NFS cache

Hi all !
I'm having a question concerning the NFS cache.
I'm using the NFS service to test the network over both 1Gb and fast-ethernet network: the NFS client copies several times (over 10,000) too differents small files (file1, file2) to the NFS server in file1_0, file1_1, ... file2_0, file2_1, etc.
Although these 2 files are renamed on the NFS server, I'm wondering if they are not in the NFS server cache. As I want to test the network performances, I want to be sure these files are copied each time and not taken from the NFS cache.
The NFS client runs solaris 7 and the server solaris 9.
Thanks in advance for any help.
Rgds,
Sabrina

Hi,
I'm using the NFS service to test the network over
both 1Gb and fast-ethernet network: the NFS client
copies several times (over 10,000) too differents
small files (file1, file2) to the NFS server in
file1_0, file1_1, ... file2_0, file2_1, etc.
Although these 2 files are renamed on the NFS server,
I'm wondering if they are not in the NFS server cache.
As I want to test the network performances, I want to
be sure these files are copied each time and not
taken from the NFS cache.We have also tested the NFS performance in the similar
fashion.
Since you are writing on to different files, each of this will
be accounted separately for NFS Writes.
All those newly written files can be read back - which will
be accounted separately for NFS Reads.
cp <local file> <remote_file_n> (n = 0,1,2,....)
cat <remote_file_n> > /dev/null
Each cp command will add to the NFS Writes and each cat
will add to the NFS Reads.
Thanks.
Regards,
Rams.

Similar Messages

  • File Lock with NFS cache

    I use the API FileChannel.lock() to get the file lock for gobal lock based on NFS system, I know that many operations on the NFS system are not atomic because of system cache, but I also know the NFS system has its own lock mechanism, so I don't know if the API FileChannel.lock() is safe as the global lock, which accessed by processes from different nodes.
    OS Linux 2.6.16.60-0.21-smp
    NFS server v3
    NFS Client v3

    Crossposted and answered.

  • Solaris 10 NFS caching problems with custom NFS server

    I'm facing a very strange problem with a pure java standalone application providing NFS server v2 service. This same application, targeted for JVM 1.4.2 is running on different environment (see below) without any problem.
    On Solaris 10 we try any kind of mount parameters, system services up/down configuration, but cannot solve the problem.
    We're in big trouble 'cause the app is a mandatory component for a product to be in production stage in a while.
    Details follows
    System description
    Sunsparc U4 with SunOS 5.10, patch level: Generic_118833-33, 64bit
    List of active NFS services
    disabled   svc:/network/nfs/cbd:default
    disabled   svc:/network/nfs/mapid:default
    disabled   svc:/network/nfs/client:default
    disabled   svc:/network/nfs/server:default
    disabled   svc:/network/nfs/rquota:default
    online       svc:/network/nfs/status:default
    online       svc:/network/nfs/nlockmgr:default
    NFS mount params (from /etc/vfstab)
    localhost:/VDD_Server  - /users/vdd/mnt nfs - vers=2,proto=tcp,timeo=600,wsize=8192,rsize=8192,port=1579,noxattr,soft,intr,noac
    Anomaly description
    The server side of NFS is provided by a java standalone application enabled only for NFS v2 and tested on different environments like: MS Windows 2000, 2003, XP, Linux RedHat 10 32bit, Linux Debian 2.6.x 64bit, SunOS 5.9. The java application is distributed with a test program (java standalone application) to validate main installation and configuration.
    The test program simply reads a file from the NFS file-system exported by our main application (called VDD) and writes the same file with a different name on the VDD exported file-system. At end of test, the written file have different contents from the read one. Indeep investigation shows following behaviuor:
    _ The read phase behaves correctly on both server (VDD) and client (test app) sides, trasporting the file with correct contents.
    _ The write phase produces a zero filled file for 90% of resulting VDD file-system file but ending correctly with the same sequence of bytes as the original read file.
    _ Detailed write phase behaviour:
    1_ Test app wites first 512 bytes => VDD receive NFS command with offset 0, count 512 and correct bytes contents;
    2_ Test app writes next 512 bytes => VDD receive NFS command with offset 0, count 1024 and WRONG bytes contents: the first 512 bytes are zero filled (previous write) and last 512 bytes with correct bytes contents (current write).
    3_ Test app writes next 512 bytes => VDD receive NFS command with offset 0, count 1536 and WRONG bytes contents: the first 1024 bytes are zero filled (previous writes) and last 512 bytes with correct bytes contents (current write).
    4_ and so on...
    Further tests
    We tested our VDD application on the same Solaris 10 system but with our test application on another (Linux) machine, contacting VDD via Linux NFS client, and we don�t see the wrong behaviour: our test program performed ok and written file has same contents as read one.
    Has anyone faced a similar problem?
    We are Sun ISV partner: do you think we have enough info to open a bug request to SDN?
    Any suggestions?
    Many thanks in advance,
    Maurizio.

