
    REQUESTR.NLM v5.90.15 Mar. 10, 2008 Novell NCP Requestor for NLMs
    REWRITE.NLM v2.00.63 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache 2.0.63 Rewrite Module
    RMANSRVR.NLM v3.07.02 Mar. 2, 2010 NDPS Resource Manager
    ROLLCALL.NLM v5.00 Jul. 27, 1998 RollCall NLM (101, API 1.0)
    ROTLOGS.NLM v2.00.63 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache 2.0.63 Log Rotation Utility for NetWare
    SAL.NLM v20413.01 Mar. 25, 2009 Novell System Abstraction Layer Version 2.3.1
    SASDFM.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 SAS Data Flow Manager
    SASL.NLM v33200904.07 Apr. 7, 2009 Simple Authentication and Security Layer 3.3.2.0 20090407
    SAVENGIN.NLM v3.27 Dec. 1, 2011 SAV Interface engine
    SCSIHD.CDM v3.03.10 May. 30, 2008 Novell NetWare SCSI Fixed Disk Custom Device Module
    SEG.NLM v1.72 Nov. 4, 2004 NetWare Memory Analyzer
    SERVINST.NLM v5.00.13 Nov. 21, 2005 NetWare 5.x/6.x Instrumentation
    SGUID.NLM v6.01 Sep. 27, 2002 NetWare GUID Services
    SLP.MPM v5.70 Feb. 15, 2006 slp Memory Protection Module
    SLP.NLM v2.13 Nov. 15, 2005 SERVICE LOCATION PROTOCOL (RFC2165/RFC2608)
    SLPTCP.NLM v2.13 Nov. 15, 2005 SERVICE LOCATION TCP/UDP INTERFACE (RFC2165/RFC2608)
    SMDR.NLM v6.58.01 Oct. 16, 2008 SMS - Storage Data Requestor
    SMSUT.NLM v1.01.03 Jun. 26, 2008 SMS - Utility Library for NetWare 6.X
    SNMP.MPM v5.70 Feb. 15, 2006 snmp Memory Protection Module
    SNMP.NLM v4.18 Jul. 25, 2006 Netware 4.x/5.x/6.x SNMP Service
    SPMDCLNT.NLM v33200904.07 Apr. 7, 2009 Novell SPM Client for DClient 3.3.2.0 20090407
    STREAMS.MPM v5.70 Feb. 15, 2006 streams Memory Protection Module
    STREAMS.NLM v6.00.06 May. 4, 2005 NetWare STREAMS PTF
    SVCCOST.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Service Costing Module
    SWEEP.NLM v4.73 Dec. 1, 2011 Sophos Anti-Virus User Interface
    SYSCALLS.NLM v5.61 Aug. 2, 2007 NetWare Operating System Call and Marshalling Library
    SYSLOG.NLM v6.05.03 Oct. 22, 2007 NetWare Logfile Daemon
    TCP.NLM v6.82.06 Dec. 23, 2009 Novell TCP/IP Stack - Transport module (NULL encryption)
    TCPIP.MPM v5.70 Feb. 15, 2006 tcpip Memory Protection Module
    TCPIP.NLM v6.82.02 Sep. 30, 2009 Novell TCP/IP Stack - Network module (NULL encryption)
    TCPSTATS.NLM v6.50.10 Jun. 20, 2003 Web Interface for Protocol Monitoring
    TFTP.NLM v2.05.01 Jan. 15, 2008 ZENworks Preboot TFTP Server
    THREADS.NLM v5.90.15 Mar. 10, 2008 Novell Threads Package for NLMs
    TIMESYNC.NLM v6.61.01 Oct. 14, 2005 NetWare Time Synchronization Services
    TLI.MPM v5.70 Feb. 15, 2006 tli Memory Protection Module
    TLI.NLM v4.30.02 Dec. 19, 2000 NetWare Transport Level Interface Library
    TSAFS.NLM v6.53.03 Oct. 16, 2008 SMS - File System Agent for NetWare 6.X
    TSANDS.NLM v20215.04 Apr. 3, 2009 TSA for Novell eDirectory 7.x, 8.x
    UHCIDRV.CAD v1.07 Feb. 26, 2008 Novell Universal Serial Bus UHCI driver
    UNICODE.NLM v7.00 Oct. 26, 2004 NetWare Unicode Runtime Library (UniLib-based) [optimized]
    USCLSM.NLM v27000507.14 Jul. 14, 2005 Novell Universal SmartCard LSM 2.7.0.0 20050714
    USERLIB.NLM v5.60 Sep. 29, 2008 NetWare Operating System Function Library
    UTILLDAP.NLM v2.00.63 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache 2.0.63 LDAP Authentication Module
    UTILLDP2.NLM v1.00 Nov. 9, 2005 LdapDN Module
    VDISK.NLM v1.00 Nov. 30, 2004 NetWare Virtual Disk
    VERIFY.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 Java verify (based on 1.4.2_18)
    VLRPC.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 DFS Volume Location Database (VLDB) RPC interface (Build 212 MP)
    VMRPC.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 DFS Volume Manager RPC interface (Build 212 MP)
    VOLMN.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Distributed Volume Manager (Build 212 MP)
    VOLSMS.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Distributed Volume Manager (Build 212 MP)
    WS2_32.NLM v6.24.01 Feb. 14, 2008 NetWare Winsock 2.0 NLM
    WSPIP.NLM v6.24 Dec. 4, 2007 NetWare Winsock Service 1.0 NLM for TCP and UDP
    WSPSSL.NLM v6.26 Dec. 4, 2007 NetWare Winsock Service 1.0 NLM for SSL
    X509ALSM.NLM v27000508.03 Aug. 3, 2005 Novell Advanced X.509 LSM 2.7.0.0 20050803
    X509LSM.NLM v27000508.03 Aug. 3, 2005 Novell Simple X.509 LSM 2.7.0.0 20050803
    XENGEXP.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 NICI Import Restricted XENG from Novell, Inc.
    XENGNUL.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 NICI NULL XENG from Novell, Inc.
    XENGUSC.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 NICI U.S./Worldwide XENG from Novell, Inc.
    XI18N.NLM v10310.53 Aug. 2, 2005 Novell Cross-Platform Internationalization Package
    XIM.XLM v27510.02.01 Aug. 25, 2008 Novell NICI Signed Loader
    XMGR.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 NICI XMGR from Novell, Inc.
    XNGAUSC.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 NICI U.S./Worldwide XMGR Assistant XENG from Novell, Inc.
    XSRVNSP.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier XSRVNSP Tree Name Service Provider
    XSUP.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 NICI XSUP from Novell, Inc.
    XTNCP.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier NCP Session Layer Driver
    XTUTIL.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Utility Functions
    ZENIMGDS.NLM v7.00 Mar. 26, 2007 ZENworks Imaging DS Library
    ZENPXE.NLM v7.00 Apr. 22, 2008 ZENworks Imaging PXE Library
    ZENWS.NLM v1.00 Jul. 29, 2002 Zen Workstation Utility NLM
    ZIP.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 Java zip (based on 1.4.2_18)
    ZLIB.NLM v1.01.04 Dec. 20, 2002 ZLIB 1.1.4 General Purpose Compression Library for NetWare
    ZLSS.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Journaled Storage System (ZLSS) (Build 212 MP)
    End of Modules List 312 Modules Loaded.
    Top of LAN Driver Configuration Listing
    Signature.....: HardwareDriverMLID
    CFG Version...: 1.15
    Node Address..: 002655D01666
    Board Number..: 1
    Board Instance: 1
    Media Type....: ETHERNET_II
    MLID Version..: 10.47
    Slot..........: 101
    I/O...........: 5000h -> 501Fh
    Memory........: FBFE0000h -> FBFFFFFFh
    and FBFC0000h -> FBFC0FFFh
    IRQ...........: 7
    DMA...........: None
    Logical Name..: N1000E_1_EII
    Signature.....: HardwareDriverMLID
    CFG Version...: 1.15
    Node Address..: 002655D01667
    Board Number..: 2
    Board Instance: 2
    Media Type....: ETHERNET_II
    MLID Version..: 10.47
    Slot..........: 102
    I/O...........: 5020h -> 503Fh
    Memory........: FBFA0000h -> FBFBFFFFh
    and FBF80000h -> FBF80FFFh
    IRQ...........: 11
    DMA...........: None
    Logical Name..: N1000E_2_EII
    End of LAN Driver Configuration Listing
    Top of Boot Drive Information
    SERVER.EXE loaded from...........: C:\NWSERVER\
    SERVER.EXE version...............: 1355757 bytes 10-03-2008 09:53am
    Total Space on Drive.............: 2016 MB
    Available Space..................: 1920 MB
    End of Boot Drive Information
    Top of Storage Device Configuration Information
    Storage Device Summary:
    0x0000 [V100-A100] USB UHCI Controller
    0x0001 [V100-A101] USB UHCI Controller
    0x0002 [V100-A102] USB UHCI Controller
    0x0003 [V100-A103] USB UHCI Controller
    0x0004 [V100-A104] USB EHCI Controller
    0x0005 [V100-A105] USB UHCI Controller
    0x0006 [V505-A0] HP SAS/SATA Unified RAID Driver
    0x0007 [V505-A0-D0:0] HP LOGICAL VOLUME f/w:1.66
    0x0008 DOS Partitioned Media
    0x0019 [V505-A0-D0:0-PAA6BA] Free Partition Space
    0x0009 [V505-A0-D0:0-P0] Big DOS; OS/2; Win95 Partition
    0x000A [V505-A0-D0:0-P7F8] NSS Partition
    0x000B [V505-A0-D0:0-P4678] NSS Partition
    0x000C [V505-A0-D0:0-P1CD18] NSS Partition
    0x000D [V505-A0-D0:0-P21B38] NSS Partition
    0x000F [V505-A0-D0:0-P26B38] NSS Partition
    0x0011 [V505-A0-D0:0-P2BB38] NSS Partition
    0x0012 [V505-A0-D0:0-P30B38] Free Partition Space
    0x0013 [V505-A0-D0:0-P353B8] NSS Partition
    0x0014 [V505-A0-D0:0-P48C38] NSS Partition
    0x0015 [V505-A0-D0:0-P612D8] NSS Partition
    0x0016 [V505-A0-D0:0-P79978] NSS Partition
    0x0017 [V505-A0-D0:0-P92018] NSS Partition
    0x0018 [V505-A0-D0:0-PAA6B8] Free Partition Space
    Storage Device Details:
    [V100-A100] USB UHCI Controller
    Media Manager object ID..: 0x0000
    Media Manager Object Type: Adapter
    Driver name..............: UHCIDRV.CAD
    Assigned driver ID.......: 256
    Adapter number...........: 256
    Primary port address.....: 1000
    Primary port length......: 18
    Secondary port address...: Not used
    Secondary port length....: Not used
    Interrupt 0..............: 18
    Interrupt 1..............: Not used
    Slot.....................: 10027
    DMA0.....................: Not used
    DMA1.....................: Not used
    Memory 0 address.........: Not used
    Memory 0 length..........: Not used
    Memory 1 address.........: Not used
    Memory 1 length..........: Not used
    [V100-A101] USB UHCI Controller
    Media Manager object ID..: 0x0001
    Media Manager Object Type: Adapter
    Driver name..............: UHCIDRV.CAD
    Assigned driver ID.......: 256
    Adapter number...........: 257
