VSphere 6.0 on HP DL360 G9 servers?? -- experiences?? issues??
I'm hoping to get new servers this year and I want to get HP G9 servers since they will be supported longer then G8 servers.
Has anyone installed vSphere 6.0 on HP G9 servers yet??
Experiences?? Issues??
Thank you, Tom
I am ordering them with two (2) 500 GB disks…hopefully!!
I know they can have two flash cards…I have not found anything pros or cons about using flash cards vs. hard drives for running ESXi except that in another vSphere cluster I did, I had to use hard drives because one can not use the flash cards as local storage (e.g. that cluster required running an appliance on local storage).
Thank you, Tom
Similar Messages
-
Multiple Gateways servers - any issues?
I am being asked to monitor multiple untrusted domains through gateway servers. We already have one gateway server setup, are there any issues I should beware of when setting up a second or third one for different domains? Do they all talk back through
port 5723 happliy without any contention?Not really - the individual servers can become the bottle-neck should there be a large number of agents reporting to them but this would be for relatively large deployments. But in terms of contention you shouldn't have any problems, there's a good article
here which has details of the process (similar content
here as well) .
I'd also take a look at the SCOM sizing tool as this will give you some details on server spec, etc
http://blogs.technet.com/b/momteam/archive/2012/04/02/operations-manager-2012-sizing-helper-tool.aspx
Extract from the SCOM2012 deployment guide:
"Gateway servers are used to enable agent-management of computers that are outside the Kerberos trust boundary of management groups, such as in a domain that is not trusted. The gateway server acts as a concentration point for agent-to-management server
communication. Agents in domains that are not trusted communicate with the gateway server and the gateway server communicates with one or more management servers. Because communication between the gateway server and
the management servers occurs over only one port (TCP 5723), that port is the only one that has to be opened on any intervening firewalls to enable management of multiple agent-managed computers. Multiple gateway servers can be placed in a single domain so
that the agents can failover from one to the other if they lose communication with one of the gateway servers. Similarly, a single gateway server can be configured to failover between management servers so that no single point of failure exists in the
communication chain.
Because the gateway server resides in a domain that is not trusted by the domain that the management group is in, certificates must be used to establish each computer's identity, agent, gateway server, and management server. This arrangement satisfies
the requirement of Operations Manager for mutual authentication." -
Adobe Servers having issues?
Does anyone here have any idea if there's an issue with Adobe's servers today? Folio downloads from acrobat.com are far slower than usual, and downloading the updated producer tools is also very slow. Other sites aren't as slow.
It took them 20 minutes on the phone with me to finally tell me that the serial number would take between 24 and 48 hours. I had to send them screen shots and such just to prove that I was actually not a complete idiot. Meanwhile they kept asking me the same questions over and over again, not writing anything down. And they didn't even realize that LR 3 was even shipping. And I am the idiot here who does not know how to look at a screen where my serial number is? They also indicated to me at the end of the conversation that this is "normal" to take 24-48 hours and that they are not having any issues.
The good news is that you can install the product and use it for 30 days before it requires you to enter a serial number. -
Removing old License Servers (SCP issues?)
I've been tasked with cleaning up the list of "Known License Servers" that are found on our domain when running RD Session Host.
I have several that shouldn't be there. I've checked in ADSI Edit/Configuration/Sites/Default Site/TS-Enterprise-License-Server and it only has my current (correct) server listed. The Terminal Server License Servers AD group only has the current server listed
as well.
I think the issue is old SCP connections. If I find the computer account in AD, (and select to view Users, Contacts, Groups and Computers as containers) and expand the computer account I can see TermServLicensing underneath the computer account. I suspect
this is causing them to be discovered. Does anyone have any feedback or suggestions on if this could be my cause, and if so, is just Right-Click deleting the SCP the solution? Is there a better way to take care of deleting the old SCP?
Thanks
SeanHi,
Please go to the Remote Desktop Licensing website and check if old License servers are listed. If so, please try to remove them and see how it works.
https://activate.microsoft.com/
Thanks.
Jeremy Wu
TechNet Community Support -
File Share crawl - NetApp Servers - Permission Issues
hello,
There are many file share contents hosted on NetApp, which are being crawled by the SharePoint 2013 Search engine in our organization.
