GR based IV is inactive
Hi Team,
user created a PO on 10.10.08 without checking GR based IV (it is not there in info record). actually this Po is subject to ERS. GR is done on 27.10.08. when he is running MRRL, it is giving an error "GR based IV is not active". now neither I can change the PO nor I can post manual invoice in MIRO (giving error message ERS is active for this PO).
How to solve it
Thanks,
Satish
You cannot edit the option of GR based IV once you have done a GR (even a partial one).....first of all cancel the material document, then put a tick in the GR Based IV in the invoice tab of PO (You can do that now as there are no GRs against the PO)...then post the GR once again.
The best thing to do is to tick the GR Based IV field in the vendor master and also the Inforecord so that these values carry as default to the PO.
Regards,
Similar Messages
-
Portal to timeout on User inactivity
Dear All,
I have already read many posts on portal timeouts to occur based on user inactivity. (that is for the portal to log off automatically when there is no mouse movement or KB activity say in 10 minutes.)
Can you please give a step by step guide as to how to achive this? Earlier posts do not clearly specify how to achieve this properly.
I am using SAP 2004S SP07.
Any assistance is highly appreciated,
Antony.Even I am on the same page and trying to figure out a way to logoff for user inactivity. we are using kiosks for ESS. so it is really needed.....
I am following through the link <a href="http://help.sap.com/saphelp_nw04/helpdata/en/bd/6ca740aa053a13e10000000a155106/frameset.htm">Specifying HTTP Session Timeout</a>. This would work for me. But I can not locate the file web.xml on the server. Please advise if you had used this.
Thanks in advance -
International Activation of iPhone
I am Italian, living in Italy most of my time, but travelling abroad very often, I need to use SIM cards from other countries, such as Albania, Mozambique, Lebanon, Etc. as I am there for long periods of time.
I am planning to buy an iphone in France, as I understood it can be used with different SIM cards. Is it thrue, or iphone still remain the only phone which may not be used internationally.
It would be a pity as I already changed from Windows to Mac computers about 8 months ago and I would be also very happy to move to iphone. There is any solution?Kevin Brown2 wrote:
Then there will be actions based upon their inaction. At the very least will be an interesting conversation with the French Telecommunications Authority.
I'll agree with you there. It will be interesting to see if they have the power to regulate what a device does outside of its borders...
I'll add this: It has been determined that the problem does not rest in the unlocking process but instead in a file of the iPhone OS which has the number formats of certain countries. I find it very hard to believe that Apple would release the unlocked phone in France and not realize that people from other countries would come to France to purchase it.
Thus, leaving countries out - especially neighboring countries - seems to be a deliberate move.
Message was edited by: Ansuz82 -
Architecture question using deferred tasks
Hi ,
I have a requirement where I need to expire the accounts based on their inactivity for a period of time.
But this period should be reset if there is any unlock or reset password operations for this user.
Is it a good practice to add a deferred task for achieving this?
I understand that I need to scan for any differed tasks instances of expiring accounts and remove them as part of the reset process. Does this sound reasonable?
Any one have successfully implemented this kind of feature? Is there a better way to do this?
Your help is highly appreciated.
Thank you,
Ani.Hi,
One way which I can suggest as deferred task seems little complicated :
1. Add an extended attribute for user say.. LastUpdatedDate, make is searchable.
2. Update this attribute on any kind of user update.
3. Now put a deferred task which will search for user with the above attribute value as say[ current date - x (where x is the inactivity days)] and do what ever you want to do with the returned list of user.
This way no check nothing and even 'x' is configurable with the help of a rule or something.
Hope this will help you.
Regards,
Surinder
Edited by: Surinder_Singh_Bora on Mar 31, 2008 3:40 PM -
1602i AP cannot connect to CT2504 Controller
Hi all,
I have a CT2504 with
Software Version
7.5.102.0
Field Recovery Image Version
System Name
Cisco_a5:d
I also have a 1602i AP with the software 15.2.4-JA1
The AP is trying to connect to the controller, but fails. I get the following log:
*Sep 25 16:58:33.035: %CAPWAP-3-ERRORLOG: Go join a capwap controller
*Sep 25 16:58:33.000: %CAPWAP-5-DTLSREQSEND: DTLS connection request sent peer_i
p: 192.168.0.250 peer_port: 5246
*Sep 25 16:58:33.483: %CAPWAP-5-DTLSREQSUCC: DTLS connection created sucessfully
peer_ip: 192.168.0.250 peer_port: 5246
*Sep 25 16:58:33.483: %CAPWAP-5-SENDJOIN: sending Join Request to 192.168.0.250
*Sep 25 16:58:33.483: %CAPWAP-3-ERRORLOG: Invalid event 10 & state 5 combination
*Sep 25 16:58:33.483: %CAPWAP-3-ERRORLOG: CAPWAP SM handler: Failed to process m
essage type 10 state 5.
*Sep 25 16:58:33.483: %CAPWAP-3-ERRORLOG: Failed to handle capwap control messag
e from controller
*Sep 25 16:58:33.483: %CAPWAP-3-ERRORLOG: Failed to process encrypted capwap pac
ket from 192.168.0.250
*Sep 25 16:58:51.611: %CAPWAP-3-ERRORLOG: Retransmission count for packet exceed
., 1)x(UNKNOWN_MESSAGE_TYPE (5)
*Sep 25 16:58:51.611: %CAPWAP-3-ERRORLOG: GOING BACK TO DISCOVER MODE
*Sep 25 16:58:51.611: %DTLS-5-SEND_ALERT: Send FATAL : Close notify Alert to 192
.168.0.250:5246
*Sep 25 16:58:51.655: %LWAPP-3-CLIENTERRORLOG: LWAPP LED Init: incorrect led sta
te 255
*Sep 25 16:58:51.675: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface Dot11Radio0, changed state to a
dministratively down
*Sep 25 16:58:51.675: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface Dot11Radio1, changed state to a
dministratively down
*Sep 25 16:58:51.687: %LINK-6-UPDOWN: Interface Dot11Radio0, changed state to up
*Sep 25 16:58:51.727: %LINK-6-UPDOWN: Interface Dot11Radio1, changed state to up
*Sep 25 16:58:52.675: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Dot11Radio
0, changed state to down
*Sep 25 16:58:52.723: %LINK-6-UPDOWN: Interface Dot11Radio1, changed state to do
wn
*Sep 25 16:58:52.731: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface Dot11Radio1, changed state to r
eset
*Sep 25 16:58:53.715: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Dot11Radio
0, changed state to up
*Sep 25 16:58:53.723: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Dot11Radio
1, changed state to down
*Sep 25 16:58:53.767: %LINK-6-UPDOWN: Interface Dot11Radio1, changed state to up
*Sep 25 16:58:53.775: %LINK-6-UPDOWN: Interface Dot11Radio0, changed state to do
wn
*Sep 25 16:58:53.783: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface Dot11Radio0, changed state to r
eset
*Sep 25 16:58:54.767: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Dot11Radio
1, changed state to up
*Sep 25 16:58:54.775: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Dot11Radio
0, changed state to down
*Sep 25 16:58:54.811: %LINK-6-UPDOWN: Interface Dot11Radio0, changed state to up
*Sep 25 16:58:55.811: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Dot11Radio
0, changed state to up
This repeats without success. Any help would be appreciated.I only have the second port connected to the switch. It is also the management port. I don't have a lot of info about the interfaces, so do not know if this is the best option. Run-config is as follows:
System Inventory
NAME: "Chassis" , DESCR: "Cisco 2500 Series Wireless LAN Controller"
PID: AIR-CT2504-K9, VID: V01, SN: PSZ172304B8
Burned-in MAC Address............................ 10:F3:11:A5:DD:20
Maximum number of APs supported.................. 5
Press Enter to continue or to abort
System Information
Manufacturer's Name.............................. Cisco Systems Inc.
Product Name..................................... Cisco Controller
Product Version.................................. 7.5.102.0
Bootloader Version............................... 1.0.18
Field Recovery Image Version..................... 7.4.1.30
Firmware Version................................. PIC 16.0
Build Type....................................... DATA + WPS
System Name...................................... Cisco_a5:dd:24
System Location..................................
System Contact...................................
System ObjectID.................................. 1.3.6.1.4.1.9.1.1279
IP Address....................................... 192.168.0.250
Last Reset....................................... Power on reset
System Up Time................................... 0 days 0 hrs 42 mins 36 secs
System Timezone Location......................... (GMT +2:00) Jerusalem
System Stats Realtime Interval................... 5
System Stats Normal Interval..................... 180
Configured Country............................... TR - Turkey
Operating Environment............................ Commercial (0 to 40 C)
Internal Temp Alarm Limits....................... 0 to 65 C
Internal Temperature............................. +31 C
External Temperature............................. +36 C
Fan Status....................................... 4200 rpm
State of 802.11b Network......................... Enabled
State of 802.11a Network......................... Enabled
Number of WLANs.................................. 1
Number of Active Clients......................... 0
Burned-in MAC Address............................ 10:F3:11:A5:DD:20
Maximum number of APs supported.................. 5
Redundancy Information
Redundancy Mode ................................. SSO DISABLED
Local State...................................... ACTIVE
Peer State....................................... N/A
Unit............................................. Primary
Unit ID.......................................... 10:F3:11:A5:DD:20
Redunadancy State................................ N/A
Mobility MAC..................................... 10:F3:11:A5:DD:20
Redundancy Management IP Address................. 0.0.0.0
Peer Redundancy Management IP Address............ 0.0.0.0
Redundancy Port IP Address....................... 0.0.0.0
Peer Redundancy Port IP Address.................. 169.254.0.0
AP Bundle Information
Primary AP Image Size
ap1g1 10776
ap1g2 10116
ap3g1 10156
ap3g2 11276
ap801 7444
ap802 8848
c1130 5092
c1140 10008
c1250 7184
c1520 8288
c602i 3756
Secondary AP Image Size
ap3g1 5792
ap801 5192
ap802 5232
c1100 3084
c1130 4964
c1140 4992
c1200 3364
c1240 4812
c1250 5504
c1310 3136
c1520 6404
c3201 4324
c602i 3716
Switch Configuration
802.3x Flow Control Mode......................... Disable
FIPS prerequisite features....................... Disabled
secret obfuscation............................... Enabled
Strong Password Check Features
case-check.................................... Enabled
consecutive-check............................. Enabled
default-check................................. Enabled
username-check................................ Enabled
position-check................................ Disabled
case-digit-check.............................. Disabled
Min. Password length.......................... 3
Min. Upper case chars......................... 0
Min. Lower case chars......................... 0
Min. Digits chars............................. 0
Min. Special chars............................ 0
Mgmt User
Password Lifetime [days]...................... 0
Password Lockout.............................. Disabled
Lockout Attempts.............................. 0
Lockout Timeout [mins]........................ 0
SNMPv3 User
Password Lifetime [days]...................... 0
Password Lockout.............................. Disabled
Lockout Attempts.............................. 3
Lockout Timeout [mins]........................ 5
Network Information
RF-Network Name............................. cont
Web Mode.................................... Enable
Secure Web Mode............................. Enable
Secure Web Mode Cipher-Option High.......... Disable
Secure Web Mode Cipher-Option SSLv2......... Disable
Secure Web Mode RC4 Cipher Preference....... Disable
OCSP........................................ Disabled
OCSP responder URL..........................