    Primary port address.....: 1020
    Primary port length......: 18
    Secondary port address...: Not used
    Secondary port length....: Not used
    Interrupt 0..............: 28
    Interrupt 1..............: Not used
    Slot.....................: 10028
    DMA0.....................: Not used
    DMA1.....................: Not used
    Memory 0 address.........: Not used
    Memory 0 length..........: Not used
    Memory 1 address.........: Not used
    Memory 1 length..........: Not used
    [V100-A102] USB UHCI Controller
    Media Manager object ID..: 0x0002
    Media Manager Object Type: Adapter
    Driver name..............: UHCIDRV.CAD
    Assigned driver ID.......: 256
    Adapter number...........: 258
    Primary port address.....: 1040
    Primary port length......: 18
    Secondary port address...: Not used
    Secondary port length....: Not used
    Interrupt 0..............: 38
    Interrupt 1..............: Not used
    Slot.....................: 10029
    DMA0.....................: Not used
    DMA1.....................: Not used
    Memory 0 address.........: Not used
    Memory 0 length..........: Not used
    Memory 1 address.........: Not used
    Memory 1 length..........: Not used
    [V100-A103] USB UHCI Controller
    Media Manager object ID..: 0x0003
    Media Manager Object Type: Adapter
    Driver name..............: UHCIDRV.CAD
    Assigned driver ID.......: 256
    Adapter number...........: 259
    Primary port address.....: 1060
    Primary port length......: 18
    Secondary port address...: Not used
    Secondary port length....: Not used
    Interrupt 0..............: 28
    Interrupt 1..............: Not used
    Slot.....................: 10030
    DMA0.....................: Not used
    DMA1.....................: Not used
    Memory 0 address.........: Not used
    Memory 0 length..........: Not used
    Memory 1 address.........: Not used
    Memory 1 length..........: Not used
    [V100-A104] USB EHCI Controller
    Media Manager object ID..: 0x0004
    Media Manager Object Type: Adapter
    Driver name..............: EHCIDRV.CAD
    Assigned driver ID.......: 256
    Adapter number...........: 260
    Primary port address.....: Not used
    Primary port length......: Not used
    Secondary port address...: Not used
    Secondary port length....: Not used
    Interrupt 0..............: 18
    Interrupt 1..............: Not used
    Slot.....................: 10031
    DMA0.....................: Not used
    DMA1.....................: Not used
    Memory 0 address.........: 0000
    Memory 0 length..........: 006C
    Memory 1 address.........: Not used
    Memory 1 length..........: Not used
    [V100-A105] USB UHCI Controller
    Media Manager object ID..: 0x0005
    Media Manager Object Type: Adapter
    Driver name..............: UHCIDRV.CAD
    Assigned driver ID.......: 256
    Adapter number...........: 261
    Primary port address.....: 3800
    Primary port length......: 18
    Secondary port address...: Not used
    Secondary port length....: Not used
    Interrupt 0..............: 38
    Interrupt 1..............: Not used
    Slot.....................: 10037
    DMA0.....................: Not used
    DMA1.....................: Not used
    Memory 0 address.........: Not used
    Memory 0 length..........: Not used
    Memory 1 address.........: Not used
    Memory 1 length..........: Not used
    [V505-A0] HP SAS/SATA Unified RAID Driver
    Media Manager object ID..: 0x0006
    Media Manager Object Type: Adapter
    Driver name..............: HPQCISS.HAM
    Assigned driver ID.......: 1285
    Adapter number...........: 0
    Primary port address.....: Not used
    Primary port length......: Not used
    Secondary port address...: Not used
    Secondary port length....: Not used
    Interrupt 0..............: 7
    Interrupt 1..............: Not used
    Slot.....................: 10041
    DMA0.....................: Not used
    DMA1.....................: Not used
    Memory 0 address.........: 0000
    Memory 0 length..........: 0400
    Memory 1 address.........: Not used
    Memory 1 length..........: Not used
    [V505-A0-D0:0] HP LOGICAL VOLUME f/w:1.66
    Media manager object ID.....: 0x0007
    Media manager Object Type...: Device
    Device type.................: Magnetic disk
    Capacity....................: 858112 MB
    Unit Size, in bytes.........: 512
    Sectors.....................: 32
    Heads.......................: 255
    Cylinders...................: 18785
    Block size, in bytes........: 4294966784
    Activated...................: Yes
    Registered..................: Yes
    Functional..................: Yes
    Writable....................: Yes
    Write protected.............: No
    Reserved....................: No
    Removable...................: No
    Read Handicap...............: No
    Offline.....................: No
    Controller Number...........: 0
    Device Number...............: 0
    Adapter Number..............: 0
    System Type.................: 0x90000
    Read after write verify.....: Disabled
    DOS Partitioned Media
    Media Manager object ID..: 0x0008
    Media Manager Object Type: Media
    Media type...............: IBM partition
    [V505-A0-D0:0-PAA6BA] Free Partition Space
    Media Manager object ID......: 0x0019
    Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
    Activated....................: Yes
    Registered...................: Yes
    Functional...................: Yes
    Reserved.....................: No
    Logical partition............: No
    Beginning sector of partition: 1429591200
    Size, in sectors.............: 328023484
    [V505-A0-D0:0-P0] Big DOS; OS/2; Win95 Partition
    Media Manager object ID......: 0x0009
    Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
    Activated....................: Yes
    Registered...................: Yes
    Functional...................: Yes
    Reserved.....................: Yes
    Logical partition............: No
    Beginning sector of partition: 32
    Size, in sectors.............: 4177888
    [V505-A0-D0:0-P7F8] NSS Partition
    Media Manager object ID......: 0x000A
    Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
    Activated....................: Yes
    Registered...................: Yes
    Functional...................: Yes
    Reserved.....................: Yes
    Logical partition............: Yes
    Beginning sector of partition: 4177920
    Size, in sectors.............: 32768000
    [V505-A0-D0:0-P4678] NSS Partition
    Media Manager object ID......: 0x000B
    Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
    Activated....................: Yes
    Registered...................: Yes
    Functional...................: Yes
    Reserved.....................: Yes
    Logical partition............: Yes
    Beginning sector of partition: 36945920
    Size, in sectors.............: 204800000
    [V505-A0-D0:0-P1CD18] NSS Partition
    Media Manager object ID......: 0x000C
    Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
    Activated....................: Yes
    Registered...................: Yes
    Functional...................: Yes
    Reserved.....................: Yes
    Logical partition............: Yes
    Beginning sector of partition: 241745920
    Size, in sectors.............: 40960000
    [V505-A0-D0:0-P21B38] NSS Partition
    Media Manager object ID......: 0x000D
    Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
    Activated....................: Yes
    Registered...................: Yes
    Functional...................: Yes
    Reserved.....................: No
    Logical partition............: No
    Beginning sector of partition: 282705920
    Size, in sectors.............: 41943040
    [V505-A0-D0:0-P26B38] NSS Partition
    Media Manager object ID......: 0x000F
    Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
    Activated....................: Yes
    Registered...................: Yes
    Functional...................: Yes
    Reserved.....................: No
    Logical partition............: No
    Beginning sector of partition: 324648960
    Size, in sectors.............: 41943040
    [V505-A0-D0:0-P2BB38] NSS Partition
    Media Manager object ID......: 0x0011
    Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
    Activated....................: Yes
    Registered...................: Yes
    Functional...................: Yes
    Reserved.....................: No
    Logical partition............: No
    Beginning sector of partition: 366592000
    Size, in sectors.............: 41943040
    [V505-A0-D0:0-P30B38] Free Partition Space
    Media Manager object ID......: 0x0012
    Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
    Activated....................: Yes
    Registered...................: Yes
    Functional...................: Yes
    Reserved.....................: No
    Logical partition............: No
    Beginning sector of partition: 408535040
    Size, in sectors.............: 38010880
    [V505-A0-D0:0-P353B8] NSS Partition
    Media Manager object ID......: 0x0013
    Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
    Activated....................: Yes
    Registered...................: Yes
    Functional...................: Yes
    Reserved.....................: Yes