    I finally got it working. I think my problem was that I was coping and pasting the /etc/pam.conf from Gary's guide into the pam.conf file.
    There was unseen carriage returns mucking things up. So following a combination of the two docs worked. Starting with:
    http://web.singnet.com.sg/~garyttt/Configuring%20Solaris%20Native%20LDAP%20Client%20for%20Fedora%20Directory%20Server.htm
    Then following the steps at "Authentication Option #1: LDAP PAM configuration " from this doc:
    http://docs.lucidinteractive.ca/index.php/Solaris_LDAP_client_with_OpenLDAP_server
    for the pam.conf, got things working.
    Note: ensure that your user has the shadowAccount value set in the objectClass

  • NFS consumes a lot of disk space on server

    I have solaris 10 on sparc. I have encountered problem with hdd disk space when running NFS. When Nfs client has mounted nfs resources. On the server I can observe that each day utilisation on mounted filesystem grows. When I unshare NFS resources the file system usage is much smaller. It is strange, because the size of files located on the shared filesytem doesnt grow so much.
    Does anybody know how to deal with it ? Is there any nfs cache which makes the reservation of hdd resources ?

    I had same problem. when resource was mounted used space grown but returned to initial state when the file system was umounted. That was because nfs daemon created temporaly files when were opened and removed those files when the file system were unmounted.
    search files with .nfs extension in the nfs share resource
    EXAMPLE:
    # pwd
    /data
    # find . |grep -i nfs
    Good luck

  • I have two Arch Linux computers -- Avoid downloading everything twice?

    Hello, I have two Arch Linux computers. A media center type computer, and a general work station. They are both x86-64.
    Arch Linux is pretty intensive on bandwidth. Even though my two computers don't have exactly the same packages, they have a lot in common. What's the best set up so that I don't download these common packages twice when upgrading the systems?
    Note: I've tried setting up a NFS mount for the package cache, but for some reason, both machines will proceed to redownload the packages and not use the ones that are in the package cache.
    EDIT: Actually, I forgot to configure pacman.conf to use the NFS cache on one of the machines, so I guess this would work after all. Is there a better way to do it though?
    Last edited by earlz (2012-07-16 01:36:01)

    nomorewindows wrote:I've seen pacserve before, but I have dual architectures, and of that, some of the machines get updated once in a blue moon.  I'm sure that pacserve probably wouldn't be affected by dual architectures.  It's just easier to remember to pull from a NFS share.
    I don't really see how that's easier. Pacserve comes with a daemon and the daemon uses multicast by default, so the network configures itself. 
    Multiple architectures were a problem before, but Arch started including the architecture in the package name for all packages a while ago. Since then, it's fine to mix and match.
    Anyway, I just wanted to clarify. If NFS is easier for you, use that.

  • Is NFS client data cacheing possible?

    Yesterday, I was viewing an HD 1080 video with VLC, and noticed that Activity Monitor was showing about 34MB/sec from my NAS box. My NAS box runs OpenSolaris (I was at Sun for over 20 years, and some habits die hard), and the 6GB video file was mounted on my iMac 27" (10.7.2) using NFSv3 (yes, I have a gigabit network).
    Being a long term UNIX performance expert and regular DTrace user, I was able to confirm that VLC on Lion was reading the file at about 1.8MB/sec, and that the NFS server was being hit at 34MB/sec. Further investigation showed that the NFS client (Lion) was requesting each 32KB block 20 times!
    Note: the default read size for NFSv3 over TCP is 32KB).
    Digging deeper, I found that VLC was reading the file in 1786 byte blocks. I have concluded that Lion's NFSv3 client implement at least one 32KB read for each application call to read(2), and that no data is cached betweem reads (this fully accounts for the 20x overhead in this case).
    A workaround is to use say rsize=1024, which will increase the number of NFS ops but dramatically reduce the bandwidth consumption (which means I might yet be able to watch HD video over wifi).
    That VLC should start issuing such small reads is a bug, so I have also written some notes in the vlc.org forums. But client side cacheing would hide the issue from the network.
    So, the big question: is it possible to enable NFS client data cacheing in Lion?

