MSDE has a bad habit of RAM "chew"

Have you tried putting a throttle on the instance?



Phillip Partipilo wrote:

I also find that the server gets a good hammering by WSUS when synchronizing
with MS.  I also have an old machine acting as the server, 800-something mhz
HP netserver, and it will start running reeeeealy sloooow.  The MSDE
instance seems to be what eats up so much CPU. Wonder why kind of queries
its busy processing.



Phillip Partipilo
Parametric Solutions Inc.
Jupiter, Florida
(561) 747-6107



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Creamer, Mark
Sent: Thursday, February 02, 2006 3:57 PM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] distributing large service pack files

Hmm. That's an answer I didn't expect. Good info. Thanks Susan. I know I
need to play more with WSUS.
The only place I have installed it was in a 20 node network with an older
server hosting WSUS only, and it killed the performance on the server. So I
(not very scientifically I admit) extrapolated that it would be a disaster
in a large corporate environment. No, I didn't install all languages :-) I'm
sure I did something wrong, just haven't gone back to revisit it yet.

<mc>
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Susan Bradley, CPA
aka Ebitz - SBS Rocks [MVP]
Sent: Thursday, February 02, 2006 3:50 PM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] distributing large service pack files

Not to mention it's my understanding that it's not legal to distribute
service packs "outside" the MS cloud and host MS code like service
packs/hotfixes like that.

This is why universities cannot hand out SP cdroms and some such things.

Since the Department of Justice... it's been my impression that MS tends to
want to control the bits so they can yank parts if need be [see recent SP
update notifications for Office due to stupid lawsuit between guy and MS on
Access]

WSUS had to get some eula's rewritten to allow the geeks to do allow
consultants to do patching and what not.

Molkentin, Steve wrote:

Mark,
WSUS (and SMS for that matter) uses the "Background Intelligent Transfer Service" (that's what it's called) to do just this on large files, in that it is smart enough to recognise downtime on your network to send files, and manages the resumption of large files if it had to stop transferring them. It is pretty seamless in my experience - all our links are less than T1 (except for the internet pipe into our head office), and we manage to push a lot of stuff around using WSUS quite well with no interruption to business. It's not hard to setup an older PC as a local WSUS cache - it needs little in the way of processor and RAM (really), and will get over any cost issue and give you the ability to distribute, etc. Additionally, it takes away all the responsibility of the staff member to install/connect/download the service pack (and don't start me on the fact that they shouldn't have admin rights to install it in the first place).
My $0.02 inc GST...
themolk.


------------------------------------------------------------------------
   *From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] *On Behalf Of
   *Creamer, Mark
   *Sent:* Friday, 3 February 2006 6:18 AM
   *To:* ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
   *Subject:* [ActiveDir] distributing large service pack files

   The structure of our WAN is such that we have lots of small
   offices all over the country, each with a few to a hundred or so
   PCs, connected by not-so-fast links. The biggest locations have
   T1s, but many don't. Keeping these things patched is a nightmare.
   We do not have distributed servers, and really nothing except the
   PCs themselves to cache something for local delivery. Which brings
   me to my question...is it even conceivable that something like an
   internal-only BitTorrent could be leveraged to distribute
   something as large as a service pack? I think it might be more
   efficient than a 3^rd party patch management solution or WSUS,
   which I can't use because of not having distributed file caches.
   If this is nutty, dish out the dirt, but I'll want to understand
   why it's nutty too J

   Thanks

   ***Mark Creamer*

   *Systems Engineer*

   Cintas Corporation | 6800 Cintas Boulevard | Mason, OH 45040

   Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://www.cintas.com


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