    Logical partition............: Yes
    Beginning sector of partition: 446545920
    Size, in sectors.............: 163840000
    [V505-A0-D0:0-P48C38] NSS Partition
    Media Manager object ID......: 0x0014
    Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
    Activated....................: Yes
    Registered...................: Yes
    Functional...................: Yes
    Reserved.....................: Yes
    Logical partition............: Yes
    Beginning sector of partition: 610385920
    Size, in sectors.............: 204800000
    [V505-A0-D0:0-P612D8] NSS Partition
    Media Manager object ID......: 0x0015
    Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
    Activated....................: Yes
    Registered...................: Yes
    Functional...................: Yes
    Reserved.....................: Yes
    Logical partition............: No
    Beginning sector of partition: 815185920
    Size, in sectors.............: 204800000
    [V505-A0-D0:0-P79978] NSS Partition
    Media Manager object ID......: 0x0016
    Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
    Activated....................: Yes
    Registered...................: Yes
    Functional...................: Yes
    Reserved.....................: Yes
    Logical partition............: Yes
    Beginning sector of partition: 1019985920
    Size, in sectors.............: 204800000
    [V505-A0-D0:0-P92018] NSS Partition
    Media Manager object ID......: 0x0017
    Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
    Activated....................: Yes
    Registered...................: Yes
    Functional...................: Yes
    Reserved.....................: Yes
    Logical partition............: No
    Beginning sector of partition: 1224785920
    Size, in sectors.............: 204800000
    [V505-A0-D0:0-PAA6B8] Free Partition Space
    Media Manager object ID......: 0x0018
    Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
    Activated....................: Yes
    Registered...................: Yes
    Functional...................: Yes
    Reserved.....................: No
    Logical partition............: No
    Beginning sector of partition: 1429585920
    Size, in sectors.............: 5280
    End of Storage Device Configuration Information
    * Volume Statistics for SYS *
    File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
    Volume Size................: 15934 MB
    Block Size.................: 4 KB
    Total Blocks...............: 4079171
    Free Blocks................: 3072770
    Purgable Blocks............: 158
    Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
    Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
    Available Directory Entries: 2147439380
    Sectors per Block..........: 8
    Free Disk Space............: 12003 MB
    Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
    Suballocation..............: OFF
    Compression................: OFF
    Migration..................: OFF
    * Volume Statistics for _ADMIN *
    File System................: Unknown
    Volume Size................: 4 MB
    Block Size.................: 4 KB
    Total Blocks...............: 1024
    Free Blocks................: 1024
    Purgable Blocks............: 0
    Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
    Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
    Available Directory Entries: 2147483647
    Sectors per Block..........: 8
    Free Disk Space............: 4 MB
    Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
    Suballocation..............: OFF
    Compression................: OFF
    Migration..................: OFF
    * Volume Statistics for IMAGES *
    File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
    Volume Size................: 99702 MB
    Block Size.................: 4 KB
    Total Blocks...............: 25523833
    Free Blocks................: 12760577
    Purgable Blocks............: 0
    Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
    Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
    Available Directory Entries: 2147483627
    Sectors per Block..........: 8
    Free Disk Space............: 49846 MB
    Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
    Suballocation..............: OFF
    Compression................: OFF
    Migration..................: OFF
    * Volume Statistics for PRINTING *
    File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
    Volume Size................: 19932 MB
    Block Size.................: 4 KB
    Total Blocks...............: 5102598
    Free Blocks................: 4766787
    Purgable Blocks............: 55
    Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
    Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
    Available Directory Entries: 2147480871
    Sectors per Block..........: 8
    Free Disk Space............: 18620 MB
    Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
    Suballocation..............: OFF
    Compression................: OFF
    Migration..................: OFF
    * Volume Statistics for STAFF *
    File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
    Volume Size................: 140541 MB
    Block Size.................: 4 KB
    Total Blocks...............: 35978535
    Free Blocks................: 4278115
    Purgable Blocks............: 428
    Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
    Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
    Available Directory Entries: 2147301305
    Sectors per Block..........: 8
    Free Disk Space............: 16711 MB
    Purgable Disk Space........: 1 MB
    Suballocation..............: OFF
    Compression................: OFF
    Migration..................: OFF
    * Volume Statistics for FCLTY *
    File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
    Volume Size................: 120121 MB
    Block Size.................: 4 KB
    Total Blocks...............: 30751101
    Free Blocks................: 6551019
    Purgable Blocks............: 2
    Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
    Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
    Available Directory Entries: 2147231898
    Sectors per Block..........: 8
    Free Disk Space............: 25589 MB
    Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
    Suballocation..............: OFF
    Compression................: OFF
    Migration..................: OFF
    * Volume Statistics for APPS *
    File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
    Volume Size................: 79761 MB
    Block Size.................: 4 KB
    Total Blocks...............: 20418911
    Free Blocks................: 8163253
    Purgable Blocks............: 0
    Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
    Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
    Available Directory Entries: 2147246784
    Sectors per Block..........: 8
    Free Disk Space............: 31887 MB
    Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
    Suballocation..............: OFF
    Compression................: OFF
    Migration..................: OFF
    * Volume Statistics for ACDMC *
    File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
    Volume Size................: 99700 MB
    Block Size.................: 4 KB
    Total Blocks...............: 25523381
    Free Blocks................: 9816828
    Purgable Blocks............: 0
    Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
    Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
    Available Directory Entries: 2147069762
    Sectors per Block..........: 8
    Free Disk Space............: 38346 MB
    Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
    Suballocation..............: OFF
    Compression................: OFF
    Migration..................: OFF
    * Volume Statistics for PUPILS *
    File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
    Volume Size................: 99702 MB
    Block Size.................: 4 KB
    Total Blocks...............: 25523813
    Free Blocks................: 13579469
    Purgable Blocks............: 0
    Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
    Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
    Available Directory Entries: 2147417601
    Sectors per Block..........: 8
    Free Disk Space............: 53044 MB
    Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
    Suballocation..............: OFF
    Compression................: OFF
    Migration..................: OFF
    Volume Name Name Spaces Loaded
    SYS DOS
    SYS MACINTOSH
    SYS NFS
    SYS LONG_NAMES
    _ADMIN DOS
    _ADMIN MACINTOSH
    _ADMIN NFS
    _ADMIN LONG_NAMES
    IMAGES DOS
    IMAGES MACINTOSH
    IMAGES NFS
    IMAGES LONG_NAMES
    PRINTING DOS
    PRINTING MACINTOSH
    PRINTING NFS
    PRINTING LONG_NAMES
    STAFF DOS
    STAFF MACINTOSH
    STAFF NFS
    STAFF LONG_NAMES
    FCLTY DOS
    FCLTY MACINTOSH
    FCLTY NFS
    FCLTY LONG_NAMES
    APPS DOS
    APPS MACINTOSH
    APPS NFS
    APPS LONG_NAMES
    ACDMC DOS
    ACDMC MACINTOSH
    ACDMC NFS
    ACDMC LONG_NAMES
    PUPILS DOS
    PUPILS MACINTOSH
    PUPILS NFS
    PUPILS LONG_NAMES
    ************************************************** ***************************

