LabVIEW animation picture ring memory allocation
I'm creating an animation in labview, I have 1,000 images that I need to flip through, I'm using a pict ring and flipping through the images... problem is after loading about 200 images (they're 20k each) my computer throw in the towel, the RAM is full the Virtual RAM might be full.... I'm wondering if there is a workaround around this? Any kind of way to manipulate the memory so I can finish? Maybe it's more of a computer thing than a LabVIEW thing... I was thinking, if I increase my machines virtual memory to "alot" and tell LabVIEW not to use th RAM just use the virtual memory that maybe I'd be able to continue, but I don't know if this is possible or how to do it... any suggestion/advice?
much thanks!
PS - I realize that there are other programs that are well suited for this and that LabVIEW really isn't animation software, but I MUST use LabVIEW to do this and I'm lookin for advice to find out whether or not this task is possible in LabVIEW. thanks.
Solved!
Go to Solution.
I would advise not to use the picture ring, if only because it's not very convenient.
You can use the picture control, which will allow you to read in and display the PNG images one after the other (using the VIs in the picture palette) and here you have two options:
Read the files in one at a time. This might be a problem if you do this quickly and repeatedly, but will solve any memory issues you might have.
Read the files in once and keep them in memory. Note that the picture control does not have any compression, so the actual size of an image in RAM would be PIXELS x 3 bytes (or x 1 byte and a bit, if you have an 8-bit color depth), so the amount of RAM will depend on the size of the image. For a 200 x 200 image, this should be 120KB, assuming I did my math correctly.
Try to take over the world!
Similar Messages
-
Hey,
Is it possible to allocate predefined RAM Memory and accumulate data's into it?
Before going in to detail – I am currently looking to write the inspection results in database for statistical analysis. I hope it will always consume some time to write it in database for each component / iteration. So decided to accumulate all the data in memory and write it at one shot.
In detail, user has to inputs the memory size via front panel control. Let us assume for writing 1 row of string information occupies “XX” bytes. (Not yet sure how to calculate memory size of 1D string array of 10 elements (max of 20 character in each string)). Dividing the user input memory size with 1 row of memory size will give how many rows we can write at maximum say “N”.
Use the for loop with “N” iteration and accumulates the 1D info to 2D array of information (auto indexing) and write it in Database at one shot.
Any help or direction may helps a lot.
Waiting for the reply
Sasi.
Certified LabVIEW Associate Developer
If you can DREAM it, You can DO it - Walt DisneyAs far I know LabVIEW internally handles the memory allocation and we don't have any option to allocate it. There might be a way by using a windows dll but no direct function atleast.
As you said you are going to use the for loop, in this case LabVIEW pre-allocates the memory depending on the data type and you don't have to worry about that. For details about the memory according to the data type you can check this link.
The best solution is the one you find it by yourself -
Hello,
I have a beginner's question: I have a large number of variables I need to pass to a function. Will there be a difference in memory use if I pass them directly compared to if I bundle them to a cluster and pass the cluster to the function and unbundle it inside?
I tried to read online posts, and some say that cluster is like a struct... does it mean that bundling variables to cluster creates new memory locations for each variable, with overhead? My application refuses to run already ("Not enough memory") so if cluster creates new memory allocations, it's critical that I know it...
Any information is appreciated
MichalMNorbert B wrote:
Different tunnels are always different dataspaces, so an output tunnel is creates a copy in regard to the inputtunnel. A shiftregister can address this because the left and right node grant access to the same dataspace. Please note that most often, this does not take much effect, but when working with arrays, it is mandatory to work with shiftregisters.
Hi, Norbert, you're right (as usual).
The only small thing about Shift Registers (vs AutoIndex)... Let's say, we have pretty big array (nearby memory limit), which should be computed inside of loop.
Now we have two possibilities: a) using AutoIndex tunnel, or b) using "preallocated" array and Shift Register. Something like that:
The method b) with preallocated array is "more understandable" for me also from the "traditional programming" point of view. Continuous memory allocated (like with malloc), then Shift Register acts as pointer, and we performing elements replacement step by step.
The method a) theoretically should work slow, because new elementh added to the array at each iteration (which caused memory reallocation every time), but it seems to be that LabVIEW intelligent enough for memory allocation before looping, and not during looping. And AutoIndex is faster than Shift Register in this case.
But it looks completely other with while loops:
Now array cannot be preallocated with AutoIndex, because total amount of iterations is unknown, and this caused big performance penalties (at least at first run). So, here Shift Register is preferred. What is funny - at second run the Method a) will be faster than method b) (looks like internal LabVIEW cache), but when total amount of iterations will be changed, then it will be slow again.
And finally For Loop with Conditional Terminal vs While Loop:
The total amount of iterations is unknown in both cases, but For Loop still fast because memory preallocated before iterations (created Array will be "trimmed" if loop will be breaked with condition).
It means, that sometimes (but not always) AutoIndex is more preferred than ShiftRegister.
Andrey. -
Slider value corresponding to picture ring control
Hi guys.
I am using LabView 2009. Currently I have a picture ring control in my VI ready for me to create an animation but I am suppose to have a numeric slider beside the picture ring control so that whenever my animation starts, my slider value would change. For example if the first image is being shown by the picture ring control then my slider value would be 0, second image shown by the picture ring, the slider value would be 15. I currently do not have any idea on how to achieve this so I do hope to receive all your prompt replies.
Thanks.This is what I have done so far, but I can't seem to connect the stop button to the event structure and how do you also change the to ?
Hope to get your prompt reply.
Thanks. -
How do I play all pictures in a picture ring one at a time in order?
Hi. I'm basically trying to do a very simple animation. I have 5 pictures in a picture ring and would like to play them in a loop. Is this possible? Thanks.
Hi LisaM!!
There is a very simple way to do this, check the following link here. I hope this is what you are looking for
Have a nice day!!
Oswald Branford -
Cache Memory Allocator \ Short Term Memory Allocator Issues
Hi all
I have a number of identically configured (High School) Servers which are giving me the same memory errors (some more frequently than others) and I've run out of ideas.
They are all HP Proliant DL360 G6 Servers, NetWare 6.5 sp8 with eDir 8.8 sp5.
The error messages are :
"Cache memory allocator out of available memory." followed by "Short term memory allocator is out of memory. xxx attempts to get more memory failed. request size in bytes xxxxxxxx from Module SWEEP.NLM"
The module referred to is always "SWEEP.NLM" (Sophos Anti-virus). A Server reset solves the problem but it is normally back within a month.
I've posted below a config.txt and segstats.txt from one of the servers.
I would be grateful if someone could help me with this as it's now becoming a 'headache'.
