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Hi
Once I too had a similar problem.
I opened the SMPS of my computer, to find a lizard inside, half cooked under the circuit boards.
So...go..take a plate, fork...and get ready...
Regards
Shiraz
The Best Relligion is Science.
Once you understand it, you will know God.
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I've been having trouble with a weird networking problem lately. Two computers (C and D in the diagram below) have "isolated" themselves and refuse to communicate with any computers besides each other, or access the internet, and they do not allow other computers to access them either. From what I can tell, there are no hardware problems that would stop them from being able to do so.
I have...
* Changed the network card on one of the two computers.
* Changed the network cable between router A and switch B.
* Attempted to release/renew the IP addresses of the computers, but they were unable to find a DHCP server on the network.
* Tried a different switch to replace switch B.
* Pinged internet sites and other computers, but the two computers can only ping each other.
* Checked the computers' basic network settings to ensure that they are correct.
* Plugged computer C into router A
* Reset all routers and switches by unplugging them for 5 mins.
... all to no avail. Anyone have an idea as to what's going on?
"A people that values its privileges above its principles soon loses both." -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
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"Attempted to release/renew the IP addresses of the computers, but they were unable to find a DHCP server on the network."
Check the router (C for DHCP Server running?
check Auto pc's DHCP?
check same subnet?
check same workgroup?
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I gave both of the computers static IP addresses, and they worked correctly after that. However, I'd like to know what the cause is - does it indicate that my gateway router is going bad, perhaps?
"A people that values its privileges above its principles soon loses both." -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
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Something weird seems to be going on with broadcasts. Typically gateways won't route broadcasts across their interfaces. DHCP clients use local broadcasts (255.255.255.255) to locate a DHCP server; ARP, the Address Resolution Protocol, uses Ethernet broadcasts on the local segment to locate IP hosts. Neither are routable.
If you have a router, rather than a level-2 device such as a switch, you must allocate different IP subnets to its various ports, and ensure that the subnet information is configured appropriately on each connected device. Otherwise the router simply won't route the packets to the right networks. You'll probably also need DNS or WINS for name resolution; Windows Browse is a broadcast protocol which isn't routable.
Another possibility which springs to mind is that the computers' network cards support software configuration of their Ethernet addresses, and they clash. This causes everything to go wrong, including the switches, which remember which MAC addresses belong to which ports so they can direct Ethernet packets to the correct port.
Stability. What an interesting concept. -- Chris Maunder
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Hi I read "MCSE Training Kit Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional" in Chapter 2 "Installing Windows 2000 Professional" under "Lesson 3: Installing Windows 2000 over the Network". I have a problem in the following section:
Performing an Installation over the Network
The Windows 2000 Setup program copies the installation files to the target computer. After copying the installation files, Setup restarts the target computer. From this point on, you install Windows 2000 in the same way that you install from a CD-ROM.
The following steps describe the process for installing Windows 2000 over the network (see Figure 2.8):
On the target computer, boot from the network client.
Connect to the distribution server. After you start the network client on the target computer, connect to the shared folder on the distribution server that contains the Windows 2000 Professional installation files.
Run Winnt.exe or Winnt32.exe to start the Setup program. Use Winnet.exe for an installation using Windows 3.x on the source system, and use Winnet32.exe for an installation using Windows 95, 98, NT 4 (or NT 3.5), or 2000 on the source system. Winnt.exe and Winnt32.exe reside in the shared folder on the distribution server. When you run Winnt.exe from the shared folder, it does the following:
Creates the $Win_nt$.~ls temporary folder on the target computer.
Copies the Windows 2000 installation files from the shared folder on the distribution server to the $Win_nt$.~ls folder on the target computer.
Install Windows 2000. Setup restarts the target computer and begins installing Windows 2000.
Check under the section that I formatted with bold and italic. There are four command that describe in this book. I used to see the command winnt.exe and winnt32.exe, but now I get confuse when there are 2 more command (winnet.exe and winnet32.exe). Can anyone give me an idea about these two command?
APO-CEDC
Save Children Norway-Cambodia Office
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Academic Learning Series Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional with Evaluation Software Comments And Corrections (Q304117)
Page 48: Misuse Of Words "source" And "target"
On page 48, under "Performing an installation over the Network", in item number 3 make the following corrections to the second sentence.
Change:
"Use Winnet.exe for an installation using Windows 3.X on the source system, and use Winnet32.exe for an installation using Windows 95, 98, NT 4 (or NT 3.4) or 2000 on the source system."
To:
"Use Winnt.exe for installation if you are using Windows 3.X on the target system, and use Winnt32.exe for installation if you are using Windows 95, 98, NT 4 (or NT 3.5) or 2000 on the target system."
Also note: winnet.exe and winnet32.exe should be winnt.exe and winnt32.exe.
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Thank you very much, now I'm clear with these two command.
APO-CEDC
Save Children Norway-Cambodia Office
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I am trying to determine all of the open file handles and them associate those handles with the file in the system.
any pointers would be greatly helpful;
thakns
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http://www.sysinternals.com/ntw2k/freeware/handle.shtml
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Thanks I so that program.