Secure Shell (ssh).......................... Enable
Telnet...................................... Disable
Ethernet Multicast Forwarding............... Disable
Ethernet Broadcast Forwarding............... Disable
IPv4 AP Multicast/Broadcast Mode............ Multicast Address : 0.0.0.0
IGMP snooping............................... Disabled
IGMP timeout................................ 60 seconds
IGMP Query Interval......................... 20 seconds
MLD snooping................................ Disabled
MLD timeout................................. 60 seconds
MLD query interval.......................... 20 seconds
User Idle Timeout........................... 300 seconds
ARP Idle Timeout............................ 300 seconds
Cisco AP Default Master..................... Enabled
AP Join Priority............................ Disable
Mgmt Via Wireless Interface................. Disable
Mgmt Via Dynamic Interface.................. Disable
Bridge MAC filter Config.................... Enable
Bridge Security Mode........................ EAP
Mesh Full Sector DFS........................ Enable
AP Fallback ................................ Enable
Web Auth CMCC Support ...................... Disabled
Web Auth Redirect Ports .................... 80,2
Web Auth Proxy Redirect ................... Disable
Web Auth Captive-Bypass .................. Disable
Web Auth Secure Web ....................... Enable
Fast SSID Change ........................... Disabled
AP Discovery - NAT IP Only ................. Enabled
IP/MAC Addr Binding Check .................. Enabled
CCX-lite status ............................ Disable
oeap-600 dual-rlan-ports ................... Disable
oeap-600 local-network ..................... Enable
oeap-600 Split Tunneling (Printers)......... Disable
WebPortal Online Client .................... 0
mDNS snooping............................... Disabled
mDNS Query Interval......................... 15 minutes
Port Summary
STP Admin Physical Physical Link Link
Pr Type Stat Mode Mode Status Status Trap POE
1 Normal Disa Enable Auto Auto Down Enable N/A
2 Normal Forw Enable Auto 1000 Full Up Enable N/A
3 Normal Disa Enable Auto Auto Down Enable Enable (Power Off)
4 Normal Disa Enable Auto Auto Down Enable Enable (Power Off
AP Summary
Number of APs.................................... 0
Global AP User Name.............................. Not Configured
Global AP Dot1x User Name........................ Not Configured
AP Name Slots AP Model Ethernet MAC Location
Country IP Address Clients
AP Tcp-Mss-Adjust Info
AP Name TCP State MSS Size
AP Location
Total Number of AP Groups........................ 0
Site Name........................................ default-group
Site Description.................................
NAS-identifier................................... Cisco_a5:dd:24
AP Operating Class............................... Not-configured
RF Profile
2.4 GHz band.....................................
5 GHz band.......................................
WLAN ID Interface Network Admission Control Radio Pol
icy
1 management Disabled None
*AP3600 with 802.11ac Module will only advertise first 8 WLANs on 5GHz radios.
AP Name Slots AP Model Ethernet MAC Location
Port Country Priority
RF Profile
Number of RF Profiles............................ 0
Out Of Box State................................. Disabled
RF Profile Name Band Description
11n-client-only Applied
802.11a Configuration
802.11a Network.................................. Enabled
11acSupport...................................... Enabled
11nSupport....................................... Enabled
802.11a Low Band........................... Enabled
802.11a Mid Band........................... Enabled
802.11a High Band.......................... Enabled
802.11a Operational Rates
802.11a 6M Rate.............................. Mandatory
802.11a 9M Rate.............................. Supported
802.11a 12M Rate............................. Mandatory
802.11a 18M Rate............................. Supported
802.11a 24M Rate............................. Mandatory
802.11a 36M Rate............................. Supported
802.11a 48M Rate............................. Supported
802.11a 54M Rate............................. Supported
802.11n MCS Settings:
MCS 0........................................ Supported
MCS 1........................................ Supported
MCS 2........................................ Supported
MCS 3........................................ Supported
MCS 4........................................ Supported
MCS 5........................................ Supported
MCS 6........................................ Supported
MCS 7........................................ Supported
MCS 8........................................ Supported
MCS 9........................................ Supported
MCS 10....................................... Supported
MCS 11....................................... Supported
MCS 12....................................... Supported
MCS 13....................................... Supported
MCS 14....................................... Supported
MCS 15....................................... Supported
MCS 16....................................... Supported
MCS 17....................................... Supported
MCS 18....................................... Supported
MCS 19....................................... Supported
MCS 20....................................... Supported
MCS 21....................................... Supported
MCS 22....................................... Supported
MCS 23....................................... Supported
802.11ac MCS Settings:
Nss=1: MCS 0-9 .............................. Supported
Nss=2: MCS 0-9 .............................. Supported
Nss=3: MCS 0-9 .............................. Supported
802.11n Status:
A-MPDU Tx:
Priority 0............................... Enabled
Priority 1............................... Disabled
Priority 2............................... Disabled
Priority 3............................... Disabled
Priority 4............................... Enabled
Priority 5............................... Enabled
Priority 6............................... Disabled
Priority 7............................... Disabled
Aggregation scheduler.................... Enabled
Frame Burst.............................. Automatic
Realtime Timeout..................... 10
A-MSDU Tx:
Priority 0............................... Enabled
Priority 1............................... Enabled
Priority 2............................... Enabled
Priority 3............................... Enabled
Priority 4............................... Enabled
Priority 5............................... Enabled
Priority 6............................... Disabled
Priority 7............................... Disabled
Rifs Rx ..................................... Enabled
Guard Interval .............................. Any
Beacon Interval.................................. 100
CF Pollable mandatory............................ Disabled
CF Poll Request mandatory........................ Disabled
CFP Period....................................... 4
CFP Maximum Duration............................. 60
Default Channel.................................. 36
Default Tx Power Level........................... 0
DTPC Status..................................... Enabled
Fragmentation Threshold.......................... 2346
RSSI Low Check................................... Disabled
RSSI Threshold................................... -80
TI Threshold..................................... -50
Legacy Tx Beamforming setting.................... Disabled
Traffic Stream Metrics Status.................... Disabled
Expedited BW Request Status...................... Disabled
World Mode....................................... Enabled
dfs-peakdetect................................... Enabled
EDCA profile type................................ default-wmm
Voice MAC optimization status.................... Disabled
Call Admission Control (CAC) configuration
Voice AC:
Voice AC - Admission control (ACM)............ Disabled
Voice Stream-Size............................. 84000
Voice Max-Streams............................. 2
Voice max RF bandwidth........................ 75
Voice reserved roaming bandwidth.............. 6
Voice CAC Method ............................. Load-Based
Voice tspec inactivity timeout................ Disabled
CAC SIP-Voice configuration
SIP based CAC ................................ Disabled
SIP Codec Type ............................... CODEC_TYPE_G711
SIP call bandwidth ........................... 64
SIP call bandwith sample-size ................ 20
Video AC:
Video AC - Admission control (ACM)............ Disabled
Video max RF bandwidth........................ Infinite
Video reserved roaming bandwidth.............. 0
Video load-based CAC mode..................... Disabled
Video CAC Method ............................. Static
CAC SIP-Video Configuration
SIP based CAC ................................ Disabled
Best-effort AC - Admission control (ACM)...... Disabled
Background AC - Admission control (ACM)....... Disabled
Maximum Number of Clients per AP Radio........... 200
802.11a Airewave Director Configuration
RF Event and Performance Logging
Channel Update Logging......................... Off
Coverage Profile Logging....................... Off
Foreign Profile Logging........................ Off
Load Profile Logging........................... Off
Noise Profile Logging.......................... Off
Performance Profile Logging.................... Off
TxPower Update Logging......................... Off
Default 802.11a AP performance profiles
802.11a Global Interference threshold.......... 10 %
802.11a Global noise threshold................. -70 dBm
802.11a Global RF utilization threshold........ 80 %
802.11a Global throughput threshold............ 1000000 bps
802.11a Global clients threshold............... 12 clients
Default 802.11a AP monitoring
802.11a Monitor Mode........................... enable
802.11a Monitor Mode for Mesh AP Backhaul...... disable
802.11a Monitor Channels....................... Country channels
802.11a RRM Neighbor Discover Type............. Transparent
802.11a AP Coverage Interval................... 180 seconds
802.11a AP Load Interval....................... 60 seconds
802.11a AP Noise Interval...................... 180 seconds
802.11a AP Signal Strength Interval............ 60 seconds
802.11a AP Neighbor Report Interval............ 180 seconds
802.11a AP Interference Report Interval........ 120 seconds
Leader Automatic Transmit Power Assignment
Transmit Power Assignment Mode................. AUTO
Transmit Power Update Interval................. 600 seconds
Transmit Power Threshold....................... -70 dBm
Transmit Power Neighbor Count.................. 3 APs
Min Transmit Power............................. -10 dBm
Max Transmit Power............................. 30 dBm
Update Contribution
Noise........................................ Enable
Interference................................. Enable
Load......................................... Disable
Device Aware................................. Disable
Transmit Power Assignment Leader............... Cisco_a5:dd:24 (192.168.0.250)
Last Run....................................... 361 seconds ago
Last Run Time.................................. 0 seconds
TPC Mode....................................... Version 1
TPCv2 Target RSSI.............................. -67 dBm
TPCv2 VoWLAN Guide RSSI........................ -67.0 dBm
TPCv2 SOP...................................... -85.0 dBm
TPCv2 Default Client Ant Gain.................. 0.0 dBi
TPCv2 Path Loss Decay Factor................... 3.6
TPCv2 Search Intensity......................... 10 Iterations
AP Name Channel TxPower Allowed Power Levels
Coverage Hole Detection
802.11a Coverage Hole Detection Mode........... Enabled
802.11a Coverage Voice Packet Count............ 100 packets
802.11a Coverage Voice Packet Percentage....... 50%
802.11a Coverage Voice RSSI Threshold.......... -80 dBm
802.11a Coverage Data Packet Count............. 50 packets
802.11a Coverage Data Packet Percentage........ 50%
802.11a Coverage Data RSSI Threshold........... -80 dBm
802.11a Global coverage exception level........ 25 %
802.11a Global client minimum exception lev.... 3 clients
Leader Automatic Channel Assignment
Channel Assignment Mode........................ AUTO
Channel Update Interval........................ 600 seconds [startup]
Anchor time (Hour of the day).................. 0
Update Contribution
Noise........................................ Enable
Noise........................................ Enable
Load......................................... Disable
Device Aware................................. Disable
CleanAir Event-driven RRM option............... Disabled
CleanAir Event-driven RRM sensitivity.......... Medium
Channel Assignment Leader...................... Cisco_a5:dd:24 (192.168.0.250)
Last Run....................................... 361 seconds ago
Last Run Time.................................. 0 seconds
DCA Sensitivity Level.......................... STARTUP (5 dB)
DCA 802.11n/ac Channel Width................... 20 MHz
DCA Minimum Energy Limit....................... -95 dBm
Channel Energy Levels
Minimum...................................... unknown
Average...................................... unknown
Maximum...................................... unknown
Channel Dwell Times
Minimum...................................... unknown
Average...................................... unknown
Maximum...................................... unknown
802.11a 5 GHz Auto-RF Channel List
Allowed Channel List......................... 36,40,44,48,52,56,60,64
Unused Channel List.......................... 100,104,108,112,116,120,124,
128,132,136,140
DCA Outdoor AP option.......................... Disabled
802.11a Radio RF Grouping
RF Group Name.................................. cont
RF Protocol Version(MIN)....................... 30(30)
RF Packet Header Version....................... 2
Group Role(Mode)............................... LEADER(AUTO)
Group State.................................... Idle
Group Update Interval.......................... 600 seconds
Group Leader................................... Cisco_a5:dd:24 (192.168.0.250)
Group Member
................................. Cisco_a5:dd:24 (192.168.0.250)
Maximum/Current number of Group Member......... 20/1
Maximum/Current number of AP................... 500/0
Last Run....................................... 361 seconds ago
802.11a CleanAir Configuration
Clean Air Solution............................... Disabled
Air Quality Settings:
Air Quality Reporting........................ Enabled
Air Quality Reporting Period (min)........... 15
Air Quality Alarms........................... Enabled
Air Quality Alarm Threshold................ 35
Unclassified Interference.................. Disabled
Unclassified Severity Threshold............ 20
Interference Device Settings:
Interference Device Reporting................ Enabled
Interference Device Types:
TDD Transmitter.......................... Enabled
Jammer................................... Enabled
Continuous Transmitter................... Enabled
DECT-like Phone.......................... Enabled
Video Camera............................. Enabled
WiFi Inverted............................ Enabled
WiFi Invalid Channel..................... Enabled
SuperAG.................................. Enabled
Canopy................................... Enabled
WiMax Mobile............................. Enabled
WiMax Fixed.............................. Enabled
Interference Device Alarms................... Enabled