Cheers
Neil Hughes
*** Memory Pool Configuration for : KLDSRV1
Time and date : 10:34:44 AM 01/18/2012
Server version : NetWare 6.5 Support Pack 8
Server uptime : 32d 20h 00m 00s
SEG.NLM version : v1.72
0xFFFFFFFF --------------------------------------------------------------
| Kernel Reserved Space |
| |
| Size : 180,355,071 bytes (172.0 MB) |
| |
0xF5400000 --------------------------------------------------------------
| User Address Space (L!=P) |
| |
| User Pool Size : 884,998,144 bytes (844.0 MB) |
| High Water Mark : 2,936,012,800 bytes (2.73 GB) |
| |
0xC0800000 --------------------------------------------------------------
| Virtual Memory Cache Pool (L!=P) |
| |
| VM Pool Size : 1,082,130,432 bytes (1.01 GB) |
| Available : 1,049,260,032 bytes (1000.7 MB) |
| Total VM Pages : 1,047,080,960 bytes (998.6 MB) |
| Free Clean VM : 1,025,097,728 bytes (977.6 MB) |
| Free Cache VM : 21,983,232 bytes (21.0 MB) |
| Total LP Pages : 0 bytes (0 KB) |
| Free Clean LP : 0 bytes (0 KB) |
| Free Cache LP : 0 bytes (0 KB) |
| Free Dirty : 0 bytes (0 KB) |
| VM Pages In Use : 2,179,072 bytes (2.1 MB) |
| NLM Memory In Use : 1,066,545,152 bytes (1017.1 MB) |
| NLM/VM Memory : 1,050,394,624 bytes (1001.7 MB) |
| Largest Segment : 16,240,640 bytes (15.5 MB) |
| High Water Mark : 1,535,295,488 bytes (1.43 GB) |
| |
0x80000000 --------------------------------------------------------------
| File System Cache Pool (L==P or L!=P) |
| |
| FS Pool Size : 2,141,048,832 bytes (1.99 GB) |
| Available : 252,231,680 bytes (240.5 MB) |
| Largest Segment : 10,547,200 bytes (10.1 MB) |
| |
| NSS Memory (85%) : 1,043,554,304 bytes (995.2 MB) |
| NSS (avail cache) : 958,324,736 bytes (913.9 MB) |
| |
0x00623000 --------------------------------------------------------------
| DOS / SERVER.NLM |
| |
| Size : 6,434,816 bytes (6.1 MB) |
| |
0x00000000 --------------------------------------------------------------
Top 6 Memory Consuming NLMs
NLM Name Version Date Total NLM Memory
================================================== ==============================
1. DS.NLM 20219.15 12 May 2009 242,957,527 bytes (231.7 MB)
2. NSS.NLM 3.27.03 7 Jun 2010 225,471,568 bytes (215.0 MB)
3. SERVER.NLM 5.70.08 3 Oct 2008 197,615,392 bytes (188.5 MB)
4. SWEEP.NLM 4.73 1 Dec 2011 104,793,570 bytes (99.9 MB)
5. DBSRV6.NLM 6.00.04 16 May 2001 38,735,938 bytes (36.9 MB)
6. XMGR.NLM 27610.01.01 30 Mar 2009 32,184,593 bytes (30.7 MB)
Logical Memory Summary Information
================================================== ==============================
File System Cache Information
FS Cache Free : 63,897,600 bytes (60.9 MB)
FS Cache Fragmented : 188,334,080 bytes (179.6 MB)
FS Cache Largest Segment : 10,547,200 bytes (10.1 MB)
Logical System Cache Information
LS Cache Free : 138,153,984 bytes (131.8 MB)
LS Cache Fragmented : 364,015,616 bytes (347.2 MB)
LS Cache Uninitialized : 333,455,360 bytes (318.0 MB)
LS Cache Largest Segment : 16,240,640 bytes (15.5 MB)
LS Cache Largest Position : 34490000
Summary Statistics
Total Free : 202,051,584 bytes (192.7 MB)
Total Fragmented : 552,349,696 bytes (526.8 MB)
Highest Physical Address : DF62E000
User Space : 1,065,353,216 bytes (1016.0 MB)
User Space (High Water Mark) : 2,936,012,800 bytes (2.73 GB)
NLM Memory (High Water Mark) : 1,535,295,488 bytes (1.43 GB)
Kernel Address Space In Use : 2,475,212,800 bytes (2.31 GB)
Available Kernel Address Space : 754,401,280 bytes (719.5 MB)
Memory Summary Screen (.ms)
================================================== ==============================
KNOWN MEMORY Bytes Pages Bytes Pages
Server: 3747295616 914867 Video: 8192 2
Dos: 111232 27 Other: 131072 32
FS CACHE KERNEL NLM MEMORY
Original: 3743006720 913820 Code: 48136192 11752
Current: 252231680 61580 Data: 28098560 6860
Dirty: 0 0 Sh Code: 40960 10
Largest seg: 10547200 2575 Sh Data: 20480 5
Non-Movable: 0 0 Help: 172032 42
Other: 1890455552 461537 Message: 1249280 305
Avail NSS: 958328832 233967 Alloc L!=P: 957685760 233810
Movable: 8192 2 Alloc L==P: 14991360 3660
Total: 1050394624 256444
VM SYSTEM
Free clean VM: 1025097728 250268
Free clean LP: 0 0
Free cache VM: 21983232 5367
Free cache LP: 0 0
Free dirty: 0 0
In use: 2179072 532
Total: 1049260032 256167
Memory Configuration (set parameters)
================================================== ==============================
Auto Tune Server Memory = OFF
File Cache Maximum Size = 2147483648
File Service Memory Optimization = 1
Logical Space Compression = 1
Garbage Collection Interval = 299.9 seconds
VM Garbage Collector Period = 300.0 seconds
server -u<number> = 884998144
NSS Configuration File:
C:\NWSERVER\NSSSTART.CFG
/AllocAheadBlks=0
/MinBufferCacheSize=20000
/MinOSBufferCacheSize=20000
/CacheBalanceMaxBuffersPerSession=20000
/NameCacheSize=200000
/AuthCacheSize=20000
/NumWorkToDos=100
/FileFlushTimer=10
/BufferFlushTimer=10
/ClosedFileCacheSize=100000
/CacheBalance=85
DS Configuration File:
SYS:\_NETWARE\_NDSDB.INI
preallocatecache=true
cache=200000000
Server High/Low Water Mark Values
================================================== ==============================
NLM Memory High Water Mark = 1,535,295,488 bytes
File System High Water Mark = 435,727 bytes
User Space Information:
User Space High Water Mark = 683,339,776 bytes
Committed Pages High Water Mark = 91 pages
Mapped VM Pages High Water Mark = 5,870 pages
Reserved Pages High Water Mark = 692,325 pages
Swapped Pages High Water Mark = 5,710 pages
Available Low Water Mark = 882,774,016
ESM Memory High Water Mark = 949 pages
Novell File Server Configuration Report For Server: KLDSRV1
Novell File Server Configuration Report Created: Wed, Jan 18, 2012 11:15 am
Novell File Server Configuration Report. [Produced by CONFIG.NLM v3.10.17]
Novell NetWare 5.70.08 October 3, 2008
(C) Copyright 1983-2008 Novell Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Server name...............: KLDSRV1
OS Version................: v5.70
OS revision number........: 8
Product Version...........: v6.50
Product Revision Number...: 8
Server Up Time(D:H:M:Sec).: 32:20:51:12
Serial number.............: XXXXXXXX
Internal Net. Addr........: 00000000h
Security Restriction Level: 1
SFT Level.................: 2
Engine Type...............: NATIVE
TTS Level.................: 1
Total Server memory.......: 3573.81 MB or 3747406848 Bytes
Processor speed rating....: 197582
Original cache buffers....: 913820
Current Cache Buffers.....: 292534
LRU Sitting Time(D:H:M:S).: 32:20:51:12
Current FSP's.............: 12
Current MP FSP's..........: 378
Current Receive Buffers...: 3000
Directory cache buffers...: 0
Workstations Connected....: 1136
Max Workstations Connected: 1528
Server language...........: ENGLISH (4)
Timesync active...........: Yes
Time is synchronized......: Yes
Total Processors..........: 4
Server DOS Country ID.....: 44
Server DOS Code Page......: 850
Boot Loader...............: DOS
Top of Modules List 312 Modules Loaded.
ACPIASL.NLM v1.05.16 Jan. 16, 2007 ACPI Architecture Services Layer for ACPI compliant systems
ACPICA.NLM v1.05.16 Jan. 16, 2007 ACPI Component Architecture for ACPI compliant systems
ACPICMGR.NLM v1.05.16 Jan. 16, 2007 ACPI Component Manager for ACPI compliant systems
ACPIDRV.PSM v1.05.19 Jan. 16, 2007 ACPI Platform Support Module for ACPI compliant systems
ACPIPWR.NLM v1.05.16 Jan. 16, 2007 ACPI Power Management Driver for ACPI compliant systems
AFREECON.NLM v5.00 Jul. 22, 2005 AdRem Free Remote Console (NCPE)
APACHE2.NLM v2.00.63 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache Web Server 2.0.63
APRLIB.NLM v0.09.17 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache Portability Runtime Library 0.9.17
AUTHLDAP.NLM v2.00.63 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache 2.0.63 LDAP Authentication Module
AUTHLDDN.NLM v1.00 Nov. 9, 2005 LdapDN Module
BROKER.NLM v3.00.12 Feb. 20, 2008 NDPS Broker
BSDSOCK.NLM v6.82.02 Dec. 23, 2009 Novell BSDSOCK Module
BTCPCOM.NLM v7.90 Jul. 9, 2003 BTCPCOM.NLM v7.90.000, Build 253
BTRIEVE.NLM v7.90 Mar. 21, 2001 BTRIEVE.NLM v7.90.000
CALNLM32.NLM v6.01.03 Aug. 26, 2008 NetWare NWCalls Runtime Library
CCS.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 Controlled Cryptography Services from Novell, Inc.
