Slowdown in system, caused by external mapped drives. How do i res

G

Guest

When a user with for an example a laptop that has a mapped drive, connects to
a network that does not include this mapped drive connection. Then this will
cause a slowdown in the system. Desktop kan freeze, and it can take up to 2
minutes before the computer can be fully usable.

I wonder if it exist some kind of setting to reduce this problem. The most
helpful would be some kind of configuration that could change the "timeout"
value down to a minimum.

Is this possible?
 
M

Malke

Ole said:
When a user with for an example a laptop that has a mapped drive,
connects to a network that does not include this mapped drive
connection. Then this will cause a slowdown in the system. Desktop kan
freeze, and it can take up to 2 minutes before the computer can be
fully usable.

I wonder if it exist some kind of setting to reduce this problem. The
most helpful would be some kind of configuration that could change the
"timeout" value down to a minimum.

Do the drives really need to be mapped? Often third-party niche
(industry-specific) programs require mapped drives to work, but
otherwise you should just use shortcuts to server resources instead of
mapping drives on mobile workstations.

Malke
 
M

Malke

Ole said:
I have googled that before. And it is not the same problem i have. But
we dont fully understand what is causing this slowdown, or if it is
tweakable. But there is always hope :)

Yes, there is always hope. :)

You might want to add a crossposting to the server groups. Here's a list
of all the MS newsgroups:

http://aumha.org/nntp.htm

Sysadmins who take care of huge networks routinely post there and I'm
sure your issue has been addressed before. Another avenue is if you
have a TechNet subscription you get two free support incidents. I've
also bitten the bullet and called paid MS server-level support and been
extremely impressed and satisfied. It cost me around $250 but I
considered it a well-spent cost of doing business in that particular
case.

One other thing I'd suggest - with all due respect, you should include
more detail in your post to the server groups (or add to this thread).
There isn't any way to tell from what you first wrote whether you're a
tiny office with 6 computers that were set up by someone who sort of
knew what he was doing and liked the idea of mapped drives (hence my
first answer to you) or you're an IT company servicing some really big
organizations. The details might help someone give you the answer.

Again, I'm sorry that I wasn't able to help you and wish you good luck
in your endeavor.

Malke
 

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