The Search Crawl account is granted Read and Execute permissions on the Shared Drive. The crawler reads the content and the permissions correctly for the first time.
But once the permissions are modified, like adding new users or removing the existing users, and after triggering a full crawl, the changes w.r.t permissions are not being reflected on the sharepoint search results. However, the same scenario works fine
on a local windows shared drive.
I have learnt that the crawl account should be a part of the group policy Manage Audting and permissions, but also learnt that NetApp doesnt have such a thing. I hope am not the only one with such an issue. Please suggest.
Sreeharsha Alagani | MCTS Sharepoint 2010 |
Linkedin | BlogHi Sreeharsha,
As I understand, you are using NetApp for file share, and you would like to know about permission needed for crawl files.
Since the issue is related to third party product, there is no sufficient resource here. Please contact their support engineer. For your convenience:
https://communities.netapp.com/welcome
In addition, I found some articles might help:
https://communities.netapp.com/community/netapp-blogs/msenviro/blog/2013/10/30/best-practices-for-sharepoint-2013-search-service-application-for-smsp
https://kb.netapp.com/support/index?page=content&id=3013718&pmv=print&impressions=false
Regards,
Rebecca Tu
TechNet Community Support -
Just bought a new MacBook Pro with i7 2.8 GHZ 17". Has 8GB memory.
Run across some minor issues.
First Does the Disk Utility have an issue with reporting problems that aint' problems. I run repair permissions after installing any program.
In OSX.4.11 on my old PowerBook 17" if anything was reported as needing repaired, and you ran Disk Utility repair it did.
On this machine there are about 30 or 40 items all related to Java 1.6 that are not repaired. in fact one issue say something has been altered and will not be repaired.
On OSX.3.5 and below Disk Utility would report non existent issues as issues.
The second matter: I have never had since I used OSX (X.2.8) I've never had had an issue of dock icon switching to ? instead. If I go to application folder and click on application even if open the dock icon returns.
First thing I did was run Software update as soon as I unboxed it and turned on spent about 4 hours downloading a ton of update including OSX.6.6. Then restarted in safe Mode then repair permission . Then restarted normally. Otherwise the machine is working beautifully.
Anyone have any IdeasHi Phillip,
The permissions are a well known issue. See Permissions messages you can safely ignore Also all the Java messages can be ignored. Also, RP is a one time event. Running RP again will change nothing.
An orphaned alias is pretty common. If you dag it off the Dock and "poof" it, then drag the Application from your /Application folder to the Dock does the icon stick, or change back to a "?"
-mj -
ProLiant DL360 G6 + MSA60 and 411 Array
Hello! I have strange issue with my old ProLiant DL360 G6 and HPStorage MSA60 I have two DL360 G6 servers (one in production and one in my office) and two MSA60 Storage, witch connect to DL. In my production enviroment Battery on Array 411 is failed. I take battery and cache module from my office DL360 and plug it into production server. Everything fine and working like charm. Now i have DL360 G6 with no battery and no cache for 411. I unplug cache and battery from P410i array and plug it to 411 (MSA60 is connect to this array) Server start, but i doesn see my MSA60 and get this message: Controller: Smart Array P411 in Slot 1 is connected to a SAS expander which is not supported due to a missing cache module, out of date firmware, or unsupported configuration. Access to the storage may be disabled. If access to the storage is available, making any configuration change will lead to potential data loss on those logical drives. So, my question is: Does battery and cache from P410i can be using with 411 array controller or not? Or i did something wrong?...
Hi:
You may also want to post your question on the HP Business Support Forum -- DL Servers section.
http://h30499.www3.hp.com/t5/ProLiant-Servers-ML-DL-SL/bd-p/itrc-264 -
Using OC to manage HP servers running Red Hat?
We've inherited a couple of HP Proliant DL360 G7 servers running Red Hat. I can manage the OS from Ops Center but I can't manage the hardware. I've tried picking "Other IPMI Service Processor" from the "Search for Type" list during "Custom Discovery" but the discovery fails. I've verified that I'm using the correct IPMI user and password. I can use ipmitool from the command line but I have to use "lanplus". Is OC not capable of using lanplus?