CDBE.NLM v6.01 Sep. 21, 2006 NetWare Configuration DB Engine
CDDVD.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Loadable Storage System (LSS) for CD/UDF (Build 212 MP)
CERTLCM.NLM v28200902.26 Feb. 26, 2009 Novell SASL EXTERNAL Proxy LCM 2.8.2.0 20090226
CERTLSM.NLM v28200902.26 Feb. 26, 2009 Novell SASL EXTERNAL LSM 2.8.2.0 20090226
CHARSET.NLM v1.01 Jun. 4, 2003 Display Character Set Support For NetWare
CIOS.NLM v1.60 Feb. 12, 2008 Consolidated IO System
CLBACKUP.NLM v8.00 Sep. 22, 2010 NetWare Client Backup
CLBROWSE.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 NetWare Client Browse
CLIB.NLM v5.90.15 Mar. 10, 2008 (Legacy) Standard C Runtime Library for NLMs
CLNNLM32.NLM v6.01.03 Aug. 26, 2008 NetWare NWClient Runtime Library
CLRESTOR.NLM v8.00 Mar. 31, 2009 NetWare Client Restore
CLXNLM32.NLM v6.01.03 Aug. 26, 2008 NetWare NWCLX Runtime Library
COMN.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Common Support Layer (COMN) (Build 212 MP)
CONFIG.NLM v3.10.17 Feb. 12, 2008 NetWare Server Configuration Reader
CONLOG.NLM v3.01.02 Aug. 8, 2006 System Console Logger
CONNAUD.NLM v3.17 May. 10, 2005 NLS - Connection Metering
CONNMGR.NLM v5.60.01 Sep. 7, 2006 NetWare Connection Manager NLM
CPQBSSA.NLM v8.20 Jan. 29, 2009 HP Insight Management Base System Agent
CPQCI.NLM v1.06 Oct. 17, 2005 hp ProLiant iLO Management Interface Driver
CPQDASA.NLM v8.20.01 Feb. 24, 2009 HP Management Array Subsystem Agent
CPQHMMO.NLM v3.92 Jun. 10, 2003 Compaq HMMO Services Provider for NetWare
CPQHOST.NLM v8.20 Jan. 29, 2009 HP Insight Management Host Agent
CPQHTHSA.NLM v8.20 Jan. 29, 2009 HP Insight Management Health Agent
CPQNCSA.NLM v8.20 Dec. 11, 2008 HP Insight NIC Agent
CPQRISA.NLM v8.20 Jan. 29, 2009 HP Insight Management Remote Insight Agent
CPQSSSA.NLM v8.20.01 Feb. 24, 2009 HP Management Storage Box Subsystem Agent
CPQTHRSA.NLM v8.20 Jan. 29, 2009 HP Insight Management Threshold Agent
CPQWEBAG.NLM v8.20 Jan. 29, 2009 HP Web Based Management Agent
CPUCHECK.NLM v5.60.01 Dec. 6, 2007 NetWare Processor Checking Utility
CRLSM.NLM v2.08.01 Oct. 28, 2008 Challenge Response LSM v2.8.1.0
CSL.NLM v2.06.02 Jan. 13, 2000 NetWare Call Support Layer For NetWare
CSLIND.NLM v4.21 Dec. 7, 1999 TCPIP CSL INDEPENDENCE MODULE 7Dec99 7Dec99
CVAPPMGR.NLM v8.00 Nov. 22, 2010 AppManager
CVARCH.NLM v8.00 Nov. 10, 2010 Archive Library
CVD.NLM v8.00 Apr. 13, 2011 Communications Service
CVJOBCL.NLM v8.00 Nov. 10, 2010 Job Client
CVLIB.NLM v8.00 Apr. 13, 2011 Library for NetWare
CVLZOLIB.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 LZO Compression Library
CVNETCHK.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 Network Check
CVSIM.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 Software Installation Manager
CVSMS.NLM v8.00 Sep. 28, 2009 NetWare SMS Interface
DBEXTF6.NLM v6.00.04 Sep. 12, 2000 Sybase Adaptive Server Anywhere External Library
DBNET6.NLM v1.45.02 Mar. 16, 2006 Debug Network IO Support
DBSRV6.NLM v6.00.04 May. 16, 2001 Sybase Adaptive Server Anywhere
DFSLIB.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 DFS Common Library (Build 212 MP)
DHOST.NLM v10010.97 Sep. 18, 2006 Novell DHost Portability Interface 1.0.0 SMP
DIAG500.NLM v3.04.03 Oct. 31, 2007 Diagnostic/coredump utility for NetWare 6.x
DM.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Directory Manager
DMNDAP.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Directory Manager NDAP Provider
DPLSV386.NLM v1.15.03 Apr. 16, 2010 NetWare 6.x Distributed Print Library - DPLSV386
DPRPCNLM.NLM v3.00.17 Oct. 10, 2006 Novell NDPS RPC Library NLM
DS.NLM v20219.15 May. 12, 2009 Novell eDirectory Version 8.8 SP5 SMP
DSAPI.NLM v6.00.04 Jan. 27, 2006 NetWare NWNet Runtime Library
DSEVENT.NLM v6.01.03 Aug. 26, 2008 NetWare DSEvent Runtime Library
DSLOADER.NLM v20219.15 May. 12, 2009 Novell eDirectory Version 8.8.0 Loader SMP
DSLOG.NLM v20219.15 May. 12, 2009 DS Log for Novell eDirectory 8.8.0
DTS.NLM v3.01.05 Sep. 8, 2008 Transaction Server 3.1.0 - Netware
EHCIDRV.CAD v1.05 Feb. 26, 2008 Novell Universal Serial Bus EHCI driver
EPWDLSM.NLM v27000508.12 Aug. 12, 2005 Novell Enhanced Password LSM 2.7.0.0 20050812
ETADVLSM.NLM v27000508.03 Aug. 3, 2005 Novell Entrust LSM 2.7.0.0 20050803
ETHERTSM.NLM v3.90 Mar. 20, 2006 Novell Ethernet Topology Specific Module
EVENTMGR.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Event Manager
EVMGRC.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 Event Manager Client
EXPIRES.NLM v2.00.63 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache 2.0.63 Expires Module
FATFS.NLM v1.24 Aug. 27, 2007 FAT Filesystem Module for NetWare
FILESYS.NLM v5.14 Apr. 16, 2008 NetWare File System NLM
FSBRWSE.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 NetWare File System Browser
GALAXY.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 Loader
GAMS.NLM v2.00.01 Sep. 2, 2008 Graded Authentication Management Service
HBNNSP.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier GetHostByName Name Service Provider
HEADERS.NLM v2.00.63 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache 2.0.63 Headers Module
HOSTMIB.NLM v5.03.01 Dec. 1, 2006 NetWare 5.x/6.x Host Resources MIB
HPASMXL.NLM v1.14 Jan. 25, 2009 HP ProLiant Embedded Health Driver
HPQCISS.HAM v1.16.01 Mar. 3, 2009 HP SAS/SATA Unified RAID driver
HTTPSTK.NLM v4.03 Sep. 4, 2008 Novell Small Http Interface
HWDETECT.NLM v1.19.05 Feb. 20, 2003 Novell Hardware Insertion/Removal Detection
IDEATA.HAM v4.34 May. 5, 2007 Novell IDE/ATA/ATAPI/SATA Host Adapter Module
IFACE.NLM v7.05.04 Dec. 1, 2011 SAV Interface for NetWare
IFOLDER.NLM v2.04 Feb. 19, 2007 ifolder
IFOLDERU.NLM v2.04 Feb. 19, 2007 ifolderu
IMGSERV.NLM v7.00 Jan. 12, 2009 ZENworks Imaging Server
IPCTL.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Transport Layer
IPMCFG.NLM v1.01.16 Oct. 22, 2005 Web Interface for IP Address Management
IPMGMT.NLM v1.03.01 May. 29, 2007 TCPIP - NetWare IP Address Management
IPPSRVR.NLM v4.02.02 Jun. 16, 2010 Novell iPrint Server
JAVA.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 java.nlm (based on 1.4.2_18) Build 08101613
JNCPV2.NLM v1.10 Nov. 13, 2003 Native Wrapper Java Class Libraries for NetWare
JNET.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 Java jnet (based on 1.4.2_18)
JSMSG.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 Jetstream Message Layer (Build 212 MP)
JSOCK.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 Support For Java Sockets (loader)
JSOCK6X.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 NetWare 6.x Support For Java Sockets (JDK 1.4.2)
JSTCP.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 Jetstream TCP Transport Layer (Build 212 MP)
JVM.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 Java Hotspot 1.4.2_18 Interpreter
JVMLIB.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 Java jvmlib (based on 1.4.2_18)
KEYB.NLM v2.10 Jul. 26, 2001 NetWare National Keyboard Support
LANGMANI.NLM v10212.02 Mar. 10, 2009 Novell Cross-Platform Language Manager