    Hi.
    On 18.01.2012 15:36, gayfield wrote:
    >
    > Hi Massimo
    >
    > Many thanks for your quick response. I've been into the console.log and
    > pasted the last few entries below :
    >
    > 17-01-2012 6:19:58 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=6001D]
    > Cache memory allocator out of available memory.
    >
    >
    > 17-01-2012 6:19:58 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=2000A]
    > Short term memory allocator is out of memory.
    > 1 attempts to get more memory failed.
    > request size in bytes 14807040 from Module SWEEP.NLM
    >
    > Loading Module FSIFIND.NLM [
    > OK ]
    > Loading Module FSBACK.NLM [
    > OK ]
    >
    > 17-01-2012 8:24:13 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=6001D]
    > Cache memory allocator out of available memory.
    >
    >
    > 17-01-2012 8:24:13 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=2000A]
    > Short term memory allocator is out of memory.
    > 2 attempts to get more memory failed.
    > request size in bytes 11403264 from Module SWEEP.NLM
    >
    >
    > 17-01-2012 8:34:17 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=6001D]
    > Cache memory allocator out of available memory.
    >
    >
    > 17-01-2012 8:34:17 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=2000A]
    > Short term memory allocator is out of memory.
    > 3 attempts to get more memory failed.
    > request size in bytes 15418880 from Module SWEEP.NLM
    >
    >
    > 17-01-2012 8:48:14 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=6001D]
    > Cache memory allocator out of available memory.
    >
    >
    > 17-01-2012 8:48:14 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=2000A]
    > Short term memory allocator is out of memory.
    > 4 attempts to get more memory failed.
    > request size in bytes 14807040 from Module SWEEP.NLM
    >
    >
    > 17-01-2012 8:58:18 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=6001D]
    > Cache memory allocator out of available memory.
    >
    >
    > 17-01-2012 8:58:18 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=2000A]
    > Short term memory allocator is out of memory.
    > 5 attempts to get more memory failed.
    > request size in bytes 14680064 from Module SWEEP.NLM
    >
    > Hope this better clarifies the situation.
    Somewhat. From the time of day, and the loading of commvault modules
    inbetween, this looks like a combined backup / AV scan issue. The
    requests of Sophos are comparably big in size, and they vary a lot. That
    will lead to fragmentation of your memory, until the memory can't be
    allocated in one chunk any more. It also *seems* as if Sophos actually
    scans the data while it gets backed up. That is *bad*.
    CU,
    Massimo Rosen
    Novell Knowledge Partner
    No emails please!
    http://www.cfc-it.de