Do you know where I can read to understand how to gather this information.
I need to incorpaorate that logic into an existing program.
thanks
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Again, I didn't see in your first post you were trying to incorporate it into your program.
That actually would be a whole different subject; What platform, language, ect..ect..
If your on the .Net platform then you may want to start here.
Windows Management Instrumentation
http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/default.asp?url=/library/en-us/wmisdk/wmi/wmi_reference.asp
progload
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I am trying to gather system information about Windows Services.
I would like to get information such as Memory, CPU, workspace, ...
thakns
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http://www.sysinternals.com/ntw2k/utilities.shtml
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Still lokking for the tools to display CPU / Menory usage for services.
I didnot see it in the list tat the URL to listed.
Also I need to understand how to gather this informationso I can incorporate it into a program of mine.
thanks
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I assume your Pluto26,
I didn't see in your first post you were trying to incorporate it into your program.
That actually would be a whole different subject; What platform, language, ect..ect..
The utility I was refering to is PsList.
PsList
http://www.sysinternals.com/ntw2k/freeware/pslist.shtml
PsList works on Windows NT, Windows 2000 and Windows XP.
Usage
The default behavior of PsList is to show CPU-oriented information for all the processes that are currently running on the local system. The information listed for each process includes the time the process has executed, the amount of time the process has executed in kernel and user modes, and the amount of physical memory that the OS has assigned the process. Command-line switches allow you to view memory-oriented process information, thread statistics, or all three types of data.
Progload
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If it is possible, try to use norton utilities, it provide many feature to work with your system. Check at www.norton.com[^] for more information.
APO-CEDC
Save Children Norway-Cambodia Office
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I'm getting a flood of attacks this morning that I don't recognize -
"[181.1] Inbound DCE BIND to potentially vulnerable RPC DCOM interface attempt detected"
Can anyone enlighten me as to what this is attempting to describe?
"My kid was Inmate of the Month at Adobe Mountain Juvenile Corrections Center" - Bumper Sticker in Bullhead City
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Dear Roger, I found the following website describe Here[^] about your error messages. Try to read it and figure our your problem.
APO-CEDC
Save Children Norway-Cambodia Office
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Good link - thanks! I ran the test from grc.com and it reports that my DCOM system has been properly patched and is not vulnerable to attack.
"My kid was Inmate of the Month at Adobe Mountain Juvenile Corrections Center" - Bumper Sticker in Bullhead City
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Hi, I read the book about disk compression and I note that the book used to tell me about the advantage of feature in windows 2000. But I heard my friend and my teacher told me that disk compression has it advantage too. Its disadvantage is reduce the quality of our hard disk and make our hard disk easy to have bad sector and no function. Does any other people have an idea about this issue?
APO-CEDC
Save Children Norway-Cambodia Office
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Depends which file system the volume uses. If it's NTFS, 'disk compression' is implemented by attempting to compress each file in 64kB (IIRC) chunks. If a chunk doesn't compress by at least 8k (again, IIRC) the uncompressed version is stored.
This technique speeds up random access as only 64k needs to be decompressed.
Whether compression is faster or slower depends on the relative speed of the processor(s) and the disk(s). If you have a slow disk and fast processor you may find that the system is faster overall.
The downsides are twofold. First, there's more to go wrong, potentially. Second, you can never do true unbuffered access. This is why Microsoft recommend that server applications don't run on compressed drives. Exchange won't mount a database if either the database or the transaction log are compressed.
Stability. What an interesting concept. -- Chris Maunder
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Hi, I read MCSE Training Kit—Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional in Chapter 2-Installing Windows 2000 Professional (Lesson 1: Getting Started), I found the comparision between NTFS and FAT/FAT32 file system as the following list:
NTFS:
- File-level and folder-level security.
- Disk compression
- Disk quotas
- File encryption
FAT or FAT32:
- Supports dual booting
- No file-level security
I note that between NTFS and FAT/FAT32 also support "Supports dual booting" option, but whey this book only list in FAT/FAT32? Please give me some idea about this issue.
APO-CEDC
Save Children Norway-Cambodia Office
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My guess is the book is talking about dual-booting 2K and 9x. To do that, your boot partition and boot.ini have to be FAT/FAT32 so that Win 9x can read it.
--Mike--
Personal stuff:: Ericahist | Homepage
Shareware stuff:: 1ClickPicGrabber | RightClick-Encrypt
CP stuff:: CP SearchBar v2.0.2 | C++ Forum FAQ
----
There is a saying in statistics that a million monkeys pounding on typewriters would eventually create a work of Shakespeare. Thanks to the Internet, we now know that this is not true.
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Yes, I think that too but what I wonder is NTFS also support mutiple boot too, as an example my computer run win2k pro (mtfs) and winxp pro (ntfs). Why microsoft did not put dual boot in NFTS file system too?
APO-CEDC
Save Children Norway-Cambodia Office
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