LBURP.NLM v20216.02 Mar. 10, 2009 LDAP Bulkload Update/Replication Protocol service extension for Novell eDirectory 8.8
LCMCIFS2.NLM v2.00.09 Sep. 14, 2007 Windows Native File Access Login Methods (Build 91 SP)
LCMMD5.NLM v28000806.23 Jun. 23, 2008 Novell SASL DIGEST-MD5 Proxy LCM 2.8.0.0 20080623
LDAPSDK.NLM v3.05.02 Apr. 12, 2009 LDAP SDK Library (Clib version)
LDAPXS.NLM v3.05.01 Apr. 12, 2009 (Clib version)
LFS.NLM v5.12 Sep. 21, 2005 NetWare Logical File System NLM
LIB0.NLM v5.90.15 Mar. 10, 2008 Novell Ring 0 Library for NLMs
LIBC.NLM v9.00.05 Oct. 3, 2008 Standard C Runtime Library for NLMs [optimized, 7]
LIBCCLIB.NLM v6.00 Oct. 23, 2002 LibC to CLib Shim for NLMs [optimized, 0]
LIBCVCL.NLM v8.00 Dec. 3, 2008 Cryptography Library
LIBNICM.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Base Services
LIBNSS.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 Generic Library used by NSS (Build 212 MP)
LIBPERL.NLM v5.00.05 Sep. 13, 2005 Perl 5.8.4 - Script Interpreter and Library
LIBXML2.NLM v2.06.26 Aug. 27, 2006 libxml2 2.6.26 (LIBC) - The XML C parser and toolkit of Gnome
LIBXTREG.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Base Services
LLDAPSDK.NLM v3.05.02 Apr. 12, 2009 LDAP SDK Library (LibC version)
LLDAPSSL.NLM v3.05.01 Apr. 12, 2009 NetWare SSL Library for LDAP SDK (LibC version)
LLDAPX.NLM v3.05.01 Apr. 12, 2009 NetWare Extension APIs for LDAP SDK (LibC version)
LOCNLM32.NLM v6.00.04 Nov. 29, 2005 NetWare NWLocale Runtime Library
LSAPI.NLM v5.02 Jan. 7, 2003 NLS LSAPI Library
LSL.MPM v5.70 Feb. 15, 2006 lsl Memory Protection Module
LSL.NLM v4.86 Feb. 2, 2006 Novell NetWare Link Support Layer
LSMAFP3.NLM v2.00.11 Sep. 14, 2007 Macintosh Native File Access Login Methods (Build 118 SP)
LSMCIFS2.NLM v2.00.07 Sep. 14, 2007 Windows Native File Access Login Methods (Build 103 SP)
LSMMD5.NLM v28000806.23 Jun. 23, 2008 Novell SASL DIGEST-MD5 LSM 2.8.0.0 20080623
MAL.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Media Access Layer (MAL) (Build 212 MP)
MALHLP.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Configure help messages (Build 212 MP)
MANAGE.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Management Functions (Build 212 MP)
MASV.NLM v2.00.01 Sep. 2, 2008 Mandatory Access Control Service
MATHLIB.NLM v4.21 Oct. 14, 1999 NetWare Math Library Auto-Load Stub
MM.NLM v3.22.08 Apr. 24, 2009 ENG TEST - NetWare 6.5 Media Manager
MOD_IPP.NLM v1.00.04 Jun. 7, 2006 iPrint Module
MOD_JK.NLM v1.02.23 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache 2.0 plugin for Tomcat
MOD_XSRV.NLM v3.01.04 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Server (Apache2 Module)
MOMAPSNW.NLM v4.00 May. 7, 2010 4.0 Build: 492 NW FC AB 2010-05-07 NW
MONDATA.NLM v6.00 Jul. 18, 2003 NetWare 5.x/6.x Monitor MIB
MONITOR.NLM v12.02.02 Apr. 4, 2006 NetWare Console Monitor
MSM.NLM v4.12 Aug. 22, 2007 Novell Multi-Processor Media Support Module
N1000E.LAN v10.47 Oct. 6, 2007 HP NC-Series Intel N1E Ethernet driver
NBI.NLM v3.01.01 Jul. 13, 2007 NetWare Bus Interface
NCM.NLM v1.15.01 Oct. 20, 2004 Novell Configuration Manager
NCP.NLM v5.61.01 Sep. 30, 2008 NetWare Core Protocol (NCP) Engine
NCPIP.NLM v6.02.01 Sep. 30, 2008 NetWare NCP Services over IP
NCPL.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Base Services
NCPNLM32.NLM v6.01.03 Aug. 26, 2008 NetWare NWNCP Runtime Library
NDPSGW.NLM v4.01.02 Mar. 2, 2010 NDPS Gateway
NDPSM.NLM v3.03.02 May. 18, 2010 NDPS Manager
NDS4.NLM v3.01.60 Apr. 9, 2008 Novell XTier NDS4 Authentication Provider
NDSAUDIT.NLM v2.09 May. 22, 2003 Directory Services Audit
NDSIMON.NLM v20216.12 Apr. 15, 2009 NDS iMonitor 8.8 SP5
NEB.NLM v5.60 Sep. 27, 2004 Novell Event Bus
NETDB.MPM v5.70 Feb. 15, 2006 netdb Memory Protection Module
NETDB.NLM v4.11.05 Jan. 6, 2005 Network Database Access Module
NETLIB.NLM v6.50.22 Feb. 12, 2003 Novell TCPIP NETLIB Module
NETNLM32.NLM v6.01.03 Aug. 26, 2008 NetWare NWNet Runtime Library
NIAM.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Identity Manager
NICISDI.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 Security Domain Infrastructure
NILE.NLM v7.00.01 Aug. 20, 2007 Novell N/Ties NLM ("") Release Build with symbols
NIPPED.NLM v1.03.09 Jul. 11, 2006 NetWare 5.x, 6.x INF File Editing Library - NIPPED
NIPPZLIB.NLM v1.00.01 Nov. 28, 2005 General Purpose ZIP File Library for NetWare
NIRMAN.NLM v1.06.04 Sep. 18, 2007 TCPIP - NetWare Internetworking Remote Manager
NIT.NLM v5.90.15 Mar. 10, 2008 NetWare Interface Tools Library for NLMs
NLDAP.NLM v20219.14 May. 13, 2009 LDAP Agent for Novell eDirectory 8.8 SP5
NLMLIB.NLM v5.90.15 Mar. 10, 2008 Novell NLM Runtime Library
NLSADPT2.NLM v2.00 Sep. 9, 2003 NLS and Metering adapter for iManager 2.0 plugin
NLSAPI.NLM v5.02 Aug. 7, 2003 NLSAPI
NLSLRUP.NLM v4.01.07 May. 10, 2005 NLS - Usage Metering
NLSLSP.NLM v5.02 May. 25, 2005 NLS - License Service Provider
NLSMETER.NLM v3.43 May. 10, 2005 NLS - Software Usage Metering Database
NLSTRAP.NLM v5.02 Feb. 19, 2004 NetWare License Server Trap
NMAS.NLM v33200904.07 Apr. 7, 2009 Novell Modular Authentication Service 3.3.2.0 20090407
NMASGPXY.NLM v33200904.07 Apr. 7, 2009 NMAS Generic Proxy 3.3.2.0 20090407
NMASLDAP.NLM v33200904.07 Apr. 7, 2009 NMAS LDAP Extensions 3.3.2.0 20090407
NPKIAPI.NLM v3.33 Apr. 16, 2009 Public Key Infrastructure Services
NPKIT.NLM v3.33 Apr. 16, 2009 Public Key Infrastructure Services
NSCM.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Security Context Manager
NSNS.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Simple Name Service
NSPDNS.NLM v6.20.03 Sep. 8, 2003 NetWare Winsock 2.0 NSPDNS.NLM Name Service Providers
NSPNDS.NLM v6.20 Nov. 12, 2001 NetWare Winsock 2.0 NSPNDS.NLM Name Service Provider
NSPSLP.NLM v6.20.04 Dec. 6, 2007 NetWare Winsock 2.0 NSPSLP.NLM Name Service Provider
NSS.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS (Novell Storage Services) (Build 212 MP)
NSSIDK.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Pool Configuration Manager (Build 212 MP)
NSSWIN.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS ASCI Window API Library (Build 212 MP)
NTFYDPOP.ENM v2.00.03 Feb. 26, 1999 Directed Pop-Up Delivery Method
NTFYLOG.ENM v2.00.03 May. 25, 1999 Log File Delivery Method
NTFYPOP.ENM v2.00.03 May. 21, 1999 Pop Up Delivery Method
NTFYRPC.ENM v2.00.03 Feb. 26, 1999 RPC Delivery Method
NTFYSPX.ENM v2.00.03 Feb. 26, 1999 SPX Delivery Method
NTFYSRVR.NLM v3.00.05 May. 10, 2005 NDPS Notification Server
NTFYWSOC.ENM v2.00.03 Feb. 26, 1999 Winsock Delivery Method
NTLS.NLM v20510.01 Mar. 11, 2009 NTLS 2.0.5.0 based on OpenSSL 0.9.7m
NWAIF103.NLM v7.94 Nov. 30, 2001 nwaif103.nlm v7.94, Build 251 ()
NWBSRVCM.NLM v7.90 Mar. 20, 2001 NWBSRVCM.NLM v7.90.000, Build 230
NWENC103.NLM v7.90 Feb. 24, 2001 NWENC103.NLM v7.90.000 (Text Encoding Conversion Library)
NWIDK.NLM v3.01.01 Sep. 19, 2003 CDWare Volume Module
NWKCFG.NLM v2.16 Jun. 24, 2005 NetWare Kernel Config NLM
NWMKDE.NLM v7.94 Dec. 11, 2001 NWMKDE.NLM v7.94.251.000
NWMON.NLM v1.20 Dec. 14, 2005 NetWare Monitoring Software
NWPA.NLM v3.21.02 Oct. 29, 2008 NetWare 6.5 NetWare Peripheral Architecture NLM
