Hi Mike,
I'm confused?
Yes you are. :)
First: The MS information. Use the horizontal slider bar at the bottom of the table listing to scroll to the left. The first column lists the Keys. The third column is the "Parent", the folder where those keys are. (Those tables are standardized format at MS documentation, and it could well be that several registry keys are in different places, thus the third column would then show different valus. In our case they are all at the same tree-node)
Second: If those keys aren't present, then their internal default is used. But if they are present, then they take precedence over the defaults. Thus just add those keys and life is good. Or use the mentioned installer to see those Keys and their Values to magically show up. The installer just adds those three keys, and has the benefit to do a simple uninstall (thus reverting them back), if you're later on don't deed those settings anymore (because you changed to a ODBC/OLEDB dataprovider)
wOOdy
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: ProFox [mailto:profox-bounces@leafe.com] Im Auftrag von mbsoftwaresolutions@mbsoftwaresolutions.com Gesendet: Freitag, 8. Dezember 2017 05:11 An: ProFox Email List profox@leafe.com Betreff: Re: AW: Check my wording on this and tell me if I'm right
On 2017-12-01 08:15, Jürgen Wondzinski wrote:
The effect which Tracy mentioned (single network user is faster than multiple users), is only partly related to that topic, but mostly with the dreaded Opportunistic Locking (or short "OpLock", which corrupts our CDX and data). SMB2/3 (as a streaming protocol) holds a local buffer to accomodate datastreams as well as OppLocks. The common solution is to disable that caching, which effectively kills the OpLocks problem. For that you have to set three Registry Keys at the CLIENT, nothing to do at server side. You can/should check for correct settings in your app at startup, but you (normally) can't change those settings on the fly, since you need Admin Rights for that. (Thus you'd better package those into your installer) https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff686200%28WS.10%29.aspx
Hi wOOdy,
See here: https://www.screencast.com/t/4tEaNq72
I don't see those 3 different settings (DirectoryCacheLifetime, FileNotFoundCacheLifetime, and FileInfoCacheLifetime) at all. Plus, the middle column in the M$ page--those values all look the same: https://www.screencast.com/t/EErMmZ4z6r
I'm confused?
[excessive quoting removed by server]