The Prolliant is running "ILO 3 Advanced", version "1.26 Aug 26 2011". Is that too new for OC?
Thanks,I was under the impression that OC was capable of using lanplus.. but I could be wrong. (I usually am)
I believe a buddy of mine has an HP ProLiant DL360 G7 running on his network, I will shoot him over an email with this link so he can (hopefully) answer you. This is the one he has, in case it matters -- http://www.servermonkey.com/hp-proliant-dl360-g7/
Edited by: 934272 on May 14, 2012 2:00 PM -
Email body of HTML or RTF messages are rendered in ASCII characters after upgrading to Firefox 5 when viewing email in MS Outlook Web Access (OWA) light from MS Exchange 2007 servers. Issue is repeatable with two entirely different Exchange systems.
Text email renders OK. Work around is to forward email (in use MS-IE).You are welcome. I'm glad you got it back up.
(1) You say you did the symbolic link. I will assume this is set correctly; it's very important that it is.
(2) I don't know what you mean by "Been feeding the [email protected] for several weeks now, 700 emails each day at least." After the initial training period, SpamAssassin doesn't learn from mail it has already processed correctly. At this point, you only need to teach SpamAssassin when it is wrong. [email protected] should only be getting spam that is being passed as clean. Likewise, [email protected] should only be getting legitimate mail that is being flagged as junk. You are redirecting mail to both [email protected] and [email protected] ... right? SpamAssassin needs both.
(3) Next, as I said before, you need to implement those "Frontline spam defense for Mac OS X Server." Once you have that done and issue "postfix reload" you can look at your SMTP log in Server Admin and watch as Postfix blocks one piece of junk mail after another. It's kind of cool.
(4) Add some SARE rules:
Visit http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules.htm and download the following rules:
70sareadult.cf
70saregenlsubj0.cf
70sareheader0.cf
70sarehtml0.cf
70sareobfu0.cf
70sareoem.cf
70sarespoof.cf
70sarestocks.cf
70sareunsub.cf
72sare_redirectpost
Visit http://www.rulesemporium.com/other-rules.htm and download the following rules:
backhair.cf
bogus-virus-warnings.cf
chickenpox.cf
weeds.cf
Copy these rules to /etc/mail/spamassassin/
Then stop and restart mail services.
There are other things you can do, and you'll find differing opinions about such things. In general, I think implementing the "Frontline spam defense for Mac OS X Server" and adding the SARE rules will help a lot. Good luck! -
User-friendly way to issue chown commands on remote servers
I'd like my technically unversed users to have, on demand, the benefit of chown commands giving them ownership of certain files being executed on remote servers. I'd like this to be doable without administrators' involvement and with no physical access to the servers by any of the users being entailed.
By "benefit of chown commands" I mean the results a competent user would get entering the command if he or she were actually doing so. By "technically unversed" I mean specifically that said users aren't and won't ever be trained to ssh into subject servers and issue chown commands themselves directly.
I should mention that the "Get Info" interface does not in this case avail users of a way to take ownership of particular files because ACEs apply to the files in question. That ACEs apply changes what is presented: instead of any editable fields under Ownership and Permissions, all users see in the "Get Info" interface is a list of whatever ACEs apply.
Please note that users do, by virtue of ACEs, have "change ownership" permissions for the files in question. Also, authentication to the servers in question under subject users' own logins is possible as necessary.
What I'd like to start with is getting some idea how complicated this could be for me to do myself as a beginning AppleScripter. I'll describe what I guess would be involved and hope for someone to shed light.
I'm guessing that something the user at his or her own machine does involving a file he or she has selected would constitute an Apple Event which a process on the client would send to a process on the server. Then I expect the server process would issue the chown command locally respectively of
1) which file was selected when the Apple Event took place, and
2) subject user's identity.
Finally, I expect some feedback might contingently be sent to client process incidentally to need to give user feedback.
Is this a fair sketch of how this should work? What is a beginner with limited time likely to accomplish attempting this?
(Find context for this posting here: http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=831517&tstart=0)
PowerMac Mac OS X (10.4.8)First, if I understand you correctly, I'd be using
Curl and, say, Perl rather than Applescript to get
this done. In other words, what you wrote in
Applescript is about all I'd need in that
language--yes?