NWPALOAD.NLM v3.00 Jul. 10, 2000 NetWare 5 NWPA Load Utility
NWSA.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS NetWare Semantic Agent (NWSA) (Build 212 MP)
NWSNUT.NLM v7.00.01 Jul. 11, 2008 NetWare NLM Utility User Interface
NWTERMIO.NLM v1.00 Sep. 11, 2006 NetWare Terminal Emulation
NWTRAP.NLM v6.00.05 Jun. 6, 2005 NetWare 5.x/6.x Trap Monitor
NWUCMGR.NLM v1.05 Mar. 14, 2001 NWUCMGR.NLM v1.5 Build 230
NWUTIL.NLM v3.00.02 Aug. 20, 2007 Novell Utility Library NLM (_NW65[SP7]{""})
PARTAPI.NLM v2.00 Apr. 17, 2002 Partition APIs for NetWare 6.1
PDHCP.NLM v2.08 Oct. 20, 2003 Di-NIC Proxy DHCP Server
PKI.NLM v3.33 Apr. 16, 2009 Novell Certificate Server
PKIAPI.NLM v2.23.10 Nov. 20, 2004 Public Key Infrastructure Services
PMAP.NLM v2.01.04 Mar. 6, 2008 ZENworks Port Mapper Service
PMLODR.NLM v1.26 Oct. 7, 2005 PMLodr for NW65
PMPORTAL.NLM v2.16 Nov. 21, 2003 NetWare License Information Portal
POLIMGR.NLM v6.27 Nov. 3, 2005 NetWare License Policy Manager
PORTAL.NLM v4.03 Sep. 22, 2008 Novell Remote Manager NLM
PROCMODS.NLM v8.00 Nov. 5, 2010 PipeLine Procedure Module
PSVCS.NLM v251.00 Nov. 30, 2001 Portability Services
PVER500.NLM v3.00 Feb. 1, 2007 NetWare 6.XX Version Library
PWDLCM.NLM v28000806.23 Jun. 23, 2008 Novell Simple Password Proxy LCM 2.8.0.0 20080623
PWDLSM.NLM v28000806.23 Jun. 23, 2008 Novell Simple Password LSM 2.8.0.0 20080623
QUEUE.NLM v5.60 May. 24, 2001 NetWare Queue Services NLM
REGSRVR.NLM v3.00.06 May. 10, 2005 NDPS Service Registry
REQUESTR.NLM v5.90.15 Mar. 10, 2008 Novell NCP Requestor for NLMs
REWRITE.NLM v2.00.63 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache 2.0.63 Rewrite Module
RMANSRVR.NLM v3.07.02 Mar. 2, 2010 NDPS Resource Manager
ROLLCALL.NLM v5.00 Jul. 27, 1998 RollCall NLM (101, API 1.0)
ROTLOGS.NLM v2.00.63 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache 2.0.63 Log Rotation Utility for NetWare
SAL.NLM v20413.01 Mar. 25, 2009 Novell System Abstraction Layer Version 2.3.1
SASDFM.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 SAS Data Flow Manager
SASL.NLM v33200904.07 Apr. 7, 2009 Simple Authentication and Security Layer 3.3.2.0 20090407
SAVENGIN.NLM v3.27 Dec. 1, 2011 SAV Interface engine
SCSIHD.CDM v3.03.10 May. 30, 2008 Novell NetWare SCSI Fixed Disk Custom Device Module
SEG.NLM v1.72 Nov. 4, 2004 NetWare Memory Analyzer
SERVINST.NLM v5.00.13 Nov. 21, 2005 NetWare 5.x/6.x Instrumentation
SGUID.NLM v6.01 Sep. 27, 2002 NetWare GUID Services
SLP.MPM v5.70 Feb. 15, 2006 slp Memory Protection Module
SLP.NLM v2.13 Nov. 15, 2005 SERVICE LOCATION PROTOCOL (RFC2165/RFC2608)
SLPTCP.NLM v2.13 Nov. 15, 2005 SERVICE LOCATION TCP/UDP INTERFACE (RFC2165/RFC2608)
SMDR.NLM v6.58.01 Oct. 16, 2008 SMS - Storage Data Requestor
SMSUT.NLM v1.01.03 Jun. 26, 2008 SMS - Utility Library for NetWare 6.X
SNMP.MPM v5.70 Feb. 15, 2006 snmp Memory Protection Module
SNMP.NLM v4.18 Jul. 25, 2006 Netware 4.x/5.x/6.x SNMP Service
SPMDCLNT.NLM v33200904.07 Apr. 7, 2009 Novell SPM Client for DClient 3.3.2.0 20090407
STREAMS.MPM v5.70 Feb. 15, 2006 streams Memory Protection Module
STREAMS.NLM v6.00.06 May. 4, 2005 NetWare STREAMS PTF
SVCCOST.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Service Costing Module
SWEEP.NLM v4.73 Dec. 1, 2011 Sophos Anti-Virus User Interface
SYSCALLS.NLM v5.61 Aug. 2, 2007 NetWare Operating System Call and Marshalling Library
SYSLOG.NLM v6.05.03 Oct. 22, 2007 NetWare Logfile Daemon
TCP.NLM v6.82.06 Dec. 23, 2009 Novell TCP/IP Stack - Transport module (NULL encryption)
TCPIP.MPM v5.70 Feb. 15, 2006 tcpip Memory Protection Module
TCPIP.NLM v6.82.02 Sep. 30, 2009 Novell TCP/IP Stack - Network module (NULL encryption)
TCPSTATS.NLM v6.50.10 Jun. 20, 2003 Web Interface for Protocol Monitoring
TFTP.NLM v2.05.01 Jan. 15, 2008 ZENworks Preboot TFTP Server
THREADS.NLM v5.90.15 Mar. 10, 2008 Novell Threads Package for NLMs
TIMESYNC.NLM v6.61.01 Oct. 14, 2005 NetWare Time Synchronization Services
TLI.MPM v5.70 Feb. 15, 2006 tli Memory Protection Module
TLI.NLM v4.30.02 Dec. 19, 2000 NetWare Transport Level Interface Library
TSAFS.NLM v6.53.03 Oct. 16, 2008 SMS - File System Agent for NetWare 6.X
TSANDS.NLM v20215.04 Apr. 3, 2009 TSA for Novell eDirectory 7.x, 8.x
UHCIDRV.CAD v1.07 Feb. 26, 2008 Novell Universal Serial Bus UHCI driver
UNICODE.NLM v7.00 Oct. 26, 2004 NetWare Unicode Runtime Library (UniLib-based) [optimized]
USCLSM.NLM v27000507.14 Jul. 14, 2005 Novell Universal SmartCard LSM 2.7.0.0 20050714
USERLIB.NLM v5.60 Sep. 29, 2008 NetWare Operating System Function Library
UTILLDAP.NLM v2.00.63 Apr. 25, 2008 Apache 2.0.63 LDAP Authentication Module
UTILLDP2.NLM v1.00 Nov. 9, 2005 LdapDN Module
VDISK.NLM v1.00 Nov. 30, 2004 NetWare Virtual Disk
VERIFY.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 Java verify (based on 1.4.2_18)
VLRPC.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 DFS Volume Location Database (VLDB) RPC interface (Build 212 MP)
VMRPC.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 DFS Volume Manager RPC interface (Build 212 MP)
VOLMN.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Distributed Volume Manager (Build 212 MP)
VOLSMS.NLM v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Distributed Volume Manager (Build 212 MP)
WS2_32.NLM v6.24.01 Feb. 14, 2008 NetWare Winsock 2.0 NLM
WSPIP.NLM v6.24 Dec. 4, 2007 NetWare Winsock Service 1.0 NLM for TCP and UDP
WSPSSL.NLM v6.26 Dec. 4, 2007 NetWare Winsock Service 1.0 NLM for SSL
X509ALSM.NLM v27000508.03 Aug. 3, 2005 Novell Advanced X.509 LSM 2.7.0.0 20050803
X509LSM.NLM v27000508.03 Aug. 3, 2005 Novell Simple X.509 LSM 2.7.0.0 20050803
XENGEXP.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 NICI Import Restricted XENG from Novell, Inc.
XENGNUL.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 NICI NULL XENG from Novell, Inc.
XENGUSC.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 NICI U.S./Worldwide XENG from Novell, Inc.
XI18N.NLM v10310.53 Aug. 2, 2005 Novell Cross-Platform Internationalization Package
XIM.XLM v27510.02.01 Aug. 25, 2008 Novell NICI Signed Loader
XMGR.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 NICI XMGR from Novell, Inc.
XNGAUSC.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 NICI U.S./Worldwide XMGR Assistant XENG from Novell, Inc.
XSRVNSP.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier XSRVNSP Tree Name Service Provider
XSUP.NLM v27610.01.01 Mar. 30, 2009 NICI XSUP from Novell, Inc.
XTNCP.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier NCP Session Layer Driver
XTUTIL.NLM v3.01.60 May. 21, 2008 Novell XTier Utility Functions
ZENIMGDS.NLM v7.00 Mar. 26, 2007 ZENworks Imaging DS Library
ZENPXE.NLM v7.00 Apr. 22, 2008 ZENworks Imaging PXE Library
ZENWS.NLM v1.00 Jul. 29, 2002 Zen Workstation Utility NLM
ZIP.NLM v1.43 Oct. 16, 2008 Java zip (based on 1.4.2_18)
ZLIB.NLM v1.01.04 Dec. 20, 2002 ZLIB 1.1.4 General Purpose Compression Library for NetWare
ZLSS.NSS v3.27.03 Jun. 7, 2010 NSS Journaled Storage System (ZLSS) (Build 212 MP)
End of Modules List 312 Modules Loaded.
