How many users do you have using Busines Objects Enterprise?

Post Author: hcso
CA Forum: Deployment
How many people did you first roll it out to and was it a difficult process?  I'm guessing there was training and documentation made available?
Using:
Business Objects Enterprise Release 2 SP2
SQL Server 2000 Data Mart
IIS
.NET framework installed
Crystal Reports XI R2
Active Directory authentication
Windows Server 2003 virtual machine
Service Pack 2
Intel 3 GHz
1.02 GB RAM
15 G hard drive
Thank you!

The sparsebundle will expand in size as required.. there is not set size.. when the hard disk is full then each TM should start deleting old backups. If you want to set a size for each backup then you will need to create a disk image.. but really TM can be left to look after this itself.
http://pondini.org/TM/33.html

Similar Messages

  • How many users can you have on one account ?

    Hi,
    I have just created a ID with Adobe Reader for a group to use files stored in cloud. I would like to know how many users can access the account at one time via, mobile devices, ipad, desktops ?

    I don't know if there is a limit; you do mean the free https://cloud.acrobat.com/ ?
    I will move your post to the Acrobat.com forum, where someone hopefully can give you a definitive answer.

  • How many users do you have?

    Hi
    Looking at VC3 with Extensis Portfolio 8.5 & Foldersync solution for file management in a studio with 60 CS2 users.
    Any suggestions or advice on following:-
    - Max number of users
    - Number of servers (whether can distribute load)
    - Compatibility issues with CS2 client and VC3 server
    - Use with an XSAN storage system
    I thank you in advance.
    Regards
    C.

    16-18 depending on who's home.

  • How many users can you have on time capsule

    How do I configure Time capsule so that I can use 2 macbook to safty copy (Time machine). Hans

    The sparsebundle will expand in size as required.. there is not set size.. when the hard disk is full then each TM should start deleting old backups. If you want to set a size for each backup then you will need to create a disk image.. but really TM can be left to look after this itself.
    http://pondini.org/TM/33.html

  • How Many Mailboxes can you have using the Mail app?

    I have 5 currently and can't seem to add any more. Is 5 the limit?
    -bk

    I know very little about gmail, but you might try the OS X Hints article, or the step-by-step guide at About.com.
    AK

  • How many playlists can you have or create

    how many playlists can you have or create

    There is no documented limit. 
    Note that Smart Playlists with Live Updating use extra processing, so if you have more than a few dozen of them you may notice a slowdown.
    Some people think they should create a playlist for each album.  If by any chance that is the reason you are asking the question, you will find it is much easier to get to an album via the column browser.

  • How many tasks can you have in a plan?

    How many tasks can you have in a plan?
    What is the maximum number of tasks I can reasonably expect to have in a newScale service (version 2007)? 
    I have approximately 30 tasks in my service.  When the authorizations are complete, and the tasks are initially scheduled, my server response time (between clicking Approve and seeing the next screen) is about 30 seconds. 
    Does this sound unusual?  Am I trying to do too much with my service?
    Thanks!

    Hi Joe,
    There is no "upper limit" on the number of tasks that you can have in a plan. Having said that, the complexity of a plan -- including conditions and the use of external tasks -- can certainly be a factor in response times.
    Having said this, 30 seconds seems like a long time and I strongly suggest that you open a case with customer care on this item.
    We have alerted them to be looking for a case from you.

  • How many Collections can you have in iBooks?

    How many Collections can you have in iBooks?  I have many and now I'm unable to add more collections.  Is there a way to add more collections/shelves?

    Hi Joe,
    There is no "upper limit" on the number of tasks that you can have in a plan. Having said that, the complexity of a plan -- including conditions and the use of external tasks -- can certainly be a factor in response times.
    Having said this, 30 seconds seems like a long time and I strongly suggest that you open a case with customer care on this item.
    We have alerted them to be looking for a case from you.

  • How many users do i have with this account?

    How many users do i have with this account?

    Hi darylm32102489,
    Which account are you referring to? I see that you have an Acrobat subscription--is that what you're asking about? Or are you referring to your Acrobat.com online storage account?
    If you're referring to an Acrobat subscription, please see this FAQ for information regarding licensing: https://helpx.adobe.com/x-productkb/policy-pricing/acrobat-pro-xi-subscription-faqs.html#i d_83547
    Please let us know if you have additional questions.
    Best,
    Sara

  • How many devices can you have on 1 icloud account

    how many devices can you have on 1 icloud accout?

    It's unusual for a whole family to use the same icloud account, since that way everyone gets the same emails, contacts, calenders, etc.  All it takes is one family member to delete a contact by mistake and then it will be deleted from everyone's devices.  Not good.  The usual advice is for every individual to have their own icloud account.
    The iTunes store is another issue - everyone can use the same Apple ID to access the same itunes account to download music, apps, etc. without everyone having to buy the items multiple times.

  • Q: How many Users do you serve w. your OES11-Infrastructure?