That's correct, give or take any errors in the script. (For obvious reasons I didn't test it.)
Then, please note that I want to chown, not chmod. Is
this an issue?
Nope. (Beyond what you pointed out below.)
I am looking at Perl documentation and read that "on
most systems, you are not allowed to change the
ownership of the file unless you're the superuser..."
(http://perldoc.perl.org/functions/chown.html).
However, isn't apache running as root?
I never thought about that. Wow, this is complicated! Are you really sure you can't make do with chmod instead?
Anyway, the answer is yes and no. The main Apache process usually runs as root, but executes CGI scripts (and other requests) as another user to avoid inherent insecurity. So unless you do something terribly, terribly insecure, you will not be able to chown from Perl. (And, although I am often lax about security, enabling root access for CGIs strikes even me as dangerous, which means it's a very bad idea.)
Really what you want is for the CGI, which does not run as root, to hand off to another process which does. I'm not a Unix guru, and would never claim to be, but I think the two following methods might work:
1. Set up a cron job running as root which looks in a directory once every minute/hour/whatever. The file name should be the user to change the owner to, and it should contain a delimited (in some form; return is possibly safe) list of files. Have the cron job walk through the list of files and use chown, then clobber the contents of the file. (Note that a CGI can use "chmod", which can make sure that the files it creates in the directory are readable by the cron job.) (Also note that you'll want to use flock to avoid race conditions between the cron job and the CGI!) This method would not be instantaneous, since the cron job only runs periodically.
2. Set up a script which runs as root which takes a line of text in the format:
user:path/to/file
and executes chown using that information. Make this process run at startup as root. Have it open a named pipe, with permissions such that CGI script can write to it, and watch for input from that pipe.
Some general notes:
A. Whatever you do, make sure that the binary/script/whatever running as root can't be written to by anyone who doesn't have root permissions.
B. Make sure to check that the user and file actually exist before doing anything with them. (And make sure to do it in the root process, since you have no guarantee that someone won't figure out what's going on and come up with some clever injection scheme to make your root process break security.) (And don't do it by passing a command to the shell; use Perl's chown or some equivalent, so that you'll be somewhat less vulnerable.)
C. For that matter, don't forget to check and make sure that the path you're about to chown is within the share point, and that the user you're going to chown to makes sense in context, so that nobody can (for example) take over someone else's user directory, or get write permission to /sbin, or something evil like that. (In fact, it might be for the best if you limited the chown operations to files only, just to be sure.)
Also, I get the part about how a constraint involving
"do shell script" method argues against using pure
Applescript in this case. But just for my information
is Applescript otherwise sufficiently capable?
If it weren't such matter of getting everything on
one line, could Applescript send commands between
hosts, convert local paths to paths on servers, issue
change ownership commands, and handle authentication?
Do methods adequate to those purposes exist in
Applescript?
Or would using multiple scripting languages be
entailed anyway? I'm guessing the latter.
Yes and no. Helpful answer, right?
First and foremost: AppleScript was originally created as a language to control programs, which would have an extensible grammar through the installation of files called "Scripting Additions". It has since been puffed up via AppleScript Studio to an application-building language in its own right, but the language itself does not have support for a lot of things which, nevertheless, the language can do by controlling another program or by extension.
AppleScript can send messages between hosts. If the remote host is a Mac, and has "Remote Apple Events" turned on in the "Sharing" control panel, then you can send commands to programs on the remote machine almost exactly as though they were local. (The only differences are in how you specify the application and how you let AppleScript know what the remote application "understands".) This support is built into the language.
If the remote host is not a Mac, you must control a program which can "translate". When it comes to terminal programs, for security reasons Apple did not include any interactive systems which could be controlled. (Although they did include "expect", I see, which would theoretically allow you to work around this...)