Top of LAN Driver Configuration Listing
Signature.....: HardwareDriverMLID
CFG Version...: 1.15
Node Address..: 002655D01666
Board Number..: 1
Board Instance: 1
Media Type....: ETHERNET_II
MLID Version..: 10.47
Slot..........: 101
I/O...........: 5000h -> 501Fh
Memory........: FBFE0000h -> FBFFFFFFh
and FBFC0000h -> FBFC0FFFh
IRQ...........: 7
DMA...........: None
Logical Name..: N1000E_1_EII
Signature.....: HardwareDriverMLID
CFG Version...: 1.15
Node Address..: 002655D01667
Board Number..: 2
Board Instance: 2
Media Type....: ETHERNET_II
MLID Version..: 10.47
Slot..........: 102
I/O...........: 5020h -> 503Fh
Memory........: FBFA0000h -> FBFBFFFFh
and FBF80000h -> FBF80FFFh
IRQ...........: 11
DMA...........: None
Logical Name..: N1000E_2_EII
End of LAN Driver Configuration Listing
Top of Boot Drive Information
SERVER.EXE loaded from...........: C:\NWSERVER\
SERVER.EXE version...............: 1355757 bytes 10-03-2008 09:53am
Total Space on Drive.............: 2016 MB
Available Space..................: 1920 MB
End of Boot Drive Information
Top of Storage Device Configuration Information
Storage Device Summary:
0x0000 [V100-A100] USB UHCI Controller
0x0001 [V100-A101] USB UHCI Controller
0x0002 [V100-A102] USB UHCI Controller
0x0003 [V100-A103] USB UHCI Controller
0x0004 [V100-A104] USB EHCI Controller
0x0005 [V100-A105] USB UHCI Controller
0x0006 [V505-A0] HP SAS/SATA Unified RAID Driver
0x0007 [V505-A0-D0:0] HP LOGICAL VOLUME f/w:1.66
0x0008 DOS Partitioned Media
0x0019 [V505-A0-D0:0-PAA6BA] Free Partition Space
0x0009 [V505-A0-D0:0-P0] Big DOS; OS/2; Win95 Partition
0x000A [V505-A0-D0:0-P7F8] NSS Partition
0x000B [V505-A0-D0:0-P4678] NSS Partition
0x000C [V505-A0-D0:0-P1CD18] NSS Partition
0x000D [V505-A0-D0:0-P21B38] NSS Partition
0x000F [V505-A0-D0:0-P26B38] NSS Partition
0x0011 [V505-A0-D0:0-P2BB38] NSS Partition
0x0012 [V505-A0-D0:0-P30B38] Free Partition Space
0x0013 [V505-A0-D0:0-P353B8] NSS Partition
0x0014 [V505-A0-D0:0-P48C38] NSS Partition
0x0015 [V505-A0-D0:0-P612D8] NSS Partition
0x0016 [V505-A0-D0:0-P79978] NSS Partition
0x0017 [V505-A0-D0:0-P92018] NSS Partition
0x0018 [V505-A0-D0:0-PAA6B8] Free Partition Space
Storage Device Details:
[V100-A100] USB UHCI Controller
Media Manager object ID..: 0x0000
Media Manager Object Type: Adapter
Driver name..............: UHCIDRV.CAD
Assigned driver ID.......: 256
Adapter number...........: 256
Primary port address.....: 1000
Primary port length......: 18
Secondary port address...: Not used
Secondary port length....: Not used
Interrupt 0..............: 18
Interrupt 1..............: Not used
Slot.....................: 10027
DMA0.....................: Not used
DMA1.....................: Not used
Memory 0 address.........: Not used
Memory 0 length..........: Not used
Memory 1 address.........: Not used
Memory 1 length..........: Not used
[V100-A101] USB UHCI Controller
Media Manager object ID..: 0x0001
Media Manager Object Type: Adapter
Driver name..............: UHCIDRV.CAD
Assigned driver ID.......: 256
Adapter number...........: 257
Primary port address.....: 1020
Primary port length......: 18
Secondary port address...: Not used
Secondary port length....: Not used
Interrupt 0..............: 28
Interrupt 1..............: Not used
Slot.....................: 10028
DMA0.....................: Not used
DMA1.....................: Not used
Memory 0 address.........: Not used
Memory 0 length..........: Not used
Memory 1 address.........: Not used
Memory 1 length..........: Not used
[V100-A102] USB UHCI Controller
Media Manager object ID..: 0x0002
Media Manager Object Type: Adapter
Driver name..............: UHCIDRV.CAD
Assigned driver ID.......: 256
Adapter number...........: 258
Primary port address.....: 1040
Primary port length......: 18
Secondary port address...: Not used
Secondary port length....: Not used
Interrupt 0..............: 38
Interrupt 1..............: Not used
Slot.....................: 10029
DMA0.....................: Not used
DMA1.....................: Not used
Memory 0 address.........: Not used
Memory 0 length..........: Not used
Memory 1 address.........: Not used
Memory 1 length..........: Not used
[V100-A103] USB UHCI Controller
Media Manager object ID..: 0x0003
Media Manager Object Type: Adapter
Driver name..............: UHCIDRV.CAD
Assigned driver ID.......: 256
Adapter number...........: 259
Primary port address.....: 1060
Primary port length......: 18
Secondary port address...: Not used
Secondary port length....: Not used
Interrupt 0..............: 28
Interrupt 1..............: Not used
Slot.....................: 10030
DMA0.....................: Not used
DMA1.....................: Not used
Memory 0 address.........: Not used
Memory 0 length..........: Not used
Memory 1 address.........: Not used
Memory 1 length..........: Not used
[V100-A104] USB EHCI Controller
Media Manager object ID..: 0x0004
Media Manager Object Type: Adapter
Driver name..............: EHCIDRV.CAD
Assigned driver ID.......: 256
Adapter number...........: 260
Primary port address.....: Not used
Primary port length......: Not used
Secondary port address...: Not used
Secondary port length....: Not used
Interrupt 0..............: 18
Interrupt 1..............: Not used
Slot.....................: 10031
DMA0.....................: Not used
DMA1.....................: Not used
Memory 0 address.........: 0000
Memory 0 length..........: 006C
Memory 1 address.........: Not used
Memory 1 length..........: Not used
[V100-A105] USB UHCI Controller
Media Manager object ID..: 0x0005
Media Manager Object Type: Adapter
Driver name..............: UHCIDRV.CAD
Assigned driver ID.......: 256
Adapter number...........: 261
Primary port address.....: 3800
Primary port length......: 18
Secondary port address...: Not used
Secondary port length....: Not used
Interrupt 0..............: 38
Interrupt 1..............: Not used
Slot.....................: 10037
DMA0.....................: Not used
DMA1.....................: Not used
Memory 0 address.........: Not used
Memory 0 length..........: Not used
Memory 1 address.........: Not used
Memory 1 length..........: Not used
[V505-A0] HP SAS/SATA Unified RAID Driver
Media Manager object ID..: 0x0006
Media Manager Object Type: Adapter
Driver name..............: HPQCISS.HAM
Assigned driver ID.......: 1285
Adapter number...........: 0
Primary port address.....: Not used
Primary port length......: Not used
Secondary port address...: Not used
Secondary port length....: Not used
Interrupt 0..............: 7
Interrupt 1..............: Not used
Slot.....................: 10041
DMA0.....................: Not used
DMA1.....................: Not used
Memory 0 address.........: 0000
Memory 0 length..........: 0400
Memory 1 address.........: Not used
Memory 1 length..........: Not used
[V505-A0-D0:0] HP LOGICAL VOLUME f/w:1.66
Media manager object ID.....: 0x0007
Media manager Object Type...: Device
Device type.................: Magnetic disk
Capacity....................: 858112 MB
Unit Size, in bytes.........: 512
Sectors.....................: 32
Heads.......................: 255
Cylinders...................: 18785
Block size, in bytes........: 4294966784
Activated...................: Yes
Registered..................: Yes
Functional..................: Yes
Writable....................: Yes
Write protected.............: No
Reserved....................: No
Removable...................: No
Read Handicap...............: No
Offline.....................: No
Controller Number...........: 0
Device Number...............: 0
Adapter Number..............: 0
System Type.................: 0x90000
Read after write verify.....: Disabled
DOS Partitioned Media
Media Manager object ID..: 0x0008
Media Manager Object Type: Media
Media type...............: IBM partition
[V505-A0-D0:0-PAA6BA] Free Partition Space
Media Manager object ID......: 0x0019
Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
Activated....................: Yes
Registered...................: Yes
Functional...................: Yes
Reserved.....................: No
Logical partition............: No
Beginning sector of partition: 1429591200
Size, in sectors.............: 328023484
[V505-A0-D0:0-P0] Big DOS; OS/2; Win95 Partition
Media Manager object ID......: 0x0009
Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
Activated....................: Yes
Registered...................: Yes
Functional...................: Yes
Reserved.....................: Yes
Logical partition............: No
Beginning sector of partition: 32
Size, in sectors.............: 4177888
[V505-A0-D0:0-P7F8] NSS Partition
Media Manager object ID......: 0x000A
Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
Activated....................: Yes
Registered...................: Yes
Functional...................: Yes
Reserved.....................: Yes
Logical partition............: Yes
Beginning sector of partition: 4177920
Size, in sectors.............: 32768000
[V505-A0-D0:0-P4678] NSS Partition
Media Manager object ID......: 0x000B
Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
Activated....................: Yes
Registered...................: Yes
Functional...................: Yes
Reserved.....................: Yes
Logical partition............: Yes
Beginning sector of partition: 36945920
Size, in sectors.............: 204800000
[V505-A0-D0:0-P1CD18] NSS Partition
Media Manager object ID......: 0x000C
Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
Activated....................: Yes
Registered...................: Yes
Functional...................: Yes
Reserved.....................: Yes
Logical partition............: Yes
Beginning sector of partition: 241745920
Size, in sectors.............: 40960000
[V505-A0-D0:0-P21B38] NSS Partition
Media Manager object ID......: 0x000D
Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
Activated....................: Yes
Registered...................: Yes
Functional...................: Yes
Reserved.....................: No
Logical partition............: No
Beginning sector of partition: 282705920
Size, in sectors.............: 41943040
[V505-A0-D0:0-P26B38] NSS Partition
Media Manager object ID......: 0x000F
Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
Activated....................: Yes
Registered...................: Yes
Functional...................: Yes
Reserved.....................: No
Logical partition............: No
Beginning sector of partition: 324648960
Size, in sectors.............: 41943040
[V505-A0-D0:0-P2BB38] NSS Partition
Media Manager object ID......: 0x0011
Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
Activated....................: Yes
Registered...................: Yes
Functional...................: Yes
Reserved.....................: No
Logical partition............: No
Beginning sector of partition: 366592000
Size, in sectors.............: 41943040
[V505-A0-D0:0-P30B38] Free Partition Space
Media Manager object ID......: 0x0012
Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
