max number of connections - sharing question

S

slothy

Hi im curious on how the limit of 10 connections works for xp pro. My
question is if im sharing a folder and with 4 users and each of those users
open 10 files at one time doe that count for each connection or it per user
based i.e. i can have a max of 10 users but unlimited about of "open" files
to that share? reason i ask is id like to setup our account "server" on xp or
even vista and share - there is a max of 4 people who would use this share
(its more a database), but watching open files it tends to be messy as it
tends to leave lots open.

thanks
 
M

Malke

slothy said:
Hi im curious on how the limit of 10 connections works for xp pro. My
question is if im sharing a folder and with 4 users and each of those
users open 10 files at one time doe that count for each connection or it
per user based i.e. i can have a max of 10 users but unlimited about of
"open" files to that share? reason i ask is id like to setup our account
"server" on xp or even vista and share - there is a max of 4 people who
would use this share (its more a database), but watching open files it
tends to be messy as it tends to leave lots open.

The inbound concurrent connections limitations is based on *connections*,
not on users or computers. Each computer can, and usually does, make
multiple connections to a "server".

If your pseudo-server is only acting as a file server (no programs need to
run on it), you can install a Linux distro and there will be no connections
limitation. Otherwise, you would be better off installing Small Business
Server instead of a workstation operating system.

Inbound connections limit in XP - http://support.microsoft.com/?id=314882

5 - XP Home/Vista Home Basic
10 - Vista Home Premium/Vista Ultimate/XP Pro
49 - SBS 2000
74 - SBS 2003
Unlimited for full Server O/Ses

Malke
 
B

Brian

Malke said:
The inbound concurrent connections limitations is based on *connections*,
not on users or computers. Each computer can, and usually does, make
multiple connections to a "server".

If your pseudo-server is only acting as a file server (no programs need to
run on it), you can install a Linux distro and there will be no connections
limitation. Otherwise, you would be better off installing Small Business
Server instead of a workstation operating system.

Inbound connections limit in XP - http://support.microsoft.com/?id=314882

5 - XP Home/Vista Home Basic
10 - Vista Home Premium/Vista Ultimate/XP Pro
49 - SBS 2000
74 - SBS 2003
Unlimited for full Server O/Ses

Malke

Ok just so im clear here, if 1 user has 10 files open from a share on a
vista premium machine - it counts for all its 10 connections and user #2 will
get a error saying no more connections allowed?
 
M

Malke

Brian wrote:

Ok just so im clear here, if 1 user has 10 files open from a share on a
vista premium machine - it counts for all its 10 connections and user #2
will get a error saying no more connections allowed?

Are you the OP? Or do you have a similar situation? If yes to either, please
try this and find out. I don't believe that one user having 10 files open
will use more than one connection but I can't test it for you here.

Malke
 

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