    The problem solved itself mysteriously overnight, without any interference from myself.
    The systems are again perfectly happily mounting the file space (650 clients of them all at the same time
    mounting up to 6 filesystems from the same server) and the server is happily serving again as it has been for the past 2 years.
    My idea is that there has been a network configuration clash, but considering that the last modification of NIS hosts file was about 4 weeks ago and the latest server was installed then and has been serving since then, I have no
    idea how such clash could happen without interference in the config files. It is a mystery and I will have to make
    every effort to unravel it. One does not really like to sweep incidents like that un-investigated under the carpet.
    If anybody has any suggestions and thoughts on this matter please post them here.
    Lydia

  • Cache Flushes Solaris10 StorageTek D280 and NFS and ZFS

    I encounter complains from users, who are connected via nfs, to Sun Solaris10 server.
    The server is connected via Fibre to a Storage Tek d280.
    The performance on the server is okay.
    However, on the , via nfs connected , clients, the performance is poor.
    I found this document, and want to try to disable the cache flushes on the server.
    http://www.solarisinternals.com/wiki/index.php/ZFS_Evil_Tuning_Guide#Cache_Flushes
    However, I rather want to have the Storage Tek D280 acting as a nice zfs storage device, rather than tweaking the operating system.
    But I can not find any document on how to configure the behavior of the cache flushes on this device.
    Is there someone who know how to setup this storage tek D280 box correctly to ingnore the Cache Flush commands generated by the NFS ?
    Kind regards,

    806760 wrote:
    Thanks for the response.
    I don't know how the D280 internally has been setup. It should use raid 5. That's about the only thing I know about it.
    It is under control of an ICT department.
    However, the effect, or if the D280 is poor configured, does it only affect the NFS clients connected to the Solaris Server ?
    I have ruled out the network configuration. This is a 1Gb connection. And for diagnose I tryed with a different switch, and direct connection.
    But it did not influence the poor performance of the client, using NFS.
    As a test, I just extract a tar file with a big amount of empty files.
    This goes over 25 times slower on the clients, than on the server.
    I have installed about 8 of those systems, but none is performing so bad.
    Since everything on all systems is about the same configuration, the only things which are out of my control, is the network, and the san.
    I tryed to test the network, but I don't see any problems with that.
    So in my mind, the only thing left, would be the san device.
    Searching on this topic, I found some explanations, about the zfs with nfs, which works poorly, due to the nfs is committing a regular synchronous write (NFS commit) However I don't like to do this.
    I also can not find any description on how to configure a D280.
    It would be nice, if you could provide some settings which has to be set in a D280.
    The configuration is two cluster nodes, and two clients.
    The cluster node mainly task is to provide the nfs shares.
    The clients and servers are in one 19" rack.
    The San, I don't know where it is.
    It has a 2Gb fibre coupling. ( On the server side there are 4Gb Emulex HBA's installed )
    Kind regards,If a tar file extracts 25 times faster on the server then it does over the network, yet both times the data is being written to the SAN LUNs on the D280, the problem is the network.
    That tar file extracts slower across the network for two reasons: bandwidth and latency.
    There's only so much data you can stuff through a gigE network. Your single 1 gigE link can handle about 100 MB/sec read and 100 MB/sec write combined - total. For all users. That may be part of your performance problem, because the configuration LUN layout of that D280 would have to be really, REALLY bad for it to be unable handle that relatively small amount of IO. You CAN test the performance of the LUNs being presented to your server - just use your favorite benchmarking tool to do various reads from the "/dev/rdsk/...." device files that make up your filesystem(s). Just make doggone sure you ONLY do reads - if you write to those LUNs your filesystem(s) will be corrupted. Something like "dd if=/dev/rdsk/... of=/dev/null bs=1024k count=10000" will tell you how fast that one LUN can stream data - but it won't tell you how many IO ops/sec the LUN can support as you'd need to do random small reads to do that. Any halfway-decently configured D280 LUN should be able to stream data at a constant 200 MB/sec while you're reading from it.
    And even if the bandwidth were much higher, you still have to deal with the additional latency of having to do all communications across your network. No matter how fat the pipe is, it still takes more time to send data across the network and have to wait for a reply. What do your ping times look like between client and server? And even with that added latency, there are some things you can do on your hosts. Increase your TCP buffer sizes, mount your filesystems on your Linux clients with the "rsize=32768,wsize=32768,intr,noatime" options, and maybe use NFSv3 instead of NFSv4 - make sure you change both the server and client settings to be sure. And work with your network admins to get jumbo frames enabled. Moving more data per packet is a good way to address latency because you wind up having to wait for a response much fewer times.