  • Forcing the disk cache to be written to disk

    Hi all. We are looking for a way to insure the content of the icommon in the ufs on disk as we need to read it. However, calling sync is async and does not seem to provide what we're looking for. When a file is updated, created all the information is not immediately written to disk. It is kept in the unified memory and later flushed to the disk cache which then writes it down on the media. However, since we're reading the hot FS we need to force ALL file metadata AND data to be written to the media.
    Seems like when I run the command 'ff', probably as a side-effect, this is happening. ff takes too long and is at the FS level. Is it a side-effect, or does 'ff' calls a specific func (truss did not reveal anything useful).
    Thanks all and best regards.

    I. What is really happening under the hood?
    1.sync(2) passes execution into kernel mode
    2.kernel function syssync() is called then
    3.then vfs_sync(0)
    4.eventually ufs_sync(vfsp,�) is called with NULL as a first argument
    in case of NULL(as a 1st arg) ufs_sync() just schedules but does not necessarily completes the writing of ufs metadata before returning.
    So, this behavior completely matches with one described in man section for sync(2).
    II. directio does not solve your problem because it affects only the way the file data( not metadata) goes to disk. ( read directio(3C) and mount_ufs(1M) carefully )
    III. What you really need
    May be it seems to be a heavy weapon for you but one of the possibilities is:
         To write a loadable system call (loadable kernel module) that will
    invoke ufs_sync() with proper arguments (non NULL vfsp) for mounted file
    system of interest.

  • How to use Java NIO to implement disk cache for serialized java objects

    Hi,
    I have a cache (implemented as hahstable etc.) that contains java objects (mostly strings) and swaps objects from runtime memory to the disk and back based on some algorithms. Currently, the reading and writing from the disk is implemented using java.io.* package i.e. fileInputstream and FileOutputStream. Essentially, I serialize the java object and write to the disk and the deserialize and give it back to the Hashtable cache.
    The performance of swapping from disk to memory is kinda slow. I have read that memory mapping would improve the performance.
    My idea is to do the following:
    Have one big file mapped to memory. I write the serialized objects to different portions of the file and then read those portions when needed. I can use the MappedByteBuffer for that but then I have the following questions. I will not store objects in the hashtable anymore.
    1. How do I delete things from the cache in the above design i.e. how do I delete portions of a mapped file?
    2. How do I serialize objects using ByteBuffers and then deserialize them? I guess this shouldn't be hard but just want to confirm.
    Do you think this is the right design or should I change? Right now using the old io package, I have a separate file for each object. When using the NIO package, I want to store all objects in a single file in different portions of the file, is that the right way to go?
    As you can see, I am beginner in memory mapped io and need help.