Interference Device Types Triggering Alarms:
TDD Transmitter.......................... Disabled
Jammer................................... Enabled
Continuous Transmitter................... Disabled
DECT-like Phone.......................... Disabled
Video Camera............................. Disabled
WiFi Inverted............................ Enabled
WiFi Invalid Channel..................... Enabled
SuperAG.................................. Disabled
Canopy................................... Disabled
WiMax Mobile............................. Disabled
WiMax Fixed.............................. Disabled
Additional Clean Air Settings:
CleanAir ED-RRM State........................ Disabled
CleanAir ED-RRM Sensitivity.................. Medium
CleanAir ED-RRM Custom Threshold............. 50
CleanAir Persistent Devices state............ Disabled
CleanAir Persistent Device Propagation....... Disabled
802.11a CleanAir AirQuality Summary
AQ = Air Quality
DFS = Dynamic Frequency Selection
AP Name Channel Avg AQ Min AQ Interferers DFS
802.11b Configuration
802.11b Network.................................. Enabled
11gSupport....................................... Enabled
11nSupport....................................... Enabled
802.11b/g Operational Rates
802.11b/g 1M Rate............................ Mandatory
802.11b/g 2M Rate............................ Mandatory
802.11b/g 5.5M Rate.......................... Mandatory
802.11b/g 11M Rate........................... Mandatory
802.11g 6M Rate.............................. Supported
802.11g 9M Rate.............................. Supported
802.11g 12M Rate............................. Supported
802.11g 18M Rate............................. Supported
802.11g 24M Rate............................. Supported
802.11g 36M Rate............................. Supported
802.11g 48M Rate............................. Supported
802.11g 54M Rate............................. Supported
802.11n MCS Settings:
MCS 0........................................ Supported
MCS 1........................................ Supported
MCS 2........................................ Supported
MCS 3........................................ Supported
MCS 4........................................ Supported
MCS 5........................................ Supported
MCS 6........................................ Supported
MCS 7........................................ Supported
MCS 8........................................ Supported
MCS 9........................................ Supported
MCS 10....................................... Supported
MCS 11....................................... Supported
MCS 12....................................... Supported
MCS 13....................................... Supported
MCS 14....................................... Supported
MCS 15....................................... Supported
MCS 16....................................... Supported
MCS 17....................................... Supported
MCS 18....................................... Supported
MCS 19....................................... Supported
MCS 20....................................... Supported
MCS 21....................................... Supported
MCS 22....................................... Supported
MCS 23....................................... Supported
802.11n Status:
A-MPDU Tx:
Priority 0............................... Enabled
Priority 1............................... Disabled
Priority 2............................... Disabled
Priority 3............................... Disabled
Priority 4............................... Enabled
Priority 5............................... Enabled
Priority 6............................... Disabled
Priority 7............................... Disabled
Aggregation scheduler.................... Enabled
Realtime Timeout..................... 10
A-MSDU Tx:
Priority 0............................... Enabled
Priority 1............................... Enabled
Priority 2............................... Enabled
Priority 3............................... Enabled
Priority 4............................... Enabled
Priority 5............................... Enabled
Priority 6............................... Disabled
Priority 7............................... Disabled
Rifs Rx ..................................... Enabled
Guard Interval .............................. Any
Beacon Interval.................................. 100
CF Pollable mode................................. Disabled
CF Poll Request mandatory........................ Disabled
CFP Period....................................... 4
CFP Maximum Duration............................. 60
Default Channel.................................. 1
Default Tx Power Level........................... 0
DTPC Status..................................... Enabled
RSSI Low Check................................... Disabled
RSSI Threshold................................... -80
Call Admission Limit ........................... 105
G711 CU Quantum ................................. 15
ED Threshold..................................... -50
Fragmentation Threshold.......................... 2346
PBCC mandatory................................... Disabled
RTS Threshold.................................... 2347
Short Preamble mandatory......................... Enabled
Short Retry Limit................................ 7
Legacy Tx Beamforming setting.................... Disabled
Traffic Stream Metrics Status.................... Disabled
Expedited BW Request Status...................... Disabled
World Mode....................................... Enabled
Faster Carrier Tracking Loop..................... Disabled
EDCA profile type................................ default-wmm
Voice MAC optimization status.................... Disabled
Call Admission Control (CAC) configuration
Voice AC - Admission control (ACM)............ Disabled
Voice Stream-Size............................. 84000
Voice Max-Streams............................. 2
Voice max RF bandwidth........................ 75
Voice reserved roaming bandwidth.............. 6
Voice CAC Method.............................. Load-Based
Voice tspec inactivity timeout................ Disabled
CAC SIP-Voice configuration
SIP based CAC ................................ Disabled
SIP Codec Type ............................... CODEC_TYPE_G711
SIP call bandwidth: .......................... 64
SIP call bandwidth sample-size ............... 20
Video AC - Admission control (ACM)............ Disabled
Video max RF bandwidth........................ Infinite
Video reserved roaming bandwidth.............. 0
Video load-based CAC mode..................... Disabled
Video CAC Method ............................. Static
CAC SIP-Video configuration
SIP based CAC ................................ Disabled
Best-effort AC - Admission control (ACM)...... Disabled
Background AC - Admission control (ACM)....... Disabled
Maximum Number of Clients per AP................. 200
802.11b Airewave Director Configuration
RF Event and Performance Logging
Channel Update Logging......................... Off
Coverage Profile Logging....................... Off
Foreign Profile Logging........................ Off
Load Profile Logging........................... Off
Noise Profile Logging.......................... Off
Performance Profile Logging.................... Off
Transmit Power Update Logging.................. Off
Default 802.11b AP performance profiles
802.11b Global Interference threshold.......... 10 %
802.11b Global noise threshold................. -70 dBm
802.11b Global RF utilization threshold........ 80 %
802.11b Global throughput threshold............ 1000000 bps
802.11b Global clients threshold............... 12 clients
Default 802.11b AP monitoring
802.11b Monitor Mode........................... enable
802.11b Monitor Channels....................... Country channels
802.11b RRM Neighbor Discovery Type............ Transparent
802.11b AP Coverage Interval................... 180 seconds
802.11b AP Load Interval....................... 60 seconds
802.11b AP Noise Interval...................... 180 seconds
802.11b AP Signal Strength Interval............ 60 seconds
802.11b AP Neighbor Report Interval............ 180 seconds
802.11b AP Interference Report Interval........ 120 seconds
Leader Automatic Transmit Power Assignment
Transmit Power Assignment Mode................. AUTO
Transmit Power Update Interval................. 600 seconds
Transmit Power Threshold....................... -70 dBm
Transmit Power Neighbor Count.................. 3 APs
Min Transmit Power............................. -10 dBm
Max Transmit Power............................. 30 dBm
Update Contribution
Noise........................................ Enable
Interference................................. Enable
Load......................................... Disable
Device Aware................................. Disable
Transmit Power Assignment Leader............... Cisco_a5:dd:24 (192.168.0.250)
Last Run....................................... 490 seconds ago
Last Run Time.................................. 0 seconds
TPC Mode....................................... Version 1
TPCv2 Target RSSI.............................. -67 dBm
TPCv2 VoWLAN Guide RSSI........................ -67.0 dBm
TPCv2 SOP...................................... -85.0 dBm
TPCv2 Default Client Ant Gain.................. 0.0 dBi
TPCv2 Path Loss Decay Factor................... 3.6
TPCv2 Search Intensity......................... 10 Iterations
AP Name Channel TxPower Allowed Power Levels
Coverage Hole Detection
802.11b Coverage Hole Detection Mode........... Enabled
802.11b Coverage Voice Packet Count............ 100 packets
802.11b Coverage Voice Packet Percentage....... 50%
802.11b Coverage Voice RSSI Threshold.......... -80 dBm
802.11b Coverage Data Packet Count............. 50 packets
802.11b Coverage Data Packet Percentage........ 50%
802.11b Coverage Data RSSI Threshold........... -80 dBm
802.11b Global coverage exception level........ 25 %
802.11b Global client minimum exception lev.... 3 clients
Leader Automatic Channel Assignment
Channel Assignment Mode........................ AUTO
Channel Update Interval........................ 600 seconds [startup]
Anchor time (Hour of the day).................. 0
Update Contribution
Noise........................................ Enable
Interference................................. Enable
Load......................................... Disable
Device Aware................................. Disable
CleanAir Event-driven RRM option............... Disabled
CleanAir Event-driven RRM sensitivity.......... Medium
Channel Assignment Leader...................... Cisco_a5:dd:24 (192.168.0.250)
Last Run....................................... 523 seconds ago
Last Run Time.................................. 0 seconds
DCA Sensitivity Level: ...................... STARTUP (5 dB)
DCA Minimum Energy Limit....................... -95 dBm
Channel Energy Levels
Minimum...................................... unknown
Average...................................... unknown
Maximum...................................... unknown
Channel Dwell Times
Minimum...................................... unknown
Average...................................... unknown
Maximum...................................... unknown
802.11b Auto-RF Allowed Channel List........... 1,5,9,13
Auto-RF Unused Channel List.................... 2,3,4,6,7,8,10,11,12
802.11b Radio RF Grouping
RF Group Name.................................. cont
RF Protocol Version(MIN)....................... 30(30)
RF Packet Header Version....................... 2
Group Role(Mode)............................... LEADER(AUTO)
Group State.................................... Idle
Group Update Interval.......................... 600 seconds
Group Leader................................... Cisco_a5:dd:24 (192.168.0.250)
Group Member
................................. Cisco_a5:dd:24 (192.168.0.250)
Maximum/Current number of Group Member......... 20/1
Maximum/Current number of AP................... 500/0
Last Run....................................... 523 seconds ago
802.11b CleanAir Configuration
Clean Air Solution............................... Disabled
Air Quality Settings:
Air Quality Reporting........................ Enabled
Air Quality Reporting Period (min)........... 15
Air Quality Alarms........................... Enabled
Air Quality Alarm Threshold................ 35
Unclassified Interference.................. Disabled
Unclassified Severity Threshold............ 20
Interference Device Settings:
Interference Device Reporting................ Enabled
Interference Device Types:
Bluetooth Link........................... Enabled
Microwave Oven........................... Enabled
802.11 FH................................ Enabled
Bluetooth Discovery...................... Enabled
TDD Transmitter.......................... Enabled
Jammer................................... Enabled
Continuous Transmitter................... Enabled
DECT-like Phone.......................... Enabled
Video Camera............................. Enabled
802.15.4................................. Enabled
WiFi Inverted............................ Enabled
WiFi Invalid Channel..................... Enabled
SuperAG.................................. Enabled
Canopy................................... Enabled
Microsoft Device......................... Enabled
WiMax Mobile............................. Enabled
WiMax Fixed.............................. Enabled
Interference Device Alarms................... Enabled
Interference Device Types Triggering Alarms:
Bluetooth Link........................... Disabled
Microwave Oven........................... Disabled
802.11 FH................................ Disabled
Bluetooth Discovery...................... Disabled
TDD Transmitter.......................... Disabled
Jammer................................... Enabled
Continuous Transmitter................... Disabled
DECT-like Phone.......................... Disabled
Video Camera............................. Disabled
802.15.4................................. Disabled
WiFi Inverted............................ Enabled
WiFi Invalid Channel..................... Enabled
SuperAG.................................. Disabled
Canopy................................... Disabled
Microsoft Device......................... Disabled
WiMax Mobile............................. Disabled
WiMax Fixed.............................. Disabled
Additional Clean Air Settings:
CleanAir ED-RRM State........................ Disabled
CleanAir ED-RRM Sensitivity.................. Medium
CleanAir ED-RRM Custom Threshold............. 50
CleanAir Persistent Devices state............ Disabled
CleanAir Persistent Device Propagation....... Disabled
802.11a CleanAir AirQuality Summary
AQ = Air Quality
DFS = Dynamic Frequency Selection
AP Name Channel Avg AQ Min AQ Interferers DFS
Mobility Configuration
Mobility Protocol Port........................... 16666
Default Mobility Domain.......................... cont
Multicast Mode .................................. Disabled
Mobility Domain ID for 802.11r................... 0xe3e
Mobility Keepalive Interval...................... 10
Mobility Keepalive Count......................... 3
Mobility Group Members Configured................ 1
Mobility Control Message DSCP Value.............. 0
Controllers configured in the Mobility Group
MAC Address IP Address Group Name
Multicast IP Status
10:f3:11:a5:dd:20 192.168.0.250 cont
0.0.0.0 Up
Mobility Hash Configuration
Default Mobility Domain.......................... cont
IP Address Hash Key
Self Signed Certificate details
SSC Hash validation.............................. Enabled.