  • Install Arch with nfs shared pacman cache

    Hello,
    I would like to make a post of some information that worked for me. I think it could find its way into the wiki, but I prefer not to be the one to do that. Two reasons for that:
    1. Just becuase it worked for me doesn't mean it is proper. If someone can confirm it is an acceptable method...
    2. I am a wiki reader, not a writer
    My situation is that I have a 3G internet conection. I like to only download the packages once... I run nfs4 exports from my desktop computer to share user data, pacman cache and sync folders See the Pacman tips I just did fresh installs of my systems. After the main system was running, I wanted to use the existing pacman cache to install the second system. I followed the Beginners guide and also used the Install from ssh article. I created my partitions with gparted on a live stick. Boot into the Arch install media, and follow the instructions for mounting the partitions. And here is where I make a brief detour to utilize my existing pacman cache.
    For reference, my nfs exports are on the desktop computer (hostname is nas) and the pkg cache is exported as:
    nas:/pkg
    Databases are exported as:
    nas:/sync
    mkdir -p /mnt/var/cache/pacman/pkg
    mkdir -p /mnt/var/lib/pacman/sync
    mount the nfs exports:
    mount -t nfs4 nas:/pkg /mnt/var/cache/pacman/pkg
    mount -t nfs4 nas:/sync /mnt/var/lib/pacman/sync
    Now I am back on track with the Beginners guide...
    pacstrap -i /mnt base base-devel
    While in the chroot, be sure to install nfs-utils (and openssh if you want to continue ssh after boot)
    When running the genfstab, it will create tons of options for the nfs4 mounts. I edited those in nano to look like other references on the site:
    nas:/pkg /var/cache/pacman/pkg nfs4 defaults,x-systemd.automount 0 0
    nas:/sync /var/lib/pacman/sync nfs4 defaults,x-systemd.automount 0 0
    And of course unmounting at the end of the Beginners guide requires unmounting these two directories too.

    Yep, well capable of doing that which is why I'm asking - I can't do that without having to have difficult conversations with the security team here. And, no, I don't need to be told about the lack of security implications in doing this
    As far as keys, I've just set the SigLevel to "Never" as I trust the packages on my workstation, but this all feels a little hinky.

  • Ssd cache performanc​e

    At this point I can only image it will help but I am trying to decide if sdd cache on the 450r is going to have a better return on performance versus a ssd drive for swap files on my VMware host. Soon to be multiple hosts.  This is not a production box but a replica site I have pieced together from some new hardware and old,.
    I would like to know if anyone has any performance metrics with ssd cache.  I am looking to get 2x256GB drives in a mirror.  This is a big project since I will have all my bays filled.  I would have to find a temp location for all my replicas break my raid and rebuild everything. I am not against it, I just want to know what I am looking at for percent of performance gains.  i know it will depend on what I plan on get setting cache policy to but I am planning on write around since most of our systems are read based. 
    Any info is appreciated. 
    Also let me know if you anyone is using iSCSI over NFS and why.  I have heard a lot about read being way faster with iSCSI but since I can't have multiple hosts on an iSCSI volume am stuck with NFS for now.