Activated....................: Yes
Registered...................: Yes
Functional...................: Yes
Reserved.....................: No
Logical partition............: No
Beginning sector of partition: 408535040
Size, in sectors.............: 38010880
[V505-A0-D0:0-P353B8] NSS Partition
Media Manager object ID......: 0x0013
Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
Activated....................: Yes
Registered...................: Yes
Functional...................: Yes
Reserved.....................: Yes
Logical partition............: Yes
Beginning sector of partition: 446545920
Size, in sectors.............: 163840000
[V505-A0-D0:0-P48C38] NSS Partition
Media Manager object ID......: 0x0014
Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
Activated....................: Yes
Registered...................: Yes
Functional...................: Yes
Reserved.....................: Yes
Logical partition............: Yes
Beginning sector of partition: 610385920
Size, in sectors.............: 204800000
[V505-A0-D0:0-P612D8] NSS Partition
Media Manager object ID......: 0x0015
Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
Activated....................: Yes
Registered...................: Yes
Functional...................: Yes
Reserved.....................: Yes
Logical partition............: No
Beginning sector of partition: 815185920
Size, in sectors.............: 204800000
[V505-A0-D0:0-P79978] NSS Partition
Media Manager object ID......: 0x0016
Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
Activated....................: Yes
Registered...................: Yes
Functional...................: Yes
Reserved.....................: Yes
Logical partition............: Yes
Beginning sector of partition: 1019985920
Size, in sectors.............: 204800000
[V505-A0-D0:0-P92018] NSS Partition
Media Manager object ID......: 0x0017
Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
Activated....................: Yes
Registered...................: Yes
Functional...................: Yes
Reserved.....................: Yes
Logical partition............: No
Beginning sector of partition: 1224785920
Size, in sectors.............: 204800000
[V505-A0-D0:0-PAA6B8] Free Partition Space
Media Manager object ID......: 0x0018
Media Manager Object Type....: Partition
Activated....................: Yes
Registered...................: Yes
Functional...................: Yes
Reserved.....................: No
Logical partition............: No
Beginning sector of partition: 1429585920
Size, in sectors.............: 5280
End of Storage Device Configuration Information
* Volume Statistics for SYS *
File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
Volume Size................: 15934 MB
Block Size.................: 4 KB
Total Blocks...............: 4079171
Free Blocks................: 3072770
Purgable Blocks............: 158
Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
Available Directory Entries: 2147439380
Sectors per Block..........: 8
Free Disk Space............: 12003 MB
Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
Suballocation..............: OFF
Compression................: OFF
Migration..................: OFF
* Volume Statistics for _ADMIN *
File System................: Unknown
Volume Size................: 4 MB
Block Size.................: 4 KB
Total Blocks...............: 1024
Free Blocks................: 1024
Purgable Blocks............: 0
Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
Available Directory Entries: 2147483647
Sectors per Block..........: 8
Free Disk Space............: 4 MB
Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
Suballocation..............: OFF
Compression................: OFF
Migration..................: OFF
* Volume Statistics for IMAGES *
File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
Volume Size................: 99702 MB
Block Size.................: 4 KB
Total Blocks...............: 25523833
Free Blocks................: 12760577
Purgable Blocks............: 0
Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
Available Directory Entries: 2147483627
Sectors per Block..........: 8
Free Disk Space............: 49846 MB
Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
Suballocation..............: OFF
Compression................: OFF
Migration..................: OFF
* Volume Statistics for PRINTING *
File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
Volume Size................: 19932 MB
Block Size.................: 4 KB
Total Blocks...............: 5102598
Free Blocks................: 4766787
Purgable Blocks............: 55
Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
Available Directory Entries: 2147480871
Sectors per Block..........: 8
Free Disk Space............: 18620 MB
Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
Suballocation..............: OFF
Compression................: OFF
Migration..................: OFF
* Volume Statistics for STAFF *
File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
Volume Size................: 140541 MB
Block Size.................: 4 KB
Total Blocks...............: 35978535
Free Blocks................: 4278115
Purgable Blocks............: 428
Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
Available Directory Entries: 2147301305
Sectors per Block..........: 8
Free Disk Space............: 16711 MB
Purgable Disk Space........: 1 MB
Suballocation..............: OFF
Compression................: OFF
Migration..................: OFF
* Volume Statistics for FCLTY *
File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
Volume Size................: 120121 MB
Block Size.................: 4 KB
Total Blocks...............: 30751101
Free Blocks................: 6551019
Purgable Blocks............: 2
Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
Available Directory Entries: 2147231898
Sectors per Block..........: 8
Free Disk Space............: 25589 MB
Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
Suballocation..............: OFF
Compression................: OFF
Migration..................: OFF
* Volume Statistics for APPS *
File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
Volume Size................: 79761 MB
Block Size.................: 4 KB
Total Blocks...............: 20418911
Free Blocks................: 8163253
Purgable Blocks............: 0
Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
Available Directory Entries: 2147246784
Sectors per Block..........: 8
Free Disk Space............: 31887 MB
Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
Suballocation..............: OFF
Compression................: OFF
Migration..................: OFF
* Volume Statistics for ACDMC *
File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
Volume Size................: 99700 MB
Block Size.................: 4 KB
Total Blocks...............: 25523381
Free Blocks................: 9816828
Purgable Blocks............: 0
Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
Available Directory Entries: 2147069762
Sectors per Block..........: 8
Free Disk Space............: 38346 MB
Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
Suballocation..............: OFF
Compression................: OFF
Migration..................: OFF
* Volume Statistics for PUPILS *
File System................: NSSIDK (Novell Storage Services)
Volume Size................: 99702 MB
Block Size.................: 4 KB
Total Blocks...............: 25523813
Free Blocks................: 13579469
Purgable Blocks............: 0
Not Yet Purgable Blocks....: 0
Total Directory Entries....: 2147483647
Available Directory Entries: 2147417601
Sectors per Block..........: 8
Free Disk Space............: 53044 MB
Purgable Disk Space........: 0 MB
Suballocation..............: OFF
Compression................: OFF
Migration..................: OFF
Volume Name Name Spaces Loaded
SYS DOS
SYS MACINTOSH
SYS NFS
SYS LONG_NAMES
_ADMIN DOS
_ADMIN MACINTOSH
_ADMIN NFS
_ADMIN LONG_NAMES
IMAGES DOS
IMAGES MACINTOSH
IMAGES NFS
IMAGES LONG_NAMES
PRINTING DOS
PRINTING MACINTOSH
PRINTING NFS
PRINTING LONG_NAMES
STAFF DOS
STAFF MACINTOSH
STAFF NFS
STAFF LONG_NAMES
FCLTY DOS
FCLTY MACINTOSH
FCLTY NFS
FCLTY LONG_NAMES
APPS DOS
APPS MACINTOSH
APPS NFS
APPS LONG_NAMES
ACDMC DOS
ACDMC MACINTOSH
ACDMC NFS
ACDMC LONG_NAMES
PUPILS DOS
PUPILS MACINTOSH
PUPILS NFS
PUPILS LONG_NAMES
************************************************** ***************************Hi.
On 18.01.2012 15:36, gayfield wrote:
>
> Hi Massimo
>
> Many thanks for your quick response. I've been into the console.log and
> pasted the last few entries below :
>
> 17-01-2012 6:19:58 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=6001D]
> Cache memory allocator out of available memory.
>
>
> 17-01-2012 6:19:58 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=2000A]
> Short term memory allocator is out of memory.
> 1 attempts to get more memory failed.
> request size in bytes 14807040 from Module SWEEP.NLM
>
> Loading Module FSIFIND.NLM [
> OK ]
> Loading Module FSBACK.NLM [
> OK ]
>
> 17-01-2012 8:24:13 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=6001D]
> Cache memory allocator out of available memory.
>
>
> 17-01-2012 8:24:13 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=2000A]
> Short term memory allocator is out of memory.
> 2 attempts to get more memory failed.
> request size in bytes 11403264 from Module SWEEP.NLM
>
>
> 17-01-2012 8:34:17 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=6001D]
> Cache memory allocator out of available memory.
>
>
> 17-01-2012 8:34:17 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=2000A]
> Short term memory allocator is out of memory.
> 3 attempts to get more memory failed.
> request size in bytes 15418880 from Module SWEEP.NLM
>
>
> 17-01-2012 8:48:14 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=6001D]
> Cache memory allocator out of available memory.
>
>
> 17-01-2012 8:48:14 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=2000A]
> Short term memory allocator is out of memory.
> 4 attempts to get more memory failed.
> request size in bytes 14807040 from Module SWEEP.NLM
>
>
> 17-01-2012 8:58:18 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=6001D]
> Cache memory allocator out of available memory.
>
>
> 17-01-2012 8:58:18 pm: SERVER-5.70-0 [nmID=2000A]
> Short term memory allocator is out of memory.
> 5 attempts to get more memory failed.
> request size in bytes 14680064 from Module SWEEP.NLM
>
> Hope this better clarifies the situation.
Somewhat. From the time of day, and the loading of commvault modules
inbetween, this looks like a combined backup / AV scan issue. The
requests of Sophos are comparably big in size, and they vary a lot. That
will lead to fragmentation of your memory, until the memory can't be
allocated in one chunk any more. It also *seems* as if Sophos actually
scans the data while it gets backed up. That is *bad*.