    Reason for this - at first glance - stupid- question is the following:
    We migrated (or Novell forced us to) from our low power (two HL DL360 G3 and 2 DL360 g4 one G5) 6.5 Cluster to a very juicy (6xDL360 G8, tons of proccessors) OES 11 cluster. We serve
    approx. 1600 - 1700 Clients. Today everything stopped some of the Cluster Nodes didn't respond. This never happend in our old Cluster!
    The reason was or IS by "Enterprise" Design:
    DMESG: ipv4: Neighbour table overflow. !!!! Are we the only ones in the (small Novell) World who serves more than 1000 Clients???? WHY is there a limitation in the IP Cluster stack???
    Did one EVER tested that. Should we better migrate to M$???
    ip neigh show | wc -l --> shows 1021 entrys
    sysctl net.ipv4.neigh.default.gc_thresh3
    net.ipv4.neigh.default.gc_thresh3 = 1024
    Means one cluster Node can handle 1024 connections. What if on one Node runs the DNS server? Only 1020 of 1600 Clients get an answer! Cool enterprise solution boys!
    VERY angry!

    On 03/25/2014 04:56 AM, jottschi wrote:
    >
    > Reason for this - at first glance - stupid- question is the following:
    > We migrated (or Novell forced us to) from our low power (two HL DL360 G3
    > and 2 DL360 g4 one G5) 6.5 Cluster to a very juicy (6xDL360 G8, tons of
    > proccessors) OES 11 cluster. We serve
    > approx. 1600 - 1700 Clients. Today everything stopped some of the
    > Cluster Nodes didn't respond. This never happend in our old Cluster!
    > The reason was or IS by "Enterprise" Design:
    > DMESG: ipv4: Neighbour table overflow. !!!! Are we the only ones in the
    > (small Novell) World who serves more than 1000 Clients???? WHY is there
    > a limitation in the IP Cluster stack???
    I'm sorry to hear about the lack of availability of the cluster nodes. I
    am sure it is frustrating to have a system configured to be
    highly-reliable (via clustering) to fail due to default settings. With
    that said, this is a default Linux setting, and you're welcome to change it.
    > Did one EVER tested that. Should we better migrate to M$???
    I do not understand what you're asking.... did anybody test this on large
    broadcast domains?
    > ip neigh show | wc -l --> shows 1021 entrys
    Wow, well that's quite a few. I think this number indicates something you
    do not realize, though. While something like 'ss' or 'netstat' will tell
    you how many layer three (IP) or four (TCP/UDP) connections your system
    has, that number is not reflected by 'ip neigh', so usually the number of
    clients your system has is limited in the list of neighbors by quite a
    bit. For example, if I make a connection on my laptop (openSUSE, but same
    default for my neighboring table) to Google, I can see that I have a fair
    number of network connections total as shown:
    Code:
    me@mybox:~/Desktop> /usr/sbin/ss -planeto | grep -c ESTAB
    61
    but that's only tangentially related to the number of neighbors my laptop
    sees:
    Code:
    me@mybox:~/Desktop> ip neigh
    192.168.1.20 dev eth0 lladdr 00:1d:09:03:54:02 STALE
    192.168.1.254 dev eth0 lladdr 00:1e:2a:74:66:35 STALE
    192.168.1.1 dev eth0 lladdr f8:8f:ca:40:7a:1c REACHABLE
    192.168.255.50 dev br8 lladdr ac:d3:58:ae:8e:ac STALE
    How can that be? I have at least eight connections to unique remote
    machines, so shouldn't I have at least eight listings in 'ip neigh'
    output? The answer, of course, is 'no' because what you see from 'ip
    neigh' are the cached addresses found via ARP, and ARP only matters within
    the current broadcast domain, meaning on your local network before you hit
    any routers. Even though I'm connected out to eight machines, all my
    local routing table needs to care about (despite being VPN'd to a few
    places and therefore having a few extra networks considered semi-local)
    are the server, router, another router, and printer. Also, this number,
    as you can see above, has entries become stale pretty quickly. I think
    that time period is, again by default, something like thirty seconds,
    since there is no guarantee from one second to the next that a given
    server, workstation, or other node on the local network will still be
    there. After something is stale the system just uses ARP again to see
    what's still out there.
    > sysctl net.ipv4.neigh.default.gc_thresh3
    > net.ipv4.neigh.default.gc_thresh3 = 1024
    Yes, this is a default for the Linux kernel in general. You're welcome to
    tune it using sysctl, or probably via Yast so that it is stored to be used
    after rebooting (and for the nice simple UI, if you're into that kind of
    thing).
    > Means one cluster Node can handle 1024 connections. What if on one Node
    > runs the DNS server? Only 1020 of 1600 Clients get an answer! Cool
    > enterprise solution boys!
    No, it means that a given box, by default, can handle 1024 connections
    from the local network. A typical Class C network, for example, only has
    254 possible nodes, so only 253 connections. I've seen enterprises do
    some supernetting to get things like 1022 nodes possible in a network, and
    sometimes even fill that, but that's it. I have been on networks that had
    addresses handed out from a Class B-like range (172.16.x.x) or even a
    class A range (10.x.x.x) but those networks never had 65k or 10M boxes on
    them because when you get too far beyond a thousand nodes you typically
    suffer a bit of slowness. In your case you not only have more than 1024
    nodes, but all of them are talking to the same server at the same time on
    that same network.
    Can Linux handle more? Sure, you're dealing with the same OS that runs
    most supercomputers in the world, many of them being large clusters of
    computers all working together in a single network, so obviously the
    potential is there; however, there are reasons that one does not allow the
    kernel to chew up all memory for a setting like "how many neighbors do you
    have cached right now" when, for 99.9999% of the world, that max number
    is around 200 since this specifically deals with neighbors on the same
    segment or broadcast domain, not neighbors meaning anything reachable via
    IP. Doing otherwise, for example setting it to 1,000,000, means that
    somebody who was clever could more-easily waste your system's memory via a
    denial of service (DoS) attack by flooding the network with bogus ARP
    entries. Every one takes some memory, and every one needs to be managed
    by the kernel until it is expired and removed, and again those networks
    needing more than 1024 to be remembered within any single thirty-second
    period are pretty rare. Your network must be pretty awesome to handle
    that number of concurrent systems in the same logical network without
    degradation.
    Regarding running a DNS server, that is a good possibility as a service
    that would experience this problem assuming all of the clients were on the
    same network as the DNS server itself. While possible, the number of
    networks where I've seen that has been pretty small overall since usually
    those machines (servers) end up in a DMZ somewhere to prevent
    unauthorized, or at least unaudited, access.
    > VERY angry!
    You're right in that this limitation should be documented, and made quite
    obvious wherever it is documented. The migration guide would make sense,
    as that would be a place where a lot of assumptions about defaults would
    be questioned due to the OS change. If you have a specific page in the
    documentation where you read through and expected limitations to be called
    out, please either submit feedback, perhaps linking to this thread to
    provide the background that you experienced, or post a link here an I'll
    do the same.
    If there are any other defaults that you feel should be changed,
    particularly for your environment, sharing those may help as well.
    In the meantime, you can change your current settings by running the
    following as 'root' if you have not done so already:
    Code:
    cp /etc/sysctl.conf /etc/sysctl.conf-`date +%s`
    cat << EOM >> /etc/sysctl.conf
    # Setup higher threshold for arp
    net.ipv4.neigh.default.gc_thresh3 = 4096
    net.ipv4.neigh.default.gc_thresh2 = 2048
    net.ipv4.neigh.default.gc_thresh1 = 1024
    EOM
    To apply the changes either run 'sysctl -p' (from memory I think that's
    the right command) or else reboot the node, then perform again on other nodes.
    Good luck.
    If you find this post helpful and are logged into the web interface,
    show your appreciation and click on the star below...