SSC device certificate not present.
Mobility Foreign Map Configuration
WLAN ID Foreign Mac Address Interface
Advanced Configuration
Probe request filtering.......................... Enabled
Probes fwd to controller per client per radio.... 2
Probe request rate-limiting interval............. 500 msec
Aggregate Probe request interval................. 0 msec
Increased backoff parameters for probe respon.... Disabled
EAP-Identity-Request Timeout (seconds)........... 30
EAP-Identity-Request Max Retries................. 2
EAP Key-Index for Dynamic WEP.................... 0
EAP Max-Login Ignore Identity Response........... enable
EAP-Request Timeout (seconds).................... 30
EAP-Request Max Retries.......................... 2
EAPOL-Key Timeout (milliseconds)................. 1000
EAPOL-Key Max Retries............................ 2
EAP-Broadcast Key Interval....................... 3600
Fastpath Packet Capture.......................... disable
Fastpath Fast Cache Control...................... enable
Fastpath Fast Testmode........................... 0x0
dot11-padding.................................... Disabled
Advanced Hotspot Commands
ANQP 4-way state................................. Disabled
GARP Broadcast state: ........................... Enabled
GAS request rate limit .......................... Disabled
ANQP comeback delay in TUs(TU=1024usec).......... 50
Location Configuration
RFID Tag data Collection......................... Enabled
RFID timeout.................................... 1200 seconds
RFID mobility....................................
Interface Configuration
Interface Name................................... ap-management1
MAC Address...................................... 10:f3:11:a5:dd:24
IP Address....................................... 192.168.0.251
IP Netmask....................................... 255.255.255.0
IP Gateway....................................... 192.168.0.7
External NAT IP State............................ Disabled
External NAT IP Address.......................... 0.0.0.0
VLAN............................................. untagged
NAS-Identifier................................... Cisco_a5:dd:24
Active Physical Port............................. 1
Primary Physical Port............................ 1
Backup Physical Port............................. Unconfigured
DHCP Proxy Mode.................................. Global
Primary DHCP Server.............................. 192.168.0.7
Secondary DHCP Server............................ Unconfigured
DHCP Option 82................................... Disabled
IPv4 ACL......................................... Unconfigured
IPv6 ACL......................................... Unconfigured
mDNS Profile Name................................ Unconfigured
AP Manager....................................... Yes
Guest Interface.................................. No
L2 Multicast..................................... Enabled
Interface Name................................... ap-management3
MAC Address...................................... 10:f3:11:a5:dd:26
IP Address....................................... 192.168.0.253
IP Netmask....................................... 255.255.255.0
IP Gateway....................................... 192.168.0.7
External NAT IP State............................ Disabled
External NAT IP Address.......................... 0.0.0.0
VLAN............................................. untagged
NAS-Identifier................................... Cisco_a5:dd:24
Active Physical Port............................. 3
Primary Physical Port............................ 3
Backup Physical Port............................. Unconfigured
DHCP Proxy Mode.................................. Global
Primary DHCP Server.............................. 192.168.0.7
Secondary DHCP Server............................ Unconfigured
DHCP Option 82................................... Disabled
IPv4 ACL......................................... Unconfigured
IPv6 ACL......................................... Unconfigured
mDNS Profile Name................................ Unconfigured
AP Manager....................................... Yes
Guest Interface.................................. No
L2 Multicast..................................... Enabled
Interface Name................................... ap-management4
MAC Address...................................... 10:f3:11:a5:dd:27
IP Address....................................... 192.168.0.254
IP Netmask....................................... 255.255.255.0
IP Gateway....................................... 192.168.0.7
External NAT IP State............................ Disabled
External NAT IP Address.......................... 0.0.0.0
VLAN............................................. untagged
NAS-Identifier................................... Cisco_a5:dd:24
Active Physical Port............................. 4
Primary Physical Port............................ 4
Backup Physical Port............................. Unconfigured
DHCP Proxy Mode.................................. Global
Primary DHCP Server.............................. 192.168.0.7
Secondary DHCP Server............................ Unconfigured
DHCP Option 82................................... Disabled
IPv4 ACL......................................... Unconfigured
IPv6 ACL......................................... Unconfigured
mDNS Profile Name................................ Unconfigured
AP Manager....................................... Yes
Guest Interface.................................. No
L2 Multicast..................................... Enabled
Interface Name................................... management
MAC Address...................................... 10:f3:11:a5:dd:20
IP Address....................................... 192.168.0.250
IP Netmask....................................... 255.255.255.0
IP Gateway....................................... 192.168.0.7
External NAT IP State............................ Disabled
External NAT IP Address.......................... 0.0.0.0
VLAN............................................. untagged
Quarantine-vlan.................................. 0
Active Physical Port............................. 2
Primary Physical Port............................ 2
Backup Physical Port............................. Unconfigured
DHCP Proxy Mode.................................. Global
Primary DHCP Server.............................. 192.168.0.7
Secondary DHCP Server............................ Unconfigured
DHCP Option 82................................... Disabled
IPv4 ACL......................................... Unconfigured
IPv6 ACL......................................... Unconfigured
mDNS Profile Name................................ Unconfigured
AP Manager....................................... Yes
Guest Interface.................................. No
L2 Multicast..................................... Disabled
Interface Name................................... virtual
MAC Address...................................... 10:f3:11:a5:dd:20
IP Address....................................... 1.1.1.1
Virtual DNS Host Name............................ Disabled
AP Manager....................................... No
Guest Interface.................................. No
Interface Group Configuration
WLAN Configuration
WLAN Identifier.................................. 1
Profile Name..................................... kisan
Network Name (SSID).............................. kisan
Status........................................... Enabled
MAC Filtering.................................... Disabled
Broadcast SSID................................... Enabled
AAA Policy Override.............................. Disabled
Network Admission Control
Client Profiling Status
Radius Profiling ............................ Disabled
DHCP ....................................... Disabled
HTTP ....................................... Disabled
Local Profiling ............................. Disabled
DHCP ....................................... Disabled
HTTP ....................................... Disabled
Radius-NAC State............................... Disabled
SNMP-NAC State................................. Disabled
Quarantine VLAN................................ 0
Maximum number of Associated Clients............. 0
Maximum number of Clients per AP Radio........... 200
Number of Active Clients......................... 0
Exclusionlist Timeout............................ 60 seconds
Session Timeout.................................. 1800 seconds
User Idle Timeout................................ Disabled
Sleep Client..................................... disable
Sleep Client Timeout............................. 12 hours
User Idle Threshold.............................. 0 Bytes
NAS-identifier................................... Cisco_a5:dd:24
CHD per WLAN..................................... Enabled
Webauth DHCP exclusion........................... Disabled
Interface........................................ management
Multicast Interface.............................. Not Configured
WLAN IPv4 ACL.................................... unconfigured
WLAN IPv6 ACL.................................... unconfigured
WLAN Layer2 ACL.................................. unconfigured
mDNS Status...................................... Enabled
mDNS Profile Name................................ default-mdns-profile
DHCP Server...................................... Default
DHCP Address Assignment Required................. Disabled
Static IP client tunneling....................... Disabled
Quality of Service............................... Silver
Per-SSID Rate Limits............................. Upstream Downstream
Average Data Rate................................ 0 0
Average Realtime Data Rate....................... 0 0
Burst Data Rate.................................. 0 0
Burst Realtime Data Rate......................... 0 0
Per-Client Rate Limits........................... Upstream Downstream
Average Data Rate................................ 0 0
Average Realtime Data Rate....................... 0 0
Burst Data Rate.................................. 0 0
Burst Realtime Data Rate......................... 0 0
Scan Defer Priority.............................. 4,5,6
Scan Defer Time.................................. 100 milliseconds
WMM.............................................. Allowed
WMM UAPSD Compliant Client Support............... Disabled
Media Stream Multicast-direct.................... Disabled
CCX - AironetIe Support.......................... Enabled
CCX - Gratuitous ProbeResponse (GPR)............. Disabled
CCX - Diagnostics Channel Capability............. Disabled
Dot11-Phone Mode (7920).......................... Disabled
Wired Protocol................................... None
Passive Client Feature........................... Disabled
Peer-to-Peer Blocking Action..................... Disabled
Radio Policy..................................... All
DTIM period for 802.11a radio.................... 1
DTIM period for 802.11b radio.................... 1
Radius Servers
Authentication................................ Global Servers
Accounting.................................... Global Servers
Interim Update............................. Disabled
Framed IPv6 Acct AVP ...................... Prefix
Dynamic Interface............................. Disabled
Dynamic Interface Priority.................... wlan
Local EAP Authentication......................... Disabled
Security
802.11 Authentication:........................ Open System
FT Support.................................... Disabled
Static WEP Keys............................... Disabled
802.1X........................................ Disabled
Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA/WPA2)............. Enabled
WPA (SSN IE)............................... Disabled
WPA2 (RSN IE).............................. Enabled
TKIP Cipher............................. Disabled
AES Cipher.............................. Enabled
Auth Key Management
802.1x.................................. Enabled
PSK..................................... Disabled
CCKM.................................... Disabled
FT-1X(802.11r).......................... Disabled
FT-PSK(802.11r)......................... Disabled
PMF-1X(802.11w)......................... Disabled
PMF-PSK(802.11w)........................ Disabled
FT Reassociation Timeout................... 20
FT Over-The-DS mode........................ Enabled
GTK Randomization.......................... Disabled
SKC Cache Support.......................... Disabled
CCKM TSF Tolerance......................... 1000
WAPI.......................................... Disabled
Wi-Fi Direct policy configured................ Disabled
EAP-Passthrough............................... Disabled
CKIP ......................................... Disabled
Web Based Authentication...................... Disabled
Web-Passthrough............................... Disabled
Conditional Web Redirect...................... Disabled
Splash-Page Web Redirect...................... Disabled
Auto Anchor................................... Disabled
FlexConnect Local Switching................... Disabled
flexconnect Central Dhcp Flag................. Disabled
flexconnect nat-pat Flag...................... Disabled
flexconnect Dns Override Flag................. Disabled
flexconnect PPPoE pass-through................ Disabled
flexconnect local-switching IP-source-guar.... Disabled
FlexConnect Vlan based Central Switching ..... Disabled
FlexCo -
A customer of mine asked me about session cookie security.
