Tom,

I tried an experiment which showed that the problem is not directly tied to
the server. I ran 3 machines on a local network. I put the winvnc4.exe
server on machine "A" and vncviewer.exe on machines "B" and "C." I ran the
pairs one at a time. The "A"-"C" combination ran fine. The "A"-"B"
combination had a vncviewer freeze after a minute or so on each try. Machine
B is a dual processor machine. Machine A is a single processor machine.

I then changed the boot.ini of machine B to force it to run on only one
processor, and combination "A"-"B" then worked fine.

--Richard--

-----Original Message-----
From: Tom Harleman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Saturday, August 18, 2007 9:42 AM
To: Richard Fox; James Weatherall; [email protected]
Subject: RE: Dual processor problem with vncviewer on XP

My experience is the same. If I disconnect from the server and reconnect, I
can navigate briefly until it hangs, again. I wonder if the video driver on
the server could be the issue.

        -----Original Message----- 
        From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Richard Fox 
        Sent: Fri 8/17/2007 8:03 PM 
        To: 'James Weatherall'; [email protected] 
        Cc: 
        Subject: RE: Dual processor problem with vncviewer on XP
        
        

        James,
        
        The ping does not stop. I ran ping -t, and then started
vncviewer.exe. When
        the hang occurred, the ping continued to report access to the
server. By the
        way, the mouse on the client also continued to operate the cursor on
the
        server, although the client screen was frozen.
        
        --Richard--
        
        -----Original Message-----
        From: James Weatherall [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
        Sent: Friday, August 17, 2007 8:57 AM
        To: 'Richard Fox'; [email protected]
        Subject: RE: Dual processor problem with vncviewer on XP
        
        Richard,
        
        If you run a "ping -t" from viewer computer to server and then run
VNC
        Viewer & reproduce the hang, does the ping also stop?
        
        Cheers,
        
        Wez @ RealVNC Ltd
        
        
        > -----Original Message-----
        > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Richard Fox
        > Sent: 17 August 2007 02:23
        > To: 'James Weatherall'; [email protected]
        > Subject: RE: Dual processor problem with vncviewer on XP
        >
        > James,
        >
        > I tried your suggestion to upgrade to the latest display driver.
That
        > did not solve the problem.
        > I then tried removing the NVIDIA driver, and running the client
using
        > the windows XP VGA driver.  The problem persisted.
        >
        > --Richard--
        >
        > -----Original Message-----
        > From: James Weatherall [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
        > Sent: Tuesday, August 14, 2007 6:55 AM
        > To: 'Richard Fox'; [email protected]
        > Subject: RE: Dual processor problem with vncviewer on XP
        >
        > Hi Richard,
        >
        > It sounds like you have a problem with the display drivers on your
        > system.
        > You might find that there's an upgrade from the manufacturer to
fix
        > problems of this sort.
        >
        > Regards,
        >
        > Wez @ RealVNC Ltd
        >
        >
        > > -----Original Message-----
        > > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        > > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Richard Fox
        > > Sent: 14 August 2007 00:06
        > > To: [email protected]
        > > Subject: Dual processor problem with vncviewer on XP
        > >
        > > I am looking for help on a problem with display freezes in
        > vncviewer
        > > running on a dual processor computer with Windows XP.
        > > 
        > > The primary symptom is that vncviewer running on a dual
processor
        > > client freezes its video after a few seconds or a few
        > minutes. But, it
        > > works fine when I change boot.ini to run only one processor.
        > > 
        > > Additional Symptoms:
        > >     The vnc link stays active, even though the viewer video
        > is frozen.
        > >     The mouse on the client continues to control the cursor on
the
        > > server, even though the video on the client is frozen.
        > >     High data rate video, such as YouTube video, or rapid
        > scrolling in
        > > Excel, causes the freeze to occur sooner than when the screens
are
        > > fairly quiet.
        > >     The debug log at level 100 is "effectively identical" for a
        > > successful 1 processor session, and for a frozen 2
        > processor session.
        > >     Assigning vncviewer process affinity to a single processor
does
        > > not fix the problem.
        > >     Assigning all process affinities except vncviewer to one
        > > processor, and assigning vncviewer to the other processor
        > does not fix
        > > the problem.
        > >     Changing routers does not fix the problem.
        > >     Turning off all firewalls and all anti-virus programs
        > does not fix
        > > the problem.
        > >     The Java version of vncviewer also exhibits the freeze-up.
        > >     Reversing the roles of the client and the server does
        > not freeze
        > > up.
        > > Winvnc works fine on the dual processor machine, and
        > vncviewer works
        > > on the other (single processor) machine.
        > >     Connecting to the same server from a different client
computer
        > > that has a single processor does not freeze up. The problem
        > appears to
        > > be localized to the dual processor machine.
        > > 
        > > Client Configuration:
        > >     vncviewer personal edition P.4.2.3
        > >     Windows XP Home with latest updates
        > >         Including Windows Patch KB896256 for AMD dual processors
        > >         Including AMD dual core processor patch 1.3.2.16
        > >         Including AMD dual core optimizer
        > >     AMD Athlon 64 X2 Dual Core Processor 4400+
        > >     3 Gigabytes of RAM
        > >     GeForce 6800 XT video card
        > >     1 gigabit port to Linksys router
        > > 
        > > Server Configuration:
        > >     winvnc4 4.1.2.0
        > >     Windows XP Home with latest updates
        > >     Dell Inspiron 8600 laptop
        > >     100 mbps port to the same Linksys router
        > > 
        > > Network configuration:
        > >     This is a local area network connected through a
        > Linksys router.
        > >     The 2 computers are in the same room.
        > >     I am controlling the server (a laptop) through the screen
and
        > > keyboard of the client (a desktop with a large screen and good
        > > keyboard.)
        > >     The vnc logs report a 20,000 kbps connection   
        > > 
        > > Thanks
        > > 
        > > --Richard Fox--
        > > _______________________________________________
        > > VNC-List mailing list
        > > [email protected]
        > > To remove yourself from the list visit:
        > > http://www.realvnc.com/mailman/listinfo/vnc-list
        > _______________________________________________
        > VNC-List mailing list
        > [email protected]
        > To remove yourself from the list visit:
        > http://www.realvnc.com/mailman/listinfo/vnc-list
        _______________________________________________
        VNC-List mailing list
        [email protected]
        To remove yourself from the list visit:
        http://www.realvnc.com/mailman/listinfo/vnc-list
_______________________________________________
VNC-List mailing list
[email protected]
To remove yourself from the list visit:
http://www.realvnc.com/mailman/listinfo/vnc-list

Reply via email to