    Have one big file mapped to memory. I write the serialized objects to different portions of the file and then read those portions when needed. I can use the MappedByteBufferThis is a good idea, one that I have worked on. It involves quite a bit of manipulation with temporary buffers and a deep working knowledge of object serialization.
    1. How do I delete things from the cache in the above design i.e. how do I delete portions of a mapped file?The best way to handle this is do a two-step process, cutting the file into two pieces and gluing it back together where the original one is...
    2. How do I serialize objects using ByteBuffers and then deserialize them? I guess this shouldn't be hard but just want to confirm.It is hard. Wrapping the streams and making the IO work properly is not the challenge however. The hard part comes in hacking the object streams. The object input/output streams use a ClassDescriptor object which only gets written once/ read once. This shouldn't be a problem if you will read/write the entire file at once, but will bring you grief if you want random access to your objects. You will also need an indexing mechanism to support random access.
    Do you think this is the right design or should I change? Right now using the old io package, I have a separate file for each object. When using the NIO package, I want to store all objects in a single file in different portions of the file, is that the right way to go?I guess it depends on your needs. Do you require random access to objects? NIO provides some performance gains, but mostly for very large amounts of data (>10M in my experience).
    You can always write all your objects into the same file using normal io techniques and you can still generate an index and acheive random access. It might be easier...
    Good luck

  • Cache memory error

    here is the hardware:
    k8t neo-fis2r ms-6702, rev 1.0
    latest ami bios version 6702ms.193
    amd 64 3400+
    kingston khx4000/512 hyperx ddr pc-4000, memory
    msi fx5900-vtd256, geforce fx 5900, video card
    antec sonata 380 watt case
    zalman cnps7000a, cpu cooler
    western digital rapter 74gb sata, hard drive
    problem is at end of boot up error message "cache memory error"
    system will not load windows xp pro.
    system bios does not show hard drive.
    can use floopy to boot into dos
    have changed out cpu, same problem.
    have changed out mother board, same problem.
    have changed out ram, same problem.
    at end of boot screen shows nvram and amount correctly.
    have tried disabling system bios cacheable, shadow ram, etc. still same problem.
    if the cache memory error can be remedied believe it possible system
    will then recognize the hard drive in the bios section, which currently only reports the cdrom drive but not the hard drive.
    any ideas? Thanks for any help.

    Hi Patrick
    Sorry, looked again and see its SATA.  No jumper on SATA.
    You will not see a SATA in normal post screens, you have to enable it in bios, either Via or Promise, I prefer Via.  In Integrated peripherals, look at page 3- 20 of manual, there is an item SATA IDE, that is Via controller, enable that. Above it is PATA IDE, the IDE1 and 2 controller, enable that. Below it the floppy disk controller, enable it (not auto).  Then go up to Onboard PCI controller, click on it, then the P20378 SATA controller, the promise controller, disable it. Check the LAN and onboard sound the AC97 controller, is enabled if you use it. The 1394 controller, the firewire for digital cameras etc. Now go to the advanced bios features, the Boot Sequence, set it to floppy, CD, and Serial CH_0 (SATA 1 on via). Enable  Boot from other devices, and enable floppy seek, (floppy swap is disabled). Then exit and save.
    You can now out your XP CD in CD drive and boot, it will ask you to press key to boot from CD, the first blue setup screen, will ask you to press F^ to load drivers, then a couple of mins later it arrives at S screen, put Via floppy in drive A, press enter, this will give list of files, select BOTH XP drivers ( you need to load 1, then back to S screen repeat for 2nd driver, then enter to proceed, next the F* ' accept ' screen, then load windows setup, then it asks if you want to install to drive. partition, format and install.
    In the bios screens your HDD will show as Via device called Serial CH_0 or Serial CH_1 (SATA2), which appear after the other drive screens.  If the promise controller is enabled, but no drive attached to SER1 or 2, then you will see a message ' Bios not  installed'
    Any problems, there should be none, let me know.
    cheers
    jocko

  • My cache memory will not increase over 1024 why not

    I work Tec support for a company that uses firefox we recently went to a new program that seems to have issues when the cache memory is lower then 2048 some computers have no problem increasing there memory size other wont allow this to happen.
    all computers have over 2gigs of ram

    What happens if you set the browser.cache.disk.capacity pref directly to 2048000 on the <b>about:config</b> page and disable the automatic setting ?

  • No Disk Cache

    I have some problems with disk cache. looks like it's not turned on. thats th e result of about:cache
    Memory cache device
    Number of entries: 439
    Maximum storage size: 18432 KiB
    Storage in use: 2589 KiB
    Inactive storage: 2589 KiB
    List Cache Entries
    Offline cache device
    Number of entries: 0
    Maximum storage size: 512000 KiB
    Storage in use: 0 KiB
    Cache Directory: /home/username/.mozilla/firefox/g4h2tnrc.default/OfflineCache
    List Cache Entries
    my OS is Ubuntu Lucid (10.04) firefox version 3.6.9

    * Make sure that you not run Firefox in [[Private Browsing]] mode
    * In Private Browsing mode some menu items are disabled (grayed) and features like visited links are disabled and not showing
    * You are in Private Browsing mode if you see "Tools > Stop Private Browsing", possibly grayed
    See [[Private Browsing]] and http://kb.mozillazine.org/Issues_related_to_Private_Browsing
    * You enter Private Browsing mode if you select: Tools > Options > Privacy > History: Firefox will: "Never Remember History"
    * To see all History settings, choose: Tools > Options > Privacy, choose the setting <b>Firefox will: Use custom settings for history</b>
    * Uncheck: [ ] "Automatically start Firefox in a private browsing session"

  • Disk caching on host or guest?

    OK, this is probably a noob question, but if we have 64GB RAM on our HyperV (2008R2) host, and we are running disk intensive software, do we:
    a) Allocate the 'minimum' RAM to the guest, and leave the rest for the host to use for disk caching, or
    b) Allocate the maximum RAM to the guest (leaving 1GB for the host), and let the guest use it for disk caching?
    Allocating half & half would seem to be a waste as they will probably both end up caching the same data (will they?), but it's not clear whether we're best letting the host or the guest do the caching. Or does it actually matter at all?
    I've had a good look around and haven't been able to find any relevant recommendations.
    More Info - the 'disk intensive' software is mainly a PostgreSQL server. We'll give that about 8GB for its shared buffers, but it seems to be recommended to use OS disk caching beyond that. There is a 1GB BBWC P420i RAID controller so write caching is performed
    on that. Currently, our biggest performance bottleneck seems to be due to uncached reads, so we are increasing the host RAM from 16GB to 64GB (and adding an SSD for index storage), but just want to know whether it's best to increase the guest RAM allocation,
    or leave it 'spare' on the host.