Questions are :
. session id randmoness
. session id length
. events producing session end (timeouts, navigation outside etc..)
. HTTP maximim header length
Could someone provide me informations/documentation about such questions ?
Tks
TullioAgain, you still did not mention if you are generalizing or speaking of a specific product and version. Since you posted your question in the "Forms" area, I guess we will assume you are referring to Forms. However, without the version information some of the info might vary. I guess in any case, you (or your customer) should try testing the product of choice as most Oracle products are free for download.
<br>
Session Id Length should be long at least 20 random characters" <br>
<blockquote><font color="blue">Here is an example of what is generated for Forms 10.1.2.3 (other versions may vary):<br>
<i>jsessionid=<b>9c1253bde83b0ed66ae9687525ef3536f960c8a0f40aa4fa14179b30656e1ea3</b></i><br>
</font></blockquote>
Http header should be less than 2100 characters<br>
<blockquote><font color="blue">This will likely depend on exactly which
product version is being used. Also, it will depend on exactly
which "header" information is being considered as part of the
count. For example, are you include all request and response
data. Are you including any of the body data? Also consider
that the host name and url parameters are part of these exchanges
too. So the total amount of characters in my environment would
likely differ from yours simply because of a difference in my host name
and parameters that I pass to call my app. In doing just a couple of
simple tests using a basic tool like ieHTTPheaders and run it against
Forms 10.1.2.3 on my local machine, I can see that the total can range
from around 1000 up into over 2000. So the exact header size is
something you would need to test based on the app and environment to
include the product version.</font><br>
</blockquote>
Session timout should be 15 minutes <br>
<blockquote><font color="blue">The concept of "session timeout" will
vary depending on what exactly we are talking about. There are
Forms sessions, db sessions, http sessions, java sessions, etc.
For the most part, all of these sessions times are configurable.
The only exception is the actually application itself. In other
words, Forms, by design is intended to be living. Meaning, it will
never die unless you kill it. You would need to program in to
your app exactly when you want its session to be destroyed. If you
wanted to destroy the app based on user inactivity, you would need to
use a Java Bean in order to perform a clean exit. Any other method
would result in an ugly termination. An example (unsupported
demo) of such a bean is available on OTN in the Forms download area.
As for the other session configurations, they are documented in the product docs.</font><br>
</blockquote>
<br> -
What is Novell's successor product manage & monitor servers?
Based on the inactivity in the group, I'm guessing there's another product
offering to manage & monitor servers?
If yes, can you guide to it. The ZCM 10 groups seem only for desktops.
Just wondering if Novell's no longer offering something to monitor servers.
Thanks,
MarcThanks. We presently use ZfD 7 and I'd like test out this ZSM. When we
upgrade to ZCM10 from ZfD 7 any compatibility problems with with ZSM M&M ?
Should we even consider implementing ZSM M&M? I mean is the writing on the
wall for it being discontinued or replaced?
Thanks again,
Marc
"Shaun Pond" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]..
> Marc,
>
> currently there is no replacement product for ZSM M&M
>
> --
>
> Shaun Pond
>
> -
I have an iMac G5 running 10.3.9. When it goes into sleep mode, a short time later the system completely shuts off. I have been out of town for a while, so I don't know exactly when this started, but my brother says it started a couple weeks ago. I would be surprised if any system-level hacks had been installed, since the rest of my family would be scared to try anything like that. As far as I know, nothing significant has been installed lately.
A bit more info:
If the computer goes to sleep based on an inactivity timer, it will sleep for a while (flashing power light) and then turn off. If I select Apple > Sleep, it immediately shuts off. I've already reset the PRAM.
Any ideas?
iMac G5 Mac OS X (10.3.9)Hi Homer,
Welcome to Apple Discussions.
It would help us to know which G5 iMac "model" you have, how much RAM, etc. You can have this info displayed on the bottom of every post by going to 'preferences' which is located in the column on the right under your name, click on "My Settings" and filling in the information asked for.
This will help in providing you with the proper and/or correct troubleshooting solutions.
Thank You.
PS: If you do not know the model of your Mac, see Knowledge Base Article http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=301724#301724 How to identify your iMac -
Inactive InfoObjects in MultiProvider based on InfoSet after Upgrade NW04s
We are upgrading our sandbox environment from BW 3.5 to NetWeaver 2004s or BI 7.0. We have done a technical upgrade and are currently using the obsolete authorizations. In testing we have discovered that our MultiProviders that are based on InfoSets contain inactive InfoObjects. Has anyone else had this problem. In running a query that uses this MultiProvider we get the message to activate our MultiProvider again.
Is it necessary to activate all existing MultiProviders based on InfoSets after upgrading to NetWeaver 2004s?
Thanks for your help,
JeriHi Jeri,
Yes this is sometimes required.
Infosets are sometimes deactivated because additional checks are available after the upgrade or because new attributes become part of your info-object.
When you change something to an underlying data provider of a multiprovider, the multiprovider is automatically inactivated and you have to reactivate it.
I also had this problem with other upgrades.
In general, activation is not too much of an effort.
Please assign points if this solved your problem,
Best Regards,
Filip Ledoux -
year quarter q_end_date customer_id incentive_flag active_date inactive_date max_q_end_date
2014 1 4/1/2014 1609913 0 8/7/2001 NULL 10/1/2014
2014 1 4/1/2014 1609918 0 8/7/2001 NULL 10/1/2014
2014 1 4/1/2014 1609965 0 8/7/2001 NULL 10/1/2014
2014 1 4/1/2014 1609991 0 8/7/2001 NULL 10/1/2014
2014 1 4/1/2014 1610001 0 8/7/2001 NULL 10/1/2014
2014 1 4/1/2014 1610054 0 8/8/2001 NULL 10/1/2014
2014 1 4/1/2014 1610068 0 8/8/2001 NULL 10/1/2014
2014 1 4/1/2014 1610069 0 8/8/2001 NULL 10/1/2014
2014 1 4/1/2014 1610158 0 8/8/2001 NULL 10/1/2014
2014 1 4/1/2014 1610188 0 8/8/2001 NULL 10/1/2014
I have table like above and needs to get incentive flags, quarter, total successfully billed, not successfully billed next quarter, not successfully billed but active by next quarter, not successfully billed and inactive by next quarter
I designed the query but difficult to test is this working fine or not
SELECT
t1.incentive_flag
,t1.year
,t1.quarter
,total_successfully_billed=COUNT(t1.customer_id)
,not_successfully_billed_next_quarter=SUM(CASE
WHENt1.max_q_end_date=t1.q_end_dateTHEN1
ELSE0
END)
,not_sb_nq_but_active_by_next_quarter_end=SUM(CASE
WHENt1.max_q_end_date=t1.q_end_date
ANDISNULL(t1.inactive_date,'12/31/9999')>=DATEADD(MONTH,3,t1.q_end_date)THEN1
ELSE0
END)
,not_sb_nq_and_inactive_by_next_quarter_end=SUM(CASE
WHENt1.max_q_end_date=t1.q_end_date
ANDISNULL(t1.inactive_date,'12/31/9999')<DATEADD(MONTH,3,t1.q_end_date)THEN1
ELSE0
END)
FROM
#successbilled customers table
GROUP
BYt1.incentive_flag
,t1.year
,t1.quarterHi,
Your second approach can be recomposed as below.
use testDB
CREATE TABLE successfullybilled([year] VARCHAR(4),[quarter] INT, q_end_date DATE,customer_id INT, incentive_flag INT, active_date DATE,inactive_date DATE,max_q_end_date DATE);
INSERT INTO successfullybilled VALUES
('2014', 1 ,'4/1/2014', 1609913 ,0 ,'8/7/2001', NULL ,'10/1/2014'),
('2014', 1 ,'4/1/2014', 1609918 ,0 ,'8/7/2001', NULL ,'10/1/2014'),
('2014', 1 ,'4/1/2014', 1609965 ,0 ,'8/7/2001', NULL ,'10/1/2014'),
('2014', 1 ,'4/1/2014', 1609991 ,0 ,'8/7/2001', NULL ,'10/1/2014'),
('2014', 1 ,'4/1/2014', 1610001 ,0 ,'8/7/2001', NULL ,'10/1/2014'),
('2014', 1 ,'4/1/2014', 1610054 ,0 ,'8/8/2001', NULL ,'10/1/2014'),
('2014', 1 ,'4/1/2014', 1610068 ,0 ,'8/8/2001', NULL ,'10/1/2014'),
('2014', 1 ,'4/1/2014', 1610069 ,0 ,'8/8/2001', NULL ,'10/1/2014'),
('2014', 1 ,'4/1/2014', 1610158 ,0 ,'8/8/2001', NULL ,'10/1/2014'),
('2014', 1 ,'4/1/2014', 1610188 ,0 ,'8/8/2001', NULL ,'10/1/2014')
;WITH cte AS
SELECT
t1.*
FROM
successfullybilled T1
WHERE
NOT EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM successfullybilled t2 WHERE t2.customer_id = t1.customer_id AND t2.year = t1.year AND t2.quarter = t1.quarter+1)
SELECT
year
, quarter
, incentive_flag
, gone_from_next_quarter = COUNT(*)
, gone_but_active_by_next_quarter_end = SUM(CASE WHEN ISNULL(inactive_date, '12/31/9999') >= DATEADD(MONTH, 3, q_end_date) THEN 1 ELSE 0 END)
, gone_and_inactive_by_next_quarter_end = SUM(CASE WHEN ISNULL(inactive_date, '12/31/9999') < DATEADD(MONTH, 3, q_end_date) THEN 1 ELSE 0 END)
FROM cte
GROUP BY
year,quarter,incentive_flag
DROP TABLE successfullybilled
If you have any question, feel free to let me know.
Eric Zhang
TechNet Community Support -
Createing Local DC based on Existing DC from NWDI Inactive DC's
Friends,
How do i create a Local Development Component from existing Development Component which is existed in NWDI Development Configuration perpective , inactive DC's?
Thanks in adnvace.
PeteHi Peter,
If I understood your question correctly, you want to create a local DC and it should be using the DC that exists in the NWDI track....
DC can be created 2 ways...
log into NWDI go to Local Development -> MyComponents-> right click and select create DC
else in webdynpro perspetive select File -> New -> Development Component Project..
This is how the Local DC will be created...
Now expand the DC and DC Metadata-> DC Definition -> Used DCs -> right click select Add Used DCs..
and add the DC that exists in NWDI track -
When I enter condition type PBXX in a purchase order position PB00 becomes inactive. So far no problem. However, when I add condition type RA01 the base value for this condition is the sum of PB00 and PBXX.
Why are inactive conditions being taken into account in the calculation of the condition base value of RA01? And what's the best way to resolve this?
Kind regards, EricPBXX and PB00 are Mutually exclusive of each other... i.e. at one time only one will be active (depending on whether u enter the price manually or it defaults from ref documents like info record. contract etc) .