    I did try eSATA as well, the WD drive was able to do 150MB/s and 149MB/s, read and write respectively. (as the QM57 chipset natively supports SATA at 3Gb/s)
    The issue here is as part of the decision process to get the W510, USB 3 capability came into consideration (for having more than 1 fast external storage device).
    EDIT:
    Ultimately, what I'm really after is:
    1. Have I configured something incorrectly, or misconfigured something.  Or is there's some ideal component linkage I'm missing.
    2. Is the W510's USB 3.0, at the very least, capable of delivering 2.5GT/s?
    3. I may, or may not have to file a complaint to Lenovo or BBB for misleading marketing / sales info.
    2nd EDIT:
    I do thank you for suggesting eSATA.  However, if Lenovo is going to reply to this, I simply won't take "use the touchpad instead" if the trackpoint isn't working properly.

  • 10.6.2 failed to install due to 'nfs error', audio no longer works

    macbook pro, all other updates have installed just fine, except for 10.6.2
    I get this in the log:
    11/10/09 3:58:15 PM com.apple.kextcache410 Created mkext archive //System/Library/Caches/com.apple.kext.caches/Startup/Extensions.mkext.
    11/10/09 3:58:15 PM com.apple.kextcache403 Failed to mount helper partition: error 0XF8DA000C (DA err# 0x0c).
    11/10/09 3:58:15 PM com.apple.kextd10 kextcache error while updating / (error count: 4)
    11/10/09 3:58:15 PM com.apple.kextcache403 /: trouble updating one or more helper partitions.
    11/10/09 3:58:15 PM com.apple.kextd10 async child pid 403 exited with status 70
    11/10/09 3:58:15 PM com.apple.kextd10 kextcache error while updating / (error count: 5)
    11/10/09 3:58:15 PM installd376 PackageKit: Install Failed: (null)
    Error Domain=PKInstallErrorDomain Code=121 UserInfo=0x104d22740 "An error occurred while updating system extension information." Underlying Error=(Error Domain=NSPOSIXErrorDomain Code=70 "The operation couldn’t be completed. Stale NFS file handle") {
    NSLocalizedDescription = "An error occurred while updating system extension information.";
    NSUnderlyingError = "Error Domain=NSPOSIXErrorDomain Code=70 \"The operation couldn\U2019t be completed. Stale NFS file handle\"";
    arguments = (
    "-update-volume",
    nothing is mounted (i rebooted before applying). not sure why it's giving that NFS error. it's consistent tho.. if i reboot and try the manual install of the patch, I get the same error.
    after the failed patch "installed" it left my sound not working... so far everything else appears to work. any thoughts on fixing this are appreciated. i ran diskutil and 'fixed perms' and 'verified disk' ... patch still fails.

    Try reinstalling the patch. If you get all the way through the installation, then see if your sound works. If not, then I suggest you do a repair install of Sno by installing Sno over Sno as in an upgrade install. Such an install, while usually very safe, still is an install so be appropriated backed up if you proceed.

  • 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

  • How to Clear Cache for an Old Static File in Shared Components

    Hello,
    I am using Apex 4.1.1.00.23, HTTP Server with mod_plsql, and Oracle Database 10.2.0.5.0.
    My situation is as follow:
    I have a CSS static file in the shared components that is used in different applications. I recently modified the CSS file, but the changes are not reflected in my applications.
    I tried clearing the cache of my browsers, deleting the file from shared components and creating a new one with the same name, and nothing is working.
    Using Firebug, I can see that the file used in my pages is the old version of it. Anyone can tell me if the server is caching the file and how can I clear it?
    Thank you for your help,
    Erick

    What kind of document is it (e.g. is this a parsed
    HTML file, or a static file)? have you adjusted your
    cache settings with the nsfc.conf file? have you
    enabled the nsfc report? Are the files stored on NFS
    volumes?
    Regardless, you can force the cache to be flushed by
    enabling the nsfc report, and then accessing the URI
    like so:
    /nsfc?restart
    See the Performance and Tuning Guide:
    http://docs.sun.com/source/817-1836-10/perftune.html#w
    p17232I tried to to do this. Did n't worked. /nsfc?restart is not working for me. I have IPlanet 6.1 Webserver version. Without having any backend server running, I am getting JSPs displayed from cache!! Please help me out.

  • Large OLTP data set to get through the cache in our new ZS3-2 storage.