    OK, this is probably a noob question, but if we have 64GB RAM on our HyperV (2008R2) host, and we are running disk intensive software, do we:
    a) Allocate the 'minimum' RAM to the guest, and leave the rest for the host to use for disk caching, or
    b) Allocate the maximum RAM to the guest (leaving 1GB for the host), and let the guest use it for disk caching?
    Allocating half & half would seem to be a waste as they will probably both end up caching the same data (will they?), but it's not clear whether we're best letting the host or the guest do the caching. Or does it actually matter at all?
    I've had a good look around and haven't been able to find any relevant recommendations.
    More Info - the 'disk intensive' software is mainly a PostgreSQL server. We'll give that about 8GB for its shared buffers, but it seems to be recommended to use OS disk caching beyond that. There is a 1GB BBWC P420i RAID controller so write caching is performed
    on that. Currently, our biggest performance bottleneck seems to be due to uncached reads, so we are increasing the host RAM from 16GB to 64GB (and adding an SSD for index storage), but just want to know whether it's best to increase the guest RAM allocation,
    or leave it 'spare' on the host.
    With Windows Server 2008 R2 / Hyper-V 2.0 you don't have that many options as VHD access is not cached by host. At all... So you'd better allocate move VM memory as I/O would be cached inside a VM. Windows Server 2012 R2 / Hyper-V 3.0 would give you more
    caching options that include Read-Only CSV Cache, Flash-based Write-Back Cache coming with Tiering and also SMB access is also extensively cached @ both client and server sides. See:
    CSV Cache
    http://blogs.msdn.com/b/clustering/archive/2013/07/19/10286676.aspx
    Write Back Cache
    http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn387076.aspx
    Hyper-V over SMB
    http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj134187.aspx
    So it could be a good idea to upgrade to Windows Server 2012 R2 now :) 
    You may deploy third-party software to do a RAM and flash cache but you need to think twice as it could be simply dangerous - no reboot you may lose gigabytes of your transactions...
    Hope this helped a bit :)
    StarWind VSAN [Virtual SAN] clusters Hyper-V without SAS, Fibre Channel, SMB 3.0 or iSCSI, uses Ethernet to mirror internally mounted SATA disks between hosts.

  • Nokia C5-03 Low memory problems ( Other Files )

    Please help. I have a nokia C5-03 the handset is showing phone memory is full. I have checked and uninstalled all unecessay applications. But problem is still there. when i check the phone memory it indicates that i have other files of 42mb installed and using phone memory. however i am unable to check what other files are installed or classfied as other files. Can you please assist me so i can know what these other files consist of or where they are located.

    Hi Thetao,
    I typed a more extensive reaction before, but it got lost when I pressed "post". Therefore I just respond to the main points that you mentioned (and some I found out myself).
    Strange: I can't find the 40 MB Maximum User Storage on the Nokia website anymore (nor the 75 MB). But it sounds very familiar to me. It looks to me as if they removed this from the phone specs, also of other Smartphones by the way.
    Yesterday, I deleted some small apps that I don't use (anymore) such as InternetRadio and I also removed Nokia email. Although the apps were below 2 MB together, this freed up over 7 MB of Phone memory (24 MB free now)! I think there were still some old emails stored in C: which I couldn't delete any other way. This helped me a great deal already but I tried your suggestions as well.
    1. No map data or CITIES folder on C: 2. Switched messages memory to phone (and phone to offline mode) and I did indeed find a forgotten email account with 30 email messages. Not much but I had 24,7 MB free after that. Of course, I put messages memory back to the memorycard. 3. Used the free edition of Y-Browser to manually delete the cache folder. Not much data in that, but 25,1 MB free after that. Nice tool, with which you can reach folders that normally stay hidden! Used YBrowser to search all C: for files over 300 kB. Only 2 files: boot_space.txt in C:\ (500 kB, contains only the X repeatedly as far as I see, but is probably essential for the operating system) and C:\resource\python25\pyton25.zip (1 MB). It looks like an installation package, but I'm not sure if I can delete it. By the way: YBrowser hasn't made a shortcut in one of the menus. Only way that I found to start it was to look for it using the Phone's search function. Is there a way to make this shortcut myself?
    4. Yes I did. No Images folder on C: anymore, nor other big files (see point 3)
    5. I use Bluetooth for file transfer sometimes, mainly for installation files (such as YBrowser.sis, but I did this one via USB-cable). However, no big files are left on C: so I don't think I have this problem.
    6. I tried to delete Nokia Chat yesterday as well (with the other apps), but it won't be uninstalled the normal way as it says "Uninstall cancelled" (not sure about the exact translation since my phone 'speaks' Dutch) Do you know if there's another way to get rid of this 3 MB app that I don't use at all?
    I think I may have found an explanation and a solution for the memory problem while navigating. You mentioned the "memory in use" in the map settings. Above that option there's a slide bar for the % of memory that the navigation can use. Standard is 70%. I always thought this was about storage memory on (in my case) the memorycard. Another topic mentioned that this the working memory (so the RAM) that the navigation may use. Setting it to 70% means there's only 30% left for other apps that run in the background. The other topic states that this is nog enough so the slider should be set to for instance 30% for navigation leaving 70% free for "the phone". From behind my computer, navigation seems much more stable. I'll try this setting in my car soon and let you know how it works.
    Thanks a lot for thinking along with me so far! There's already 25,1 MB of space, which is great since it was only 7 MB last Sunday. And navigation looks more stable. I'd appreciate if you have some more answers to my latest questions, but if not I think my phone will work a lot better already!
    Regards, Paul

  • Memory problem with jdk/jre 1.1.8

    My name is BERGMANN Yannick.
    I'm working for IRM in Li?ge and we developped an application (user interface for an industrial measurement system) in Java (JDK/JRE version : 1.1.8).
    We have a big memory problem with this application :
    - This user interface is running on a WINDOWS NT PC with 128MB.
    - This is the command to lanch our application :
    C:\Program Files\JavaSoft\JRE\1.1\bin\jrew.exe" -ms32m -mx32m -cp "\Program Files\HMI\HMI.zip;\Velocis\Add_On\Jdbc\raima.jar;\Program Files\Swing-1.1.1\swingall.jar" be.irm.hmi.kernel.HMI -t15 -d"Velocis rdstcp" -newdb -mf1m -mr20
    - When our application is running, everything seems to be OK in memory for it. The garbage collector seems to work properly and our application has always at least 5MB free memory (We use the java instruction "Runtime.getRuntime().freeMemory()" to know this).
    - But when we look in the "Windows NT task manager" for the "jrew" application, the memory increases ALWAYS.
    - After 5 days our application is completely frozen and blocked ...???
    - here is a memory map of our Windows NT PC :
         "jre.exe"     "commit total"     "commit limit"     "commit peak"     "physical total"     "physical available"     "physical file cache"     
    Monday     92264     109256     194944     109424     130484     19492     6216     
    Thuesday     106196     123072     194944     123348     130484     6072     5840     
    Wednesday     110836     132288     194944     132416     130484     4408     5140     
    Thursday     108200     144980     194944     145140     130484     4888     5148     
    Friday     109440     158319     194944     161334     130484     4911     4992     
    Monday     111600     209060     228548     209148     130484     5184     3484     
    Have you any idea of what is happening with "jrew" in memory ?
    We have had this problem for six month and we are totaly out of idea.
    If you can give us any idea, we'll appreciate a lot.
    Thanks in advance,
    BERGMANN Yannick
    IRM SA - Software Engineer
    Tel. (32)4/239.90.10
    Tel. (32)4/239.90.74 (direct)
    Fax (32)4/263.40.97
    E-mail [email protected]