So this is not really a "Problem" , RA01 will use only the active one a s base. -
Get Inactive User in Domain based on Last Logon Time Stamp
Dear Experts,
I have used this code, but it is not displaying proper result, please help me how to display only "Daysinactive=90", for me it is display all the user.Please help me
# Gets time stamps for all User in the domain that have NOT logged in since after specified date
# Mod by Tilo 2014-04-01
import-module activedirectory
$domain = "domain.mydom.com"
$DaysInactive = 90
$time = (Get-Date).Adddays(-($DaysInactive))
# Get all AD User with lastLogonTimestamp less than our time and set to enable
Get-ADUser -Filter {LastLogonTimeStamp -lt $time -and enabled -eq $true} -Properties LastLogonTimeStamp |
# Output Name and lastLogonTimestamp into CSV
select-object Name,@{Name="Stamp"; Expression={[DateTime]::FromFileTime($_.lastLogonTimestamp).ToString('yyyy-MM-dd_hh:mm:ss')}} | export-csv OLD_User.csv -notypeinformation
HariHi,
Use the -AccountInactive parameter of Search-ADAccount:
http://ss64.com/ps/search-adaccount.html
Don't retire TechNet! -
(Don't give up yet - 13,085+ strong and growing) -
Talkin' Bout My Generations: A Brief History of Intel-based Portable Macs
During my first four years here at Discussions, I came across a fairly common problem while trying to help folks using Windows on a Mac: very few people I responded to could tell mewhat kind of system they were using. Many were users of portable Macs, so to try and help them out identifying the machines they used, I thought of making a guide to portableidentification. But as I was writing this article two years ago, I got thinking about a more detailed history of the MacBook family from 2006 to 2010. I’ve taken many of the news snippets I’ve read from Macworld magazine and other sources to provide the historical content in this guide and combinedthem with my personal opinions on each model. Specifications where used have been verified by Brock Kyle’s EveryMac.com and by Apple support documents as well as keynote speeches from Apple execs. The opinions provided are those of the author and are independent of Apple, Inc, so in other words, if you feel differently about these machines…
DON’T SHOOT THE MESSENGER!
And now, the guide. Enjoy!
First generation (1G):
These are the only 32-bit Intel Mac portables in the field, sporting Intel Core Duo (“Yonah”) processors from 1.83-2.16 GHz (Early '06, including Glossy)
MacBook
This long-awaited upgrade of the iBook has a port setup comparable to the Mid-'05 iBook--2 USB 2.0, 1 FW400, audi oout, mini video. Also uses an inset keyboard, which drew some groans from the community-at-large when it first launched. Internally, uses an Intel GMA950 graphics system that borrows up to 64 MB as video RAM and adds 16 MB overhead.
Case type: Solid white or black polycarbonate shell
Chipset: Intel 945GM
Standard RAM: 512 MB (432 MB usable)
Maximum RAM: 2.00 GB PC2-5300 DDR2 SDRAM(1968 MB usable)
Pros: Solid performance vs. iBook, goodbasic machine for the Web, hard drive is user-serviceable.
Cons: Poor graphics make this unit ascratch for mid-level business work, games or creative apps; limited RAM, no64-bit support
MacBook Pro
This was Apple's Intel debut, along withthe iMac (Core Duo). Apple flashed a1.67 GHz prototype at Macworld Expo ‘06 that was scratched in production for a1.83 GHz model. Supply chain economicsresulted in an optical drive downgrade to a standard single-layer drive fromthe double-layer drives in the late '05 PowerBooks. It's also the only model in the MacBook Procontinuum not to bear a FireWire 800 port. Although functionally similar to the MacBookthat followed it, this line has discrete graphics by way of AMD's RADEONX1600--up to 256 MB. Slightly revisedversions, rolled in by mid-year, included a glossy display and improved videoRAM.
Case type: Anodized aluminum compositewith plastic edging.
Chipset: Intel 945GM
Standard RAM: 1 GB
Maximum RAM: 2.00 GB PC2-5300 DDR2 SDRAM
Pros: Good step up from PB '05, can runpro apps and games with ease
Cons: limited RAM, no 64-bit support, no DVD±DL support, lack of FW800 abother for some
Second generation (2G):
The 2G portables (“Late 2006” in Applespeak) were a mild speed bump of the 1G lines, replacing the 32-bit Core with the 64-bit Core2 (“Merom”). Processor speeds ranged from 2.0 GHz-2.33 GHz. Apple fixed many 1G shortcomings here, but retained the 945 family chipsets until well into 2007. As aresult of the 945 family’s addressing limitations, usable RAM is limited to 3GB, even when 4 GB can be installed. (See http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/macbook_pro/faq/macbook-pro-core-2-duo-3-g b-memory-limitation-details.html) Further, Apple has chosen to limitWindows support on these units to Vista; anything else is “use at own risk”.
On the plus side, these 2G portables arethe absolute earliest qualifiers for Mac OS X Lion, albeit with a significantlylimited user experience—that is, many features of note simply are not possible given the nature of the 2G internals.
MacBook
No visible markers set these units apart from the 1G models, and all internals are the same save for the Core2 CPU. These units were slightly revised in 2007 toenable draft 802.11n support; those models shipped in October 2006 and onward could download an update to enable 802.11n. The only way to confirm a 2G MacBook is via software; the Model ID iseither ”2,1” or “2,2”
Case type: Solid white or blackpolycarbonate shell
Chipset: Intel 945GM
Standard RAM: 1 GB (944 MB usable)
Maximum RAM: 3.00 GB PC2-5300 DDR2 SDRAM (2992 MB usable)
Pros: Core2 offers 64-bit support and modest speed boost, max RAM up
Cons: Still comes up short forhigh-demand applications.
MacBook Pro
Functionally similar to its predecessor while retaining the AMD X1600 graphics, the 2G Pro had three notable differences. This line marks the permanent return of the FireWire 800 port—this one’s on the right side. Also back for an encore is the double-layer SuperDrive; Apple’s suppliers finally had the size of optical drive that Apple needed. Like the MacBook, it also gets a lift from the new Core2 CPUs with twice as much L2 cache as their predecessors and their trendier plastic-clad siblings.
Case type: Anodized aluminum composite with plastic edging.
Chipset: Intel 945GM
Standard RAM: 1 GB
Maximum RAM: 3.00 GB PC2-5300 DDR2 SDRAM
Pros: FW800 is back, as is DVD±DL; max RAM up, graphics still strong
Cons: Speed improvement only nominal, Windows Vista support still lacking inspots (X1000-series chips are not DX10 qualified)
Third generation (3G):
The “Mid/Late 2007” portables were somewhat of a redesign from the inside, though they remained similar to 2G models when viewed from without. Common to both lines is the Intel 965 chipset family, best known by its Intel codename, “Santa Rosa”; with it, the system bus got ramped to 800 MT/s while the memory bus remained at 667 MT/s. Here, the Core2 gets another modest speed bump, with standard frequencies ranging from 2.1 GHz-2.4 GHz. At this time, the RAM ceiling was lifted, allowing 4 GB to be used in all models and making theseMacs capable 64-bit machines. Windows x64 variants will run on this class, but it requires Boot Camp 2.1 or higher and some finesse with installing individual software packages since Apple’s installer places a soft block on these units.
Also of note: 3G and 4G MacBook Pros were particularly susceptible to a defect in the NVIDIA graphics chip, which left unchecked would cause these units not to display video, or to show scrambled video. Apple has a current repair program to fixthis issue if you should run across it, but time is running out. Unless you are aware that the defect has been repaired, these models are best avoided
MacBook
By the time the 3G models surfaced, the2G models were dealing with heavy criticism for not being refreshed in sync with the Pro models. Apple had three convincing reasons for such a delay. First came the iPhone EDGE, for which development was a top priority. The delay actually bought some time for Apple to reveal the other two reasons; Intel was providing the GMA X3100 as a companion to the GM965, which in itself was a modest improvement over the GMA 950 used in the first two iterations; and Apple had been working on its latest flagship OS, “Leopard”, released just days before the new MacBook surfaced on All Saints’ Day (11/1). One might say that waiting does indeed payoff, judging from Macworld’s bench scores of the 3G MacBooks, 2007 was a good year to upgrade the old iBook to something better.
Case type: Solid white or black polycarbonate shell
Chipset: Intel GM965
Standard RAM: 1 GB (880 MB usable)
Maximum RAM: 4.00 GB PC2-5300 DDR2 SDRAM (3952 MB usable)
Pros: Better graphics, potentially faster WLAN support, improved speed, conservative energy usage
Cons: Poor graphics in Windows, game support on both platforms limited to casual titles (many FPS/RTS/MMO games not supported)
MacBook Pro
The 3G Pro underwent a massive interior overhaul in June 2007, sporting NVIDIA GeForce 8600M GT graphics and—for the first time in an Apple portable—an option to build a Core2 Extreme into the unit at 2.6 GHz. These were the first portables to carry 802.11n as a standard option, as well as the first Apple portables touse an LED-backlit display. The 3G Pro also meets or exceeds all Windows Vista operating requirements, and was one of the best performing computers to run Vista, according to PC World.
Unfortunately for longtime notebook users, the 3G lines of the MacBook Pro also mark some “lasts”. The line of 3G Pros was the last line of portables to have officially shipped with Tiger, the last portables to includean Apple Remote as standard equipment, and, perhaps more notably, the last tobear a traditional numeric keypad.
Case type: Anodized aluminum composite with plastic edging.
Chipset: Intel GM965
Standard RAM: 2 GB
Maximum RAM: 4.00 GB PC2-5300 DDR2 SDRAM
Pros: Significantly improved graphics, greater energy efficiency over 2G units due to chipset and display upgrades, fastest unit of its time for current OSes, solid all-around performance, potentially faster WLAN support.
Cons: Not quite “future-proof”
Fourth generation (4G)
The “Early 2008” portables were met with fervent anticipation, as Apple hinted about “something in the air” at what would be CEO Steve Jobs’ final Macworld Expo address. Notebooks were all the rage, as was the upcoming iPhone software upgrade that gave rise to application development and the App Store. Exciting news indeed, it was. Yet, as was the norm in Jobsian monologues, he had “one more thing” to show off. Inter-office memos? Nope, but it did arrive in the classic manila envelope used for such. It was the first-generation MacBook Air, partof a 4G lineup that saw revamped Core2 CPUs ranging from 1.6 GHz all the way upt o 2.6 GHz depending on model and build options.
The new CPUs were based on Intel’s latest “Penryn” cores, some of which received a drop in L2 cache versus the “Merom” cores used in 2G and 3G units. However, the drop in cache did little to impact performance; the new CPUs were actually faster by a slight margin at the same speeds as prior Core2’s, per Macworld’s bench scores. As there were few changes in case designapart from removing the keypad from the MacBook Pro, only software can separate a 4G unit from a 3G unit.
The 4G units, and all units following, officially support x64-native Windows via Boot Camp 2.1 as included on their Install Discs, or ondiscs with future versions of OS X and Boot Camp.
MacBook
The 4G MacBook saw the processor upgrade and little else,but the bump was likely enough to convince any but the hard-core 12” PowerBookenthusiasts to cross over to Intel. Because it’s still based on the Santa Rosa (GM965) platform, the 20-pluspercentage point improvements touted by tech-savvy bloggers and enthusiastsites are never realized. Rather, some sources have documented a roughimprovement of between three percent and ten percent over the 3G units.
Sadly for some, this model is the last MacBook to bear anysize and speed of FireWire port.