CU,
Massimo Rosen
Novell Knowledge Partner
No emails please!
http://www.cfc-it.de -
Bug? Picture Ring proprty String and Values" returns error 1054 in LV 8.5
Should that propert exist for a Picture Ring?
Ben
Message Edited by Ben on 09-01-2008 07:47 AM
Ben Rayner
I am currently active on.. MainStream Preppers
Rayner's Ridge is under construction
Solved!
Go to Solution.
Attachments:
Error_1054.PNG 27 KBThe fact that the error is gone when you don't connect the indicator is good. Even better it is super.
It means the compiler removes that specific node from the execution stack if it isn't needed.
Ton
Free Code Capture Tool! Version 2.1.3 with comments, web-upload, back-save and snippets!
Nederlandse LabVIEW user groep www.lvug.nl
My LabVIEW Ideas
LabVIEW, programming like it should be! -
Memory allocation in CS 5.5
First time to the forum and a relatively new user in AE.
Here's my error message:
"Memory allocation of 9.2 GB exceeds internal limits. Decrease the memory requirements for the rendering of this frame (12802). For more info: www.adobe/com/go/learn_ae_mem"
So here's where the confusion sets in:
a) I've gone through the forums and tweaked the multiprocessing settings... still get the same error.
b) I've changed the color bit depth to 8 (mentioned in another posting)
My comp is a full HD animation simulating a walk through a hallway. There's roughly 14 elements in the composition and the camera movement is a pan in.
I hope this is enough information to get the ball rolling. If more info is needed, I'll do my best to get you what you need.
Thanks!Below are screen shots of the aforementioned settings. I receive the error as I scrub to 00;00;20 on the composition. The message displays as a large .jpg file begins to rotate out and another .jpg file rotates in. I've used a camera to pan in on this elements' transitions but am not using any effects directly. I hope this helps!
-Kyle -
Maximum file size in picture ring?
Hello folks!
I am planing to use a picture ring with a quite big amount of data needed.
My question: is there a maximum data size that i can embed in a picture ring (number of pictures or overall file sizes)?
Thanks!If you have enough memory to keep all the images open simultaneously, then something like this might help. Put all your images in the same directory on disk and have no other files in that directory. Then use List Folder from the Advanced File palette to get an aaray of the filenames. Feed that array to a for loop where you open all the files and place the images into the pict ring. I have written a "slide show" program which does this. Never tried it with 400 images though.
If you do not have enough memory for all the images, then you need to manage the iamges much more carefully.
Lynn -
How to display a continuously updating mesh object with the Labview 3D Picture Object
I have a continously updating stream of 3D images that can be represented in a mesh (a 3D movie if you will). I want to display this in the 3D Picture object so that everytime I acquire a new 3D image it is displayed. Examples are scarce and I couldn't find anything that dealt with this specific issue.
Currently (within a FOR/WHILE loop) for each iteration I create a scene object, set the geometry as a newly created mesh object, set the texture and eventually wire it to the 3D Picture. This implementation seems to leak memory (the taskmanager shows the used memory continously increasing and eventually processing speed will drop). I assume it's because I recreate the object for each iteration. Trouble is, I can't find anything that would let me release/delete the object once I'm done with the frame. All examples that I found only deal with creating the 3D object once and manipulating it.
What's the appropriate way to code this?
Solved!
Go to Solution.You just need to use the 'Close Reference" VI on the 3D Picture Reference as this code below. It runs inside the loop.
Now, if you are dealing with mesh, then you should use the Set Mesh Parameters to change the points inside the loop and then, just closed the reference after the code is done. Look at this code below. The trick is to get the reference back from object using Typecast ( To More Specific Reference VI).
Also, look at the shipping examples in:
C:\nivs_dev\2013\InstallTo\ProgramFiles\National Instruments\LabVIEW\examples\picture\3D Picture Control
and specially the Using Meshes.vi.
Barp - Control and Simulation Group - LabVIEW R&D - National Instruments -
Hi, guys, does anyone know whether I can use dyanmic memory allocation on the Real time system with "call library function" node. DLL is programmed using C language. Thanks.
MachmanYou certainly can. LabVIEW Real-Time functionality is really not much different than what you can do on Windows. The only difference being that you can now assign priorty and timing to your execution loops; essentially, you have determinism with RT whereas with Windows, you never have a guarantee.
Thus, in regards to calling a dll, you can perform this the same way you would in LabVIEW for Windows. Here's a KnowledgeBase article on how to do this if you're not already familiar.
Cheers,
Emilie K. | Applications Engineer | National Instruments -
Can I load pictures for a picture ring control at run time?
Hi all,
is there a way to achieve the above mentioned behaviour? Changing the graphics elements of a picture ring control or indicator at run time?
Best regards,
Matthias
Solved!
Go to Solution.You can do that with the picture indicator. I have written a slide show program in LV and it works quite smoothly. If you start to see delays, it is probably due to file read time rather than the display. Read one or two files from disk ahead of when you will want to display them. Updating the display from memory should be fast.
Lynn -
Queue Memory Allocation Weirdness
I am at a loss to how LabVIEW is allocating memory in its queues.
In the example I attached you must open Windows Task Manager and look at the Memory column.
I'll try to lead you through the steps of the example.
1.) Make a queue of length 10, data type double array.
2.) Fill the queue with 10 arrays of 1M points, watch the memory increase in 8M steps in the Task Manager. (This makes complete sense to me.)
3.) Empty the queue of the 10 elements. Note that the memory stays constant in the Task Manager. (This also make sense to me and LabVIEW will not release the memory in case it is needed later.)
4.) Fill the queue with empty arrays, watch the memory decrease in 8M steps in the Task Manager. (This also makes complete sense to me.)
5.) Put one array element in the queue, 1M doubles, then dequeue the element. Now the memory increases by 8M steps for all 10 iterations. Note if you increase the number of iteration on this last loop, the total memory used never goes beyond 80M, the original allocation.
Why is LabVIEW using all the memory initially allocated to the queue when there is only 1 element in it at any time?
I ask this because at points in my real program I want to limit my queue to a single element to save memory, but this example shows that will require a work around.
If anybody has any insights, I greatly appreciate it.
Cheers,
Andrew
Attachments:
QueueMemoryWeirdness.vi 23 KB
QueueMemoryWeirdness.png 64 KBNathand,
Thanks for your advice, although I am having a hard time following it. I'm trying to put the words into images in my head, but presently it is not working. It has been a long week.
As far a real program goes, a brief description is as follows:
I have a bunch of A/D boards in a PXI chassis; the slow part of my program is writing to a file. After the data is processed, I store the values in a queue where it is passed to a "consumer loop" that saves the data. If I have a single element queue, then my DAQ acquisition speed is limited by how fast the files can be saved. Thus, I have a finite length queue to buffer the data while it gets saved.
The person that I work likes to store millions of double precision points, so memory can grow fast. Typically we only get 2M total points from each board, and my queue can grow to 500MB in size. However, there are times when my colleague wants to acquire 10M or more points from each board. In this case, I want to limit the queue size to 1. Since this can not be done dynamically while the program is running, I am using a semaphore like construct to limit my queue to 1 element. (That is I wait until my file is saved before adding another element.) When I tried to do this, my memory usuage kept growing, similar to the example I provided earlier.
I came up with a kludge type solution, fill up the queue to N-1 elements with empty arrays, then insert in the front my real data set. It works but I am not happy with it.
On this board there are plently of people like yourself who are much more clever than me, and i am hoping they can figure out what is going on here. (I'm still trying to figure out your advice.)
Thanks again for your help.
Cheers,
mcduff -
Application limit to 1G memory allocation
My application uses a lot of memory. I break the memory allocation to small arrays of 100M each.
I have Windows XP 32bit and I set the /3GB flag in the boot.ini file, the computer has 4G byte of ram memory. Never the less, Labview (ver 8.2) can't allocate more then 1G byte memory.
Why?
Attached small vi that represents the problem.
Regards
Gabi
Attachments:
Giga allocation 2.vi 37 KBWell if you managed to get 1.5 Gig then you beat my best which was 1.2 G.
The issue is the hardware of the pentium chip and the OS.
The MSB of the address distinguishes between OS memory space and program space which limits you to 2G max.
64 bit machine may let you go farther but I have not tested this myself.
The other factor that has to be taken into concideration is that LV insists all of its buffer be contiguous so if the OS can not find a contiguous block, the allocation fails.
Quoting from JPD signature;
"All of the above may be wrong!"
If you know better, then by all means straighten me out.
Ben
Ben Rayner
I am currently active on.. MainStream Preppers
Rayner's Ridge is under construction -
When i run exe built in Labview 7.1 the memory usage goes on increasing
Dear Sir/Madam
I have built an application in LabView 7.1. When i run this application and view the memory usage in Task manager, i find that the memory usage goes on increasing.
Please help.
With Regards
Ravindra KumbharHi, Ravindra,
It looks that you have memory leak in your application.
There are lot of possible reasons for memory leaks - opened in cycle and not closed references, continuosly growing arrays, memory allocation in own DLLs, etc.
Normally you should have the same behaviour in development environment as well (memory of LabVIEW.exe incresed continuously).
You should check the code, which executed repeatable (while/for loops) for allocated, but not closed resources. What you can do is following - remove (or isolate) parts of you code, executed in cycles, then check is leak present or not. So, step by step you will found the place where leak occurred.
best regards,
Andrey.
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