    We recently purchased a ZS3-2 and are currently attempting to do performance testing.  We are using various tools to simulate load within our Oracle VM 3.3.1 cluster of qty5 Dell m620 servers-- swingbench, vdbench, and dd.  The OVM repositories are connecting via NFS.  The Swingbench load testing servers have a base OS disk mounted from the repos and NFS mounts via NFS v4 from within the VM (we would also like to test dNFS later in our testing). 
    The problem I'm trying to get around is that the 256G of DRAM (and a portion of that for ARC) is large enough where my reads are not touching the 7200 RPM disks.  I'd like to create a large enough data set so the amount of random reads cannot possible be stored within the ARC cache  (NOTE: we have no L2ARC at the moment).
    I've run something similar to this in the past, but have adjusted the "sizes=" to be larger than 50m.  My thought here is that, if the ARC is up towards around 200 or so MB's, if I create the following on four separate VM's and run vdbench at just about the same time, it will be attempting to read more data than can possibly fit in the cache.
    * 100% random, 70% read file I/O test.
    hd=default
    fsd=default,files=16,depth=2,width=3,sizes=(500m,30,1g,70)
    fsd=fsd1,anchor=/vm1_nfs
    fwd=fwd1,fsd=fsd*,fileio=random,xfersizes=4k,rdpct=70,threads=8
    fwd=fwd2,fsd=fsd*,fileio=random,xfersizes=8k,rdpct=70,threads=8
    fwd=fwd3,fsd=fsd*,fileio=random,xfersizes=16k,rdpct=70,threads=8
    fwd=fwd4,fsd=fsd*,fileio=random,xfersizes=32k,rdpct=70,threads=8
    fwd=fwd5,fsd=fsd*,fileio=random,xfersizes=64k,rdpct=70,threads=8
    fwd=fwd6,fsd=fsd*,fileio=random,xfersizes=128k,rdpct=70,threads=8
    fwd=fwd7,fsd=fsd*,fileio=random,xfersizes=256k,rdpct=70,threads=8
    rd=rd1,fwd=fwd1,elapsed=900,interval=30,fwdrate=max,format=yes,pause=30,openflags=fsync
    rd=rd2,fwd=fwd2,elapsed=900,interval=30,fwdrate=max,format=yes,pause=30,openflags=fsync
    rd=rd3,fwd=fwd3,elapsed=900,interval=30,fwdrate=max,format=yes,pause=30,openflags=fsync
    rd=rd4,fwd=fwd4,elapsed=900,interval=30,fwdrate=max,format=yes,pause=30,openflags=fsync
    rd=rd5,fwd=fwd5,elapsed=900,interval=30,fwdrate=max,format=yes,pause=30,openflags=fsync
    rd=rd6,fwd=fwd6,elapsed=900,interval=30,fwdrate=max,format=yes,pause=30,openflags=fsync
    rd=rd7,fwd=fwd7,elapsed=900,interval=30,fwdrate=max,format=yes,pause=30,openflags=fsync
    However, the problem I keep running into is that vdbench's java processes will throw exceptions
    ... <cut most of these stats.  But suffice it to say that there were 4k, 8k, and 16k runs that happened before this...>
    14:11:43.125 29 4915.3 1.58 10.4 10.0 69.9 3435.9 2.24 1479.4 0.07 53.69 23.12 76.80 16384 0.0 0.00 0.0 0.00 0.0 0.00 0.1 7.36 0.1 627.2 0.0 0.00 0.0 0.00 0.0 0.00
    14:12:13.071 30 4117.8 1.88 10.0 9.66 69.8 2875.1 2.65 1242.7 0.11 44.92 19.42 64.34 16384 0.0 0.00 0.0 0.00 0.0 0.00 0.1 12.96 0.1 989.1 0.0 0.00 0.0 0.00 0.0 0.00
    14:12:13.075 avg_2-30 5197.6 1.52 9.3 9.03 70.0 3637.8 2.14 1559.8 0.07 56.84 24.37 81.21 16383 0.0 0.00 0.0 0.00 0.0 0.00 0.1 6.76 0.1 731.4 0.0 0.00 0.0 0.00 0.0 0.00
    14:12:15.388
    14:12:15.388 Miscellaneous statistics:
    14:12:15.388 (These statistics do not include activity between the last reported interval and shutdown.)
    14:12:15.388 WRITE_OPENS Files opened for write activity: 89 0/sec
    14:12:15.388 FILE_CLOSES Close requests: 81 0/sec
    14:12:15.388
    14:12:16.116 Vdbench execution completed successfully. Output directory: /oracle/zfs_tests/vdbench/output
    java.lang.RuntimeException: Requested parameter file does not exist: param_file
      at Vdb.common.failure(common.java:306)
      at Vdb.Vdb_scan.parm_error(Vdb_scan.java:50)
      at Vdb.Vdb_scan.Vdb_scan_read(Vdb_scan.java:67)
      at Vdb.Vdbmain.main(Vdbmain.java:550)
    So I know from reading other posts, that vdbench will do what you tell it (Henk brought that up).  But based on this, I can't tell what I should do differently to the vdbench file to get around this error.  Does anyone have advice for me?
    Thanks,
    Joe