Case type: Solid white or black polycarbonate shell (as of late 2008, white only)
Chipset: Intel GM965
Standard RAM: 2 GB (1904 MB usable)
Maximum RAM: 4.00 GB PC2-5300 DDR2 SDRAM (3952 MB usable)
Pros: Still a solid machine for light work, cheap, fast for its price
Cons: It’s the only cheap way to make your FireWire gear work
MacBook Air
The new kid on the block this go-around;the MacBook Air is Apple’s first sub-notebook since the PowerBook Duo of the early 1990’s. Classified as a “thin and light”, the Air is a very strikingdefinition of that term. At three pounds weight and 0.16” to 0.76” thickness, and with logic circuitry the length of a standard No. 2 pencil, Apple could crow about making “the world’s thinnest notebook” and still pack more punch into a space of 14 inches at a time when other sub-note vendors were still trying to shrink their wares. These vendors, according to Jobs, started shrinking items that shouldn’t be shrunk. Where most sub-notes had 11” or 12” screens, for example, the Air packed in a 13-incher; and when a keyboard was needed for the Air, Apple went with a full-size board identical to the then one-and-a-half-year-old MacBook design, complete with inset keys. From the MacBook Pro, the Air gained an aluminum finish as well as a backlit keyboard. On its own, the Air introduced solid-state storage (colloquially “flash drives”) as hard drives for the Mac. However, this option added $1,000 to the Air’s asking price and dropped its already limited storage capacity from80 GB to 64 GB. To add insult to injuryin some minds, the Air also dropped common expansion options and an internal optical drive to acquire its legendary dimensions. Left after shrinkage: a single USB port, an audio jack, and a “micro-DVI” video port. Despite these sacrifices, the 1G MacBook Air still outclasses other sub-notes where it counts because its chipset is the same GM965 used in the 3G and 4G MacBook offerings in addition to having the fastest low-voltage CPU’s of the day in custom quarter-sized packages. Its performance in comparison to full-featured notebooks is lower by way of processor speed being lower, and yet normal for a portable of its class.
Case type: Anodized aluminum
Chipset: Intel GM965
Standard RAM: 2 GB onboard (1904 MB usable)
Pros: Size and weight offer maximumportability, big screen and keyboard offer comfort for travelers, multi-gesturetrackpad has large surface for easy usability, and price is on par for class.
Cons: Limited expansion options, limited storage, and service-removable battery ,costly add-ons required for use in environments where WLAN isn’t an option, not well suited to Windows variants beyond XP.
MacBook Pro
Not much new here from the 3G lines, save for the absentkeypad. Base specs were upped by small increments, and dedicated VRAM doubled for all models. Nonetheless, the 4G Pro can make a capable,if not solid gaming unit (as if the 3G unit wasn’t competent in its own right). Like the 3G unit, it is also well suited to Vista and its 64-bit variant, and it can easily run Windows 7 in its many forms as well.
Case type: Anodized aluminum composite with plastic edging.
Chipset: Intel GM965
Standard RAM: 2 GB
Maximum RAM: 4.00 GB PC2-5300 DDR2 SDRAM
Pros: Robust graphics, flexible options,and multi-gesture trackpad
Cons: What’s not to like? If you liveor die crunching numbers, it’s tougher, but doable.
Fifth generation (5G)
As is done in every odd generation, Apple reworked the entire line of notebooks from within for the “Late 2008/Early 2009” cycle. In addition, Apple was hard at work on atotally new and totally trend-setting casing process for its portables. The result: an extreme makeover not seen in Apple’s portable lines since the 68K-to-PowerPC transitions of the early 1990’s. To rework the interior of the MacBook family, Apple went to NVIDIA—not Intel—for a high-performance logicsolution to be used in notebooks. NVIDIAwas working on a desktop chipset at the time; but if Steve Jobs’ statement at Apple’s October ‘08 notebook event is to be believed, Apple designers asked NVIDIA to make it mobile, and the company delivered an MCP logic set dubbed“GeForce 9400M” unto Apple. All linesthus benefited from markedly faster graphics and the adoption of ultra-fas tDDR3 memory. Here, the 5G MacBook and 2G MacBook Air became passable all-around units, with the 5G MacBook Pro sportingdynamically switchable graphics engines.
For the exterior makeover, Apple Senior Designer Jon Iverevealed that Apple’s latest process created a “unibody” enclosure that waslighter and required fewer parts to produce, for it was milled entirely fromone sheet of aluminum. To complete themakeover, Apple drew on its experience with the Aluminum line of iMac desktopsand fused all-glass displays into the new assemblies.
For some models, the fifth generation held well into 2010,and so received only incremental upgrades to the CPU, GPU, and system RAM
All models from this generation, save for the whiteMacBook, include a button-less, customizable multi-gesture trackpad.
MacBook and MacBookPro (15”)
Because the two lines had converged in this iteration, only subtle visual differences kept them apart. Both lines dropped the FireWire 400 port and exchanged their respectivevideo outputs for a common Mini DisplayPort, based on an emerging standard. The loss of certain status quofeatures on both lines (FW400 on theMacBook, traditional keyboard on the Pro) drew some whining in certain circles,but such things happen when Apple does this sort of retooling.
With the 5G notebooks, Apple further blurred the line thatonce separated MacBook from MacBook Pro, allowing the former a backlit keyboardin its fullest build. Apple hoped that thiswould swing “fence people” toward the MacBook instead of a low-cost Windows PC since these are folks that would be forced to spend $2,000 on a MacBook Probecause they want to play games in either Mac OS or Windows, casually orotherwise.
Case type: Anodized aluminum unibody
Chipset: NVIDIA GeForce 9400M MCP (withGeForce 9600M GT GPU in Pro models)
Standard RAM: 2 GB (1792 MB usable)
Maximum RAM: 8.00 GB PC3-8500 DDR3 SDRAM( 7936 MB usable)
Pros: Fast graphics, lighter, moredurable, energy efficient, hard drive is user-serviceable, wealth of optionsavailable
Cons: Changes in port makeup require conversion adapters; may frustrate some
MacBook Pro (17”)
At MacWorld Expo ’09, Apple SeniorVice-President Phil Schiller spent more than 90 minutes touting the company’slatest software offerings. In typical Apple style, however, Schiller couldn’t let Apple make what would be its finalcurtain call without a fantastic final act. The 5G-notebook lineup would be rounded out with a stunning revision to one of Apple’s crown jewels: the 17-inch MacBook Pro. Though it’s fundamentally similar to its smaller siblings and received the same makeover from its 4G incarnation that the others received, its battery puts it in a class of its own; Apple claimed not only that the battery will last an unheard-of 8 hours, but also that it would continue to function at nearly 100% potential after 300charge cycles and drop to 80% potential after 1000 cycles, thereby lastingthree times longer than most conventional notebook batteries, including itsown. The reason for this is thebattery’s adaptive charging circuitry, which requests that charge be directedonly to the cells that require it instead of the system charging the battery uniformly across all cells. Real world testing of Apple’s claims yielded figures closer to 5 hours. Still, the fact that the battery is fixed inplace seemed irrelevant. Fixed batteries have been a source of worry for many gadget lovers since the original iPoddebuted in 2001.
Nonetheless, Apple’s flagship retained manyof thee same advantages and disadvantages of its 5G fellows, and yet it remaineda solid machine for those fortunate enough to afford its nearly $3,000 base sticker price. Build-to-order modelsnearly eclipsed the 3 GHz mark—but as Don Adams would have said, missed it by that much.
Case type: Anodized aluminum unibody
Chipset: NVIDIA GeForce 9400M MCP with GeForce 9600M GT GPU
Standard RAM: 2 GB (1792 MB usable)
Maximum RAM: 8.00 GB PC3-8500 DDR3 SDRAM (7936 MB usable)
Pros: Powerful, lighter, more durable,energy efficient, hard drive is user-serviceable, wealth of options available
Cons: Changes in port makeup require conversion adapters; may frustrate some ,expensive entry price, fixed battery
MacBook Air (Second Generation and Third Generation)
How do you improve on the world’s most eye-catching notebook? Apparently, you improve uponit from within, as CEO Jobs outlined during the October event introducing the5G-notebook architecture. Like itsfull-sized siblings, the 2G Air ships with an NVIDIA 9400M MCP and 2 GB of fast DDR3 RAM onboard even as the ultra-low voltage Core2 CPU at its heart has seenonly miniscule improvements in overall clock speed. Hard drive options have seen more modest gains, with the standard drive adding 50% more space than its predecessor and the SSD option doubling to 128 GB. With these adjustments, the Air becomes more palatable to travelers willing toaccept certain tradeoffs in exchange for size and weight. For Windows users under Boot Camp, the Air also becomes a more capable, if still underpowered, Vista unit, albeit one that won’t gain much from an x64-based variant thereof.
Case type: Anodized aluminum unibody
Chipset: NVIDIA GeForce 9400M MCP
Standard RAM: 2 GB onboard (1792 MB usable)
Pros: Size and weight offer maximumportability, big screen and keyboard offer comfort for travelers, multi-gesturetrack pad has large surface for easy usability, and price is on par for class,better storage options than previous model.
Cons: No change in onboard RAM to offset new hardware overhead, add-ons still required where WLAN isn’t available, adapter required for new Mini DisplayPort with most displays
MacBook (’09 White)
A surprise refresh in early 2009 brought an entry-level MacBook under $1,000 with most of the 5G features above. To keep it that affordable, Apple ended up blending a third-gen polycarbonate MacBook exterior with a modified 5G-logicassembly. Users of this model got the same fast graphics engine as the one in the mainstream aluminum MacBooks, all the while keeping the single and now scarce FW400 port; but they also gave up niceties such as the multitouch track pad and the slightly quicker DDR3 RAM. Nonetheless, this 5G model was mostlikely aimed at those looking to start with a Mac and get a full-fledged computer.
Case type: Polycarbonate unibody shell
Chipset: NVIDIA GeForce 9400M MCP
Standard RAM: 2 GB (1792 MB usable)
Maximum RAM: 4 GB (3840 MB usable)
Pros: Solid construction, cheaper than prior models, few if any changes from previous model
Cons: Limited trackpad motion support, RAM capped at 4 GB, looks less classy
Sixth generation (6G)
Perhaps the only generation not to offer a significant step up from the previous one, the sixth generation opened with a minor redesign of the white MacBook, which at long last had caught up with the earliest 5G models and therefore offered a better value than its previousmodel. MacBook Airs also see but a minorspeed bump. True improvement is not achieved until the arrival of the first mobile processors to use the emerging “Nehalem”microarchitecture and to see the return of multithreading support. The processor’s redesign also affords the ability to shut down inactive processor cores whilst boosting the clock speed of those that remain active. Unfortunately, MacBook Pros are the only models to receive this welcome upgrade, even if it only comes in a dual-core package to start with. All other models run on the last knownreleases of the “Penryn” core—a harbinger of things to come, maybe?
MacBook
From Mid 2009 onward, MacBooks continued to shadow their upper-crust siblings, but in the process, they ultimately catch up—to 2008’s lineup. It’s from here that these modelstake a multitouch glass-backed trackpad, a fixed battery, and the Mini DisplayPort monitor connection. A remolded unibody design gives this model a curved front. FireWire finally drops, as does the IR receiver; Apple found that many consumers buying the MacBook just didn’t care for either add-on. Still, subtle bumpsin CPU speed and battery life may have been enough to justify an upgrade from previous generation models.