  • How many times do you have to pay for Creative Cloud complete plan prepaid if it says an amount of money per year? do you have to pay that every year?

    how many times do you have to pay for a Creative Cloud complete plan prepaid if it says an amount of money per year? do you have to pay that every year?

    Perhaps the unclear part here is that the Cloud is a subscription offering. You never pay for it outright and never actually own it.
    12 months pre-paid simply means paying the full 12 months subscription upfront. The following year, you do the same. And the same every year after that.
    Like any subscription, if you want to keep using the software, you keep paying the monthly (or annual) fee every month (or year), year in, year out.
    When you cancel your subscription, or it expires and you don't renew, then the software stops working.

  • How many albums do you have?

    How many albums do you have? How much variation do you have between albums?
    I have so many pictures I'm having a hard time deciding on how to setup albums.

    John,
    I don't have a lot of albums. There's no one-to-one correspondence between photos and albums, so I choose not to use them as my main organizational scheme. I prefer working in Library view, where I do get each photo once and only once. (I use V6 Film Rolls, which is the same as Events in '08.) When importing photos, I place them in my most recent, current roll (event) or begin a new one. Then I keyword all of the new photos, and they're good to go. Working chronologically makes sense to me, and I pretty much remember where my photos are. In addition, I can find any photo or group of photos in my library by filtering by keywords and date.
    I use albums for special collections and projects. I have some smart albums for the best photos of my kids' birthdays. I gather photos into albums to prepare for printing. I also create albums for the purpose of adding slideshows to my home movies in iDVD, and to use as title frames in iMovie.
    That's just my system; it works for me. iPhoto is so flexible and powerful that in time you'll find one that works for you.
    Regards.

  • How many libraries can you have in i photo?

    How many libraries can you have in i photo?

    gussie88 wrote:
    Was she satisfied eventually!!! haha If you export and import photos to a new library, do faces -places etc transfer too? Thanks
    Yes, I believe they do.  The places data is associated with GPS coordinates tagged on each photo.  I think the faces data works the same way -- it is associated with each photo regardless of what album it is in.

  • How many lines can you have on a nation wide talk and text plan?

    How many lines can you have on a nation wide talk and text plan?

    A max of five lines is allowed on the Nationwide Talk & Text family plan.

Maybe you are looking for