Ok that idea sounds golden, I will try it out the first chance I get. This
is a big improvement over the way it is now, it's a little harder on users,
but not much. I thank you very much!
However, just because I am a curious kind of guy, I do not yet know
*why*such a slowdown occurs when saving a
page 211 of samba 3 by example.pdf has instructions on how to redirect
folders using registry changes. you can easily redirect my documents by
right clicking on it and changing the target. i don't save files to my
desktop because that just results in a cluttered desktop and large
roaming prof
The VM is being saved to the Desktop, within a folder (or multiple folders
if the user puts it there)
If I redirect My Docs, and the VM files are there - Then won't VMware run
much more slowly trying to access this stuff across the network when the
user wants to run the VM? Profile loading/saving
where are you saving the VM at? My documents? you can redirect my
documents as well as most folders under c:\documents and settings\user
Jonathan Bougher wrote:
Hello everyone,
I could really use some help trying to diagnose a tricky issue within the
domain
I have set up.
I am using samba-3
Ouch - insane is not what I was going for, hahaha jk. I just hoped that the
gigabit speeds would better support a larger profile.
If I was getting the full DL/UL speeds for profile transfer it would not be
such an issue because it would only take about a minute and a half.
But I see your wisdom C
Ouch - insane is not what I was going for, hahaha jk. I just hoped that the
gigabit speeds would better support a larger profile.
If I was getting the full DL/UL speeds for profile transfer it would not be
such an issue because it would only take about a minute and a half.
But I see your wisdom C
I think your right there. What type of OS/VM software are you using?
Could you have the OS + common app bits in a virtual disk that is on
the local machine and the user profile, user specific applications all
in a seperate virtual disk that they get from the samba server? That
would probabl
On 10/14/2008, Jonathan Bougher ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Profile Logoff: 50,000 kb/s (a ~3GB profile takes roughly 10 min to load)
Using roaming profiles for profiles so large is - well - insane.
You won't get much better performance...
I'd look for another way (than using huge roaming profi
Hello everyone,
I could really use some help trying to diagnose a tricky issue within the
domain
I have set up.
I am using samba-3.0.28-1.el5_2.1 and openldap-2.3.27-8.el5_2.4 on a server
running Centos 5.1.
I have everything working properly within the domain, users can log in,
netlogon
scripts