Case type: Polycarbonate unibody shell
Chipset: NVIDIA GeForce 9400M MCP
Standard RAM: 2 GB (1792 MB usable)
Maximum RAM: 4 GB (3840 MB usable)
Pros: Long battery life, sleeker and slimmer design,slightly lighter
Cons: Almost no change from 5G setup; ports dropped
MacBook Pro (15” and17”)
As mentioned above, the 6G Pro offered little in the way of improvements over the 5G lineup—or so it might seem at first glance. Externally, they appear very much like the 5Gmodels, except that Apple has added an SD card slot to the port array—a big upgrade for camera buffs whom usually resorted to carrying cheap and oft-clunky card readers to dangle from a USB port.
Internally, these two flagship units make several changes to accommodate the Intel “Nehalem” architecture mentioned above. No longer could a third-party chipset be used—the direct result of a protracted battle between Intel and NVIDIA over the terms of the deal that allowed the Core2 to run on a non-Intel logic set. In its place, Intel supplied the “Arrandale” Core i-series multipurpose processors along with the then-new 5 series logic sets. Arrandale brought with it a completely new bus known as QuickPath Interconnect, which in theory was much improved over the traditional front-side bus. Also making their debut were Turbo Boost, which shut down one core and turned up the other based on demand, and the Intel HD Graphics core, a welcome boost over previous Intel offerings that for their part lacked muscle; this new engine could render 720p HD where 2007’s X3100 had to feign it. Last but certainly not least, Hyper Threading Technology, absent since the last of the Pentium 4 600 series CPU’s were cas tin 2006, returns to little fanfare but grants users twice the effective coresduring heavy workload.
Flash storage, introduced on MacBook Airs, makes its way into the mainstream lines with this generation and all that will follow it, though the drives’ expense and potential loss of storage space were not always justifiable, even though flash storage delivers on the promise of improved read/write access speeds.
Despite these huge gains, users anticipating quad-core chips on Macs when high-end Windows notebooks already had such were at the very least disappointed
For the discrete graphics engine, Apple again turned to NVIDIA for its 300-series chips, these being significantly more powerful than the 9-series previously used. Video RAM remained unchanged.
Case type: Anodized aluminum unibody
Chipset: Intel 5 Series/HD Graphics with NVIDIA GT 330M
Standard RAM: 4 GB (3840 MB usable inlow-energy modes)
Maximum RAM: 8.00 GB PC3-8500 DDR3 SDRAM (7936 MB usable in low-energy modes)
Pros: Big lift from i-Series CPU’s, SD cards now usablewithout extra hardware, more starting RAM, SSD options for better performance
Cons: Low-energy modes use a graphics engine that is a drag on gaming for some (per user reports), still dual-core.
Seventh generation (7G)
There may be some discussion as to whether a seventh generation of Mac portables exists, or whether this line should be part of the sixth generation instead. Apple’s internal naming schemes for the mainstream models did indeed point to a seventh generation, so on that basis, here’s a definition: Seventh-gen models were, as the sixth-gen models, a mild refresh. This time, though, the refresh targeted only those models not receivingthe Arrandale i-Series upgrade. All models received the final upgrade of the Penryn Core2’s, as well as replacing NVIDIA’s 9400M MCP with a more robust version in the 320M.
With Windows XP in decline from 2009’s release of Windows 7, this became the last iteration of Mac portables to run the nearly-decade-old platform. Vista, too, would meet its end here, though Microsoft still considers it in mainstream support untilmid-2012. Perhaps Apple wished to streamline their Windows support to a single version—or perhaps it realized what so many others outside of itself knew from experience: Vista was a disaster, and it was best left to rot with its distant ancestor, Windows Me, inthe depths of history’s sewers.
MacBook
The trusty steed of many a cheapskate since its 2006 intro received what would be its last upgrade ever in mid 2010. The Penryn processor gets a slight bump from 2.1 GHz to 2.4 GHz, and NVIDIA 320M graphics round out the package. Otherwise, there’s not much new, for its reign as King of Value would quickly come to a close.
Case type: Polycarbonate unibody shell
Chipset: NVIDIA GeForce 320M MCP
Standard RAM: 2 GB (1792 MB usable)
Maximum RAM: 4 GB (3840 MB usable)
Pros: Modest gains for CPU and GPU—but that’s it
Cons: Still cheap looking with a plastic shell—and you paid WHAT?
MacBook Pro (13”)
Now firmly rebranded as a Pro model, Apple’s 13” aluminum notebook was poised to gain clout with “prosumers” and other types that loved the aluminum look but did not want to pay extra for the new CPU’s of the 15” and 17” models. Still, these units made big gains from the new NVIDIA MCP and Penryn chips up to 2.66 GHz. All in all, this seemed a very well-balanced unit for one a full generation behind its peers, and one that was well worth its $1,200 entry fee
Case type: Anodized aluminum unibody
Chipset: NVIDIA GeForce 320M MCP
Standard RAM: 4 GB (3840 MB usable)
Maximum RAM: 8.00 GB PC3-8500 DDR3 SDRAM (7936 MB usable)
Pros: Full featured for the size, hits a“sweet spot” for the price
Cons: Aging architecture now at limit, no i-Series chips to be found
MacBook Air (Fourth Generation)
The head-turning Air gets a late 2010 all-around makeoverwhile expanding the family of portables to include Apple’s smallest notebook since the 12” PowerBook made a splash in 2003. Even at the new 11.6” size, the Air gets a slightly thicker body than its previous two models. The extra thickness isn’t enough to keep it from being the thinnest, but it is enough to add a much-requested second USB port and to eliminate the clumsy door covering the initial USB port and the video port in addition to exposing the MagSafe connector, making the once-awkward connection more accessible. This also gives it a more rectangular profile in line with Apple’s other models.
The upgraded 13” model doubles onboard flash storage andadds the SD card slot from the MacBook Pros.
Both models now feature factory upgrades to storage andRAM—up to 256 GB and 4GB respectively-- as well as new options from theultra-low-voltage Penryn Core2’s. Bothmodels also benefitted from NVIDIA’s 320M MCP Starting at 1.4 GHz with 64 GB ofstorage and 2 GB RAM for $999, the MacBook Air slowly began to earn its place as the value leader, costing just as much as the venerable white MacBook. Even so, with so many options for this model,there was something to fit every budget.
These models are the first to carry a specific OS requirement when running Boot Camp, despite running Snow Leopard as previous models can. Windows 7 is a must, though one would be hard-pressed trying to squeeze it into a minimally configured 11” unit
Case type: Anodized aluminum unibody
Chipset: NVIDIA GeForce 320M MCP
Standard RAM: 2 GB (1792 MB usable)
Maximum RAM: 4 GB (3840 MB usable)
Pros: Still thin and light, wealth of options available,extra USB port, ports much more accessible
Cons: Options fixed at time of order, Boot Camp needs toospecific for some users
What About Sandy Bridge?
As of February 2011, Apple was one of the first manufacturers to introduce Intel’s Sandy Bridge platform to the world, ushering in the eighth and current generation of portable Macs. With this generation, quad-core, eight-thread i-Series CPU’s are a staple of the 15” and 17” high end, while dual-core ,quad-thread models still populate the lower end. Nonetheless, all models now benefit from the same new technology with none fully ahead of or behind the others.
All models also feature a breakthrough in peripheralconnectivity that combines bandwidths of both PCI Express and DisplayPort intoa bus markedly faster than any bus presently in use. Christened “Thunderbolt”, the new interface offers enormous potential with its theoretical 10 gigabit-per-second bandwidth. However, devices using Thunderbolt are only beginning to emerge on the market,thus it is still too early to offer any concrete opinion regarding thistechnology.
As these models are currently on sale (and have recentlybeen updated) at the Apple Store and Apple Authorized Resellers worldwide, to proffer any opinion of current models defeats the purpose of this, anhistorical document of Mac portable evolution.
Conclusion and Final Thoughts
To have witnessed and tracked the evolution of Apple’snotebook lines from 2006 to the present is no small feat. One could say that doing so is in fact opening a window on the history of Apple itself, for it is in Apple’s notebooks that we have seen the greatest innovations both from the company and in computing itself. From their inceptionin 2006, Apple’s Intel notebooks have evolved into some of the best and mostreliable notebooks on the market today. To be able to run Windows as well asthe Mac OS only solidifies that position.
Yet, with each stage of their evolution, the MacBook, MacBookPro and MacBook Air, while they have made significant forward progress, havehad to sacrifice features that some users find essential. Still, while the complaints roll in with each generation of notebooks, time must march on. Apple is a computer company after all, and must continually update its wares if it is to remain in its current position near the top of the industryat large.
The stark realities of Apple’s business, however, should never be used as an excuse to buy the latest and greatest hardware even if yours seems less capable than someone else’s. Holding onto older Apple hardware may actually put you at an advantage, since you may still be able to work with hardware that newer models don’tsupport. This is one of many reasons Macs tend to stick around longer than most Windows PCs.
I certainly hope you have enjoyed this look back at Apple’s Intel notebook lines. As a proudmember of the Mac community for almost eight years and a volunteer whose role connects him to computing past, I find this knowledge of the past fascinating; and yet it is vital to maintain such a background, as it can give us as users an idea of where the industry will be in the months and years to come.Due to a copy/paste glitch, some necessary spaces have inadvertently been removed. If I could fix this, I would.
-
Hi
I'm trying to come up with query report to show Inactive Item bought within a specific period and not sold within a specific period by whse and have stock
The report should show Item Number, Item Name ,Item cost,Retail Price [Based on a price list], Qty in Whse, Last Purchase Date, Last sale Date etc.
e.g item bought between 2011-2013 and have not been sold with the same date range or the last 12 months.
Regards
Brian Ndunda.Hi,
Try this query:
SELECT T0.[ItemCode], T0.[ItemName], T0.[OnHand], T0.[AvgPrice], T0.[LastPurPrc], T0.[LstSalDate] FROM OITM T0 left JOIN INV1 T1 ON T0.ItemCode = T1.ItemCode left JOIN OINV T2 ON T1.DocEntry = T2.DocEntry WHERE T1.[Quantity] is null and T0.[OnHand] >0 GROUP BY T0.[ItemCode], T0.[ItemName], T0.[OnHand], T0.[AvgPrice], T0.[LastPurPrc], T0.[LstSalDate]
Thanks & Regards,
Nagarajan
Maybe you are looking for
-
CA-ICI-CTI version in CRM 5.0
Hi Gurus, We are upgrading CRM 4.0 to CRM 5.0 SR3. After the upgrade we would like to connect Cisco Telephone system to IC Webclient to handle the calls. Bucher-Suter is the third party provider for Cisco. They need the following versions & features
-
HT4461 how to download non-Apple store apps on iMac 10.8
How to download non-Apple store apps on iMac 10.8. I want to transfer photos from a Samsung Galaxy S4 to the iMac.
-
Changing Default SMTP port in SAP Portal/Web AS java 6.40
Hi all, We are configuring notification service in SAP Portal 6.0 with SPS 15. The SMTP server not using 25 port which is default for SMTP. when the server is trying to send notification it is pointing to IP address and 25 port. HOw can I change the
-
SQL> create or replace function route 2 ( 3 p_no number 4 ) 5 return number 6 is 7 l_res number(20); 8 cursor c1 is 9 select 'x' from dlo where order_no=p_no 10 and 11 qty_ord>nvl(qty_rec,0); 12 cursor c2 is 13 select 'x' from dlo where order_no=p_no
-
Service Entry sheet reversal problem.
Hi All, For a service PO, we need to cancel the GR for SES. I understand that to cancel GR, we need to revert the SES in ML81N, which will create the cancellation document. The problem is in ML81N when entering SES number system shows messaage "En