    ah... it's almost always the second set of eyes.  Yes, it is run from a script.  And I just looked and realized that the list last line didn't have the \# in it.  Here's the line:
       "Proceed to the "Test Setup" section, but do something like `while true; do ./vdbench -f param_file; done` so the tests just keep repeating."
    I just added the hash to comment that out and am rerunning my script.  My guess is that it'll complete   Thanks Henk.

  • Stop systemd.service by other systemd.service (nfs)

    Hi there,
    I'm currently tweaking my nfs setup.
    What do I want
    Mount my exported directories via bind to export, when the nfs-server starts. And unmount the directories on stop of the nfs-server
    Approach
    /etc/systemd/system/nfs.target
    [Unit]
    Description=Network File System Server
    Wants=export-daten.mount export-daten-Downloads.mount export-portage.mount export-root.mount export-root-boot.mount
    Requires=nfs-server.service
    BindsTo=nfs-server.service
    [Install]
    WantedBy=multi-user.target
    /etc/systemd/system/export-daten.mount
    [Unit]
    Description=/home/blubb/Daten nach /export/daten
    BindsTo=nfs-server.service
    StopWhenUnneeded=true
    [Mount]
    What=/home/blubb/Daten
    Where=/export/daten
    Options=bind
    [Install]
    WantedBy=nfs.target
    ls nfs.target.wants
    export-daten-Downloads.mount export-daten.mount export-portage.mount export-root-boot.mount export-root.mount
    nfs-server.service is the original one shipped by Arch in /usr/lib/systemd/system.
    Current behaviour
    start nfs.target: mounts directories, starts nfs-server
    stop nfs.target: unmounts directories,  doesn't stop nfs-server
    start nfs-server.service fails, because can't export /export/daten/Downloads, which doesn't exist, because the mount-units were not processed.
    stop nfs-server.service: umount directories (due to the BindsTo directive) and stops the nfs.target.
    Desired behaviour
    The current behaviour works, but isn't very clean. Would be nice, if nfs.target stops the nfs-server.service too. I don't want nfs-server.service copy to /etc and modify as I will miss any updates of the original unit in /usr/lib.
    Is it possible to stop nfs-server.service in/by nfs.target?

    Tanks, works so far. One problem is left.
    For some reason, nfs option nohide doesn't work. So I have to export other filesystems in subtree too. My 2 units:
    export-daten.mount
    [Unit]
    Description=/home/sm/Daten nach /export/daten
    BindsTo=nfs-server.service
    StopWhenUnneeded=true
    [Mount]
    What=/home/sm/Daten
    Where=/export/daten
    Options=bind
    [Install]
    WantedBy=nfs.target
    and the filesystem, which is mounted in there:
    export-daten-Downloads.mount
    [Unit]
    Description=/home/sm/Daten/Downloads nach /export/daten/Downloads
    BindsTo=nfs-server.service
    Requires=export-daten.mount
    StopWhenUnneeded=true
    [Mount]
    What=/home/sm/Daten/Downloads
    Where=/export/daten/Downloads
    Options=bind
    [Install]
    WantedBy=nfs.target
    According to the Manpage I'm not sure, if the Requires option is even recognized. Mounting works. But when I stop my nfs-server, I get this message:
    journalctl
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Stopping Network File System Server.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Stopped target Network File System Server.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unit export-daten-Downloads.mount is not needed anymore. Stopping.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unit export-portage.mount is not needed anymore. Stopping.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unit export-root-boot.mount is not needed anymore. Stopping.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unmounting /boot nach /export/root/boot...
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unit export-root.mount is not needed anymore. Stopping.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unmounting /var/portage nach /export/portage...
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Stopping NFS server and services...
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unmounting /home/sm/Daten/Downloads nach /export/daten/Downloads...
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unit export-daten.mount is not needed anymore. Stopping.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unit export-root-home-sm-Daten-Downloads.mount entered failed state.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas kernel: nfsd: last server has exited, flushing export cache
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unmounted /boot nach /export/root/boot.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unit export-root.mount is not needed anymore. Stopping.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unmounted /var/portage nach /export/portage.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unmounted /home/sm/Daten/Downloads nach /export/daten/Downloads.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unit export-daten.mount is not needed anymore. Stopping.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Stopped NFS server and services.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Stopping NFS Mount Daemon...
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas rpc.mountd[21709]: Caught signal 15, un-registering and exiting.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unmounting /home/sm/Daten nach /export/daten...
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unmounting / nach /export/root...
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Stopped NFS Mount Daemon.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unmounted /home/sm/Daten nach /export/daten.
    Feb 12 07:23:53 Nas systemd[1]: Unmounted / nach /export/root.
    Manpage:
    If a mount point is beneath another mount point in the file system hierarchy, a dependency between both units is created automatically.
    It seems, that works for mounting, but not for the umount.
    Can I do something to unmount that stuff cleaner?