Since converting a path is really just text processing, yes, AppleScript can do that. I didn't try to build that in because I am under the impression that you know some other language/shell scripting tool better than AppleScript, so it makes better sense for you to put as much of the work into the parts you know, in order to make debugging easier. One method of doing it in AppleScript:
set x to [a POSIX path found somehow for a file on a connected server]
if (the offset of "/Volumes/" in x) is 1 then
-- "the offset of" uses 1-based offsets, not 0 as in most languages
set x to text 10 through -1 of x
-- This removes "/Volumes/" from the beginning of x
set x to text ((the offset of "/" in x) + 1) through -1 of x
-- That removes up through the next slash, which is the volume name
set x to "/Path/To/The/Share/Point/On/The/Server/" & x
else
error "The path isn't in /Volumes/, so either the server is mounted in a nonstandard way or the path isn't on a remote host at all." number 9000
end if
(The other method of which I am aware is to change AppleScript's text item delimiter to "/", convert the path to a list, test whether the first item is "Volumes", then put together items 3 and up into a string again. I have always had a semi-irrational prejudice against using this method because Apple's documentation circa about 1996, from which I learned AppleScript, made it sound like this might be dangerous, but it works.)
The Finder (which can be scripted) can apparently change ownership and permissions -- a fact which I did not know until just now; I must have missed it last time I looked for it -- and of course "do shell script" can be used to call "chmod" and "chown". The problem with both of these methods, vis-a-vis your particular difficulty, is that your files are not local. You could turn on Remote Apple Events and have the Finder do it, but that's really a security hole. And a potentially maddening one to figure out if anyone starts exploiting it.
I'd stick with a CGI and the cron/named pipe scheme. No matter what you do you're going to have a little extra security risk, just because chown requires root permissions, but minimizing that risk is probably a good thing. -
Azure VLAN Servers Can't Communicate
I have been running two Windows Servers 2012 r2 boxes in azure for a few months now and all of a sudden they can't talk to each other
in anyway. I tried this but
it did not seem to help me. Any ideas? I would like to transfer files between the two but no matter what I do they can't find each other. When I do a tracert it shows me the correct dns name for my server but tells me the destination host is unreachable. A
week or so ago I used a powershell command to set the ip's as static in azure so on reboot they would stay the same and I did not have any problems for a week or so after that until this came up. I also have them set in the host file so I can talk to them
via name but neither name or ip seem to work for communication at this point. Thanks for any advice.I have one set for 10.0.0.4 and 10.0.0.5 which is what their ip's were before I set them static and they are the only two servers in the vlan. They also worked fine for about 2 weeks being static until today. I have all windows firewalls turned off on both
machines as my first guess was an update turned it on. I have rebooted them multiple times but I am going to try an azure full shutdown to see if that does the trick. I have not made any changes to the DNS and my gateway is correct 10.0.0.1.
As I was writing this I did a full azure shutdown which seems to have fixed it. I can now talk between servers without issue. Hmmm, this is very bothersome. I run a nightly task to load data from one server to another for a customer and can not have
these flake out whenever they feel like it. I am hoping I do not have this issue again. My current setup is to only run them a few hours at night and have them full azure power off during the times I do not need them. I currently send a powershell command
to shutdown and deallocate "stop-azurevm -servicename $servicename1 -name $vmname1 -force" so I am not billed for run time I do not need. Is there a better way to do this? I only need them to run a few hours a day to perform their duties but
it seems like having them force shutdown is causing lots of headaches. -
Logoff remote sessions to multiple servers for the same user
Hi,
I'm after some advice, I have a junior DBA working with me who has a tendancy to leave remote connections on various production servers, we have a large estate about 300 servers and trying to identify the servers is a difficult task.
I was hoping to use SQL Server Management Studio / Registered servers and issue one simple command against all servers to logoff the account which has been left connected. I normally log into each server start Task Manager/Users and log off the account,
this then stops the account locking but only when I have identified all servers he is still connected to. I have tried the comand prompt Logoff and session ID, this works great but the session ID on each server can be different.
Any help or advice would be great! Thanks in advance.Hi
I think it would be easier to enable session time out settings using GPO considering you work in a domain environment..
Having session timeouts settings you could say... hey after 15 min of inactivity disconnect the user and then after 15 min of disconnected session log him off
Take a look at this URL: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc754272.aspx
Hope this helps
Best regards
Joaquin Camarero Muñoz -
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 -
Hi,
My environment is VMware vSphere 4 with a few ESX 4 servers. On that, I have a vCenter, a View 4 server and SRSS. Then I have a number of Windows XP desktops.