    We had a memory problem with a swing applet in our company. The major reason for this was that we added new components in a JTree and removed them later again, and the components we removed were never garbage collected. This was because with these components we added different listeners, and we didn't remove the listeners after we didn't need the components anymore. After we corrected this, the components where garbage collected.
    Perhaps it's a similar problem you have, or I have no idea. Check that you remove actionlisteners, mouselisteners etc from components you want to be garbage collected.
    You could also test your application with OptimizeIt to see what objects you create and how many you get of them over time: http://www.vmgear.com

  • Memory problem with 5330 XpressMusic

    Hi,
    I seem to have a memory problem with my 5330, I have a 1Gb micro disc installed. My son sent me a photo from his phone, when it arrived I got a warning on the scren that 'there is not enough memory to receive messages', I have tried to delete as much as I can, a lot tells me I can't delete it, but I still get the same warning. This warnig shows up each time I switch on the phone. How can I get myself more space? Can I move things from the phone memory to the memory card?
    Gerald
    Message Edited by warmbells on 01-Nov-2009 06:19 PM

    Are you sure you're using a 5330 XpressMusic? Or is it a 5320 XpressMusic? The former is yet to be released, AFAIK.
    Assuming that you are using a 5320, try these steps:
    -> Move all photos, music, videos stored in the phone memory to the memory card. You can use the built-in File Manager to accomplish this.
    -> Delete all files that you would've received via bluetooth, present in your Inbox. You can save them to the mass storage.
    -> Clear the browser cache.
    -> Clear the Sent Items folder.
    -> Make sure you don't have too many messages in your inbox.
    Hope this helps
    Cheers,
    DeepestBlue
    5800 XpressMusic (Rock Stable) | N73 Music Edition (Never Say Die) | 1108 (Old and faithful)
    If you find any post useful, click on the Green "Kudos" Button on the left to say Thank You...

  • Strange performance issue with 3510/3511 SAM-FS disk cache

    Hi there!
    I'm running a small SAM-QFS environment and have some strange performance issue on the disk storage part, which somebody here might be able to explain.
    Configuration: one 3510, dual controller, RAID-5 9+1, one hot spare and one disk not configured for whatever reason. The R5 logical drive hosts a 150GB LUN for SAM-QFS metadata (mm in SAM-FS speak) and a 1TB LUN for data (mr in SAM-FS speak). Further, there are two small LUNs (2GB, 100GB) for some other purpose. Those two LUNs have nearly no I/O. All disks are SUN146G. Host connection is 2GBit, multipathing enabled and working.
    Then the disk cache became too small, and the customer added a 3511 expansion unit with SUN300G disks. One logical drive is a RAID-1, 1+1, used for NetBackup catalog. The other is a RAID-5, 8+1, providing two LUNs: 260GB SAM-FS metadata (mm) and 1.999TB SAM-FS data (mr).
    For SAM-FS, the LUNs form two file systems: one "residing" in the 3510, the other "residing" in the 3511 expansion. Cabling is according to the manual and checked several times by several independant people. Operating system is Solaris 10, hardware is a V880.
    The problem we observe: SAM-FS I/O on LUNs on disks inside the 3510 is fine. With iostat, I see 100MB/s read and 50MB/s write at the same time. On the SAM-FS file system which is running on the two LUNs in the 3511, the limit seems to be at 40MB/s read/write. Both SAM-FS file systems are configured the same in regards of block size.
    In case I have activity on both SAM-FS file systems, I see 100MB/s+ on the LUN running inside the controller shelf and another 40MB/s on the disk runnin in the 3511 expansion chassis. So, the controller is easily capable of handling 150MB/s.
    Cache settings in the 3510 controller are default I think (wasn't installed by me), batteries are fine.
    Is this 40MB/s we experience a limitation by the expansion shelf? Don't think so. Anybody has any ideas on this? What parameters to check or to change? Any hint appreciated. I can also provide further details if needed. Thank you.
    wolfgang

    SUN300G disks sound like 300GB FC disks.
    Depending on how many files are in the SAMFS file system, sharing the mm and mr devices on the same RAID array can be a pretty horrible idea. In my opinion and experience, it's almost always better to NEVER put more than one LUN on a RAID array. Period. Putting more than one LUN on an array results in IO contention on that array. And large, unnaturally configured (9+1? Why?) RAID arrays will have problems from the start.
    What are the block sizes used on the RAID arrays? It wouldn't surprise me to see that the RAID array on the expansion tray has a very large block size. Larger block sizes are, in general, not better. Especially for SAMFS metadata - which IIRC is something like 8k or 16k blocks.
    I suspect what is happening is most of the metadata updates are going to the mm device on the new array, contending with the IO operations on the file data.
    How much space is left on each mm device? What does "iostat -sndxz 2" show when you're having the IO problems?

Maybe you are looking for

  • Displaying a prompt on report's initial load

    Hi, I know that in WebI I can set a prompt to be displayed when the data is refreshed but that's not what I wish to accomplish at the moment.  What I want to do is to display a prompt when the report is first loaded.  Example:  As soon as the user op

  • Drobo failure & Directory corruption

    Reporting my experience with a Drobo failure and great support from Alsoft DiskWarrior : My Drobo failed. Not a hardware failure, but a corruption in the directory that prevented my disk to mount... According to Drobo support, everything was "ok" on

  • Batch management & process Order

    hi gurus !!! can we have qty divided in two batch numbers against same process order ??

  • Control & Simulation Loop failed to compile

    Dear Forum Members, I have a problem with a Control & Simulation Loop program (attached) that just doesn't compile & run.  I believe that the problem is associated with the 'Feedback Node' at the bottom of this Control & Simulation Frame since if thi

  • Workflow task "In Process".

    Hi Experts, i have created a workflow for some accounts transfer procedure. there is a background task for transferring of accounts. When i am testing the workflow sometime this task executes in 10 mins(as it is background task and background tasks h