  • MPD over NFS which is not on LAN but over Internet

    Hello,
    I tried MPD on a raspberry pi and a NFSv4 mount over vpn over internet.
    Suffice to say, I was surprised when I saw mpd actually attempting to *read* one and every file in the huge 500GB repository. What the hell. Why does it need to "read" in the whole file??
    Is there an alternative to mpd with similar capabilities, that doesnt suck? Or should I run mpd on the main server - but how do I then get the sound/mp3s to the raspberry pi?

    HiImTye wrote:
    you could do library updates from the NFS server and save the library info to the NFS share, then point your MPD server you use to listen on to those library files. then you don't have to struggle with network speeds on updates.
    but this does make me curious why it is reading the entire songs. it could just be that you have a lot of songs so that it seems like it is? idk
    I scp'ed over the database file from main server which had indexed/updated the db with about 80k songs.
    Then mounted the nfs share to the rasperry pi to the same absolute paths as on the main server (why not).
    This works fine, I see only the songs that I play are transferred quite fast, playing is almost instantenous, and they seem to be cached somewhere. Seeking within files is also fast, especially once already played.
    Now as you say, the database file needs to be kept in sync between the NFS server and raspberry, one way would be to put it as well in some nfs share, or sshfs or whatever, or even cronjob it with rsync, since I wont be doing database updates/adding albums that often on the main server.
    Would be good if something like this was documented somewhere. Like the wiki. And an option in mpd to ignore update commands to its database - thats now dangerous - it does read all the files, and even if it only tries to read headers - for some shares such as 1 or 2TB of songs, thats too much. Now the mpd on rasperry is more of a proxy.
    So yes, this does work now, the slight downside is that the android client mpdroid is not that good - it doesnt respect volume keys when not in view'and such, but one can live with that.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Class Discussion (AS 2.0)

    How to access the stage movieClip objects from the class? I want to set the text value of a textBox called 'myLable_txt' from the class file. Please help.

  • Can you stream music and video to Samsung blu-ray players?

    Hi I'm thinking of buying a Samsung blu-ray player with wireless connectivity. They have the Allshare feature so you can stream music and video content from your desktop to the player. I have read that it does not work with Mac - is that the case? Do

  • Cannot Stop Job

    Hi, I'm running a SQL 2005 SP 2 on Windows 2003 Server R2. I have a Job that includes a IS Package and then conducts a lot of calculations of which one runs into an infinite loop. The problem now is, that I can't stop the job. If i try it sp_stop_job

  • File or Memory Stream Access through Flex

    Dear all I create a desktop sharing application that is written in Flex. For desktop sharing I have a component that generates a series of images of a selected screen area, where only the changed screan areas will be transmitted. I would like to pass

  • "DVD: best quality" & "MPEG-2 high quality encode"--difference????

    I've noticed the two settings under compression settings. I don't see any difference between the setting make up. Am I missing anyhing or is there really a difference if I use one over he other. I've always used DVD Best Quality.