When the user logs into his/her desktop via the Sun Ray, everything works including the local USB printer (an HP laserjet). But...you can only print once...then the print queue stays at "Printing" and won't go away. Any further print jobs just get queued up. It also won't let you delete the print job from the queue. The first print job actually does come out on the printer, but doesn't disappear from the XP's print queue.
Any ideas?
JimI can duplicate the "white screen of death" with Early Access to vmware view, with Rays running from Solaris/x86. This is in fact not vmware-specific, as I can hang uttsc to an ordinary XP system. To duplicate fairly reliably, I run a Flash example and then "start -> logoff". uttsc doesn't terminate, and truss shows repeated
/1: pollsys(0x08046690, 2, 0x08046728, 0x00000000) = 0
/1: ioctl(10, AUDIO_GETINFO, 0x08046620) =0
This doesn't happen if the IE window is terminated before logout. The behavior appears to be independent of "-F off" in uttsc (but I'm using the Ray audio driver).
Is there a workaround (other than downgrading) in the vmware view scenario?
Edited by: grommit on Aug 5, 2009 7:37 AM -
DST issues? For OES2 to OES11 upgrade?
Hi all
I have a client with DST working well on a couple of OES2 sp3 64-bit
servers on vSphere 5.0
Does anyone here have any experience with such upgrades?
I'd be pretty sure that the one upgrade path of just rebinding the NSS
volumes to new servers would be more grief than is worth it. I'd also
like to avoid the server migration option just because of how much data
is involved, not even sure if we have enough extra space to go this
route, plus from our experience with Migrating from NW6.5 to these
boxes in the beginning (OES2 sp1 at the time) did NOT understand DST on
the destination.
Andy of
KonecnyConsulting.ca in Toronto
Knowledge Partner
http://forums.novell.com/member.php?userid=75037
If you find a post helpful and are logged in the Web interface, please
show your appreciation by clicking on the star below. Thanks!Originally Posted by konecnya
Hi all
I have a client with DST working well on a couple of OES2 sp3 64-bit
servers on vSphere 5.0
Does anyone here have any experience with such upgrades?
I'd be pretty sure that the one upgrade path of just rebinding the NSS
volumes to new servers would be more grief than is worth it. I'd also
like to avoid the server migration option just because of how much data
is involved, not even sure if we have enough extra space to go this
route, plus from our experience with Migrating from NW6.5 to these
boxes in the beginning (OES2 sp1 at the time) did NOT understand DST on
the destination.
Andy of
KonecnyConsulting.ca in Toronto
Knowledge Partner
View Profile: konecnya - Novell Forums
If you find a post helpful and are logged in the Web interface, please
show your appreciation by clicking on the star below. Thanks!
We just went through a round of upgrades from OES2 SP3 (physical) with and without DST to OES11/SP1 on VMware
Now, given your particular setup, I'd think you could be fine with moving the disks. In our case, we needed to do ID transfers, and that could still be done. Setup your target OES11 SP1 VM, do your iPrint, DHCP, etc. migrate them (just not the file services). Do the ID transfer. Power off source VM. "move" the NSS disks (I'm ASSUMING the NSS disks are separate VMware virtual hard disks) to the new OES11 box and voila.
The only gotcha that I can think of:
I BELIEVE that if you stored the disks with the virtual machine (default I believe), you have to be VERY VERY careful to NOT "delete from disk" when you remove the OES2 Guest, as I think it'll delete the entire underlying directory which is now where your disks are
In other words, if you SCP or something to the ESXi host and look at the directory/file structure it'll be something like:
\OES2-Guest\bunch of .vmdk files
\OES11-Gust\bunch of .vmdk files
When you "move" the virtual disks from OES2-Guest to OES11-Guest, it's just pointing to the:
\OES2-Guest\nssdisk.vmdk files
You could manually move them around I believe if you want to maintain the proper directory structure.
Personally that would probably be the biggest time saver for you.
Otherwise you COULD migrate the file systems with DST but there's some scenarios/caveats involved with that.
Let me know if you choose the route to actually migrate the DST file systems and I'll explain further.
But, if it were me, and I had them on VMware, I'd just "move" the disks around.
Maybe you are looking for
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