Don't say WINS !!!
#1
Posted 12 March 2002 - 02:35 AM
WESSSSSSSSSSS
#2
Posted 12 March 2002 - 04:50 AM
#4
Posted 13 March 2002 - 03:15 AM
Are all the clients setup to use your WINS server in their respective TCP/IP properties?
yes, all the clients are configured to use WINS server, is there anyway to make sure that the WINS server is working correctly?? I will try the suggestions on the article that ryoko mentioned and I'll be back
#6
Posted 13 March 2002 - 06:10 PM
Now, what was the KB article you found that you used in the first place? I am interested to see what the original fix was that got you into this predicament.
#7
Posted 13 March 2002 - 09:53 PM
#8
Posted 14 March 2002 - 12:28 AM
-Ry
#9
Posted 14 March 2002 - 02:20 AM
#11
Posted 16 March 2002 - 11:20 AM
#12
Posted 16 March 2002 - 02:05 PM
hey clutch, i use netbeui in a production environment and it works A LOT faster than TCP/IP does, especially when you have machines that are on different IP ranges, so don't bag on an old protocol that still out performs TCP/IP on smaller LANs (not WANs)
NetBEUI used to be the protocol of choice for smaller networks because of its lower overhead and faster throughput. However, have you taken a good look at the collisions on an average network using it? How about the broadcast storms? Also, when comparing the protocols, are you comparing the two on the same OS (such as Win2K) or is this a mixed environment (such as Win95, 98, NT4, 2K)? If you are using older Win9X boxes, then those are the ones that will see the performance benefit (unless the aforementioned issues catch up depending on the network size as NetBEUI does not scale well), but if you are using a modern network that relies on network-installed and client/server applications, then you will not see a performance benefit and in reality be hurting the performance of the network.
@wessss,
Did you try calling MS Support and just getting the proper fix for the clients? They are pretty easy to deal with; all you have to do is tell them the Q number along with what the issues were that brought you to that conclusion, and they will email the fix to you (or a link to get it). You don't have to pay for it either, so it would definately be worth your time to check it out. Point to this article as it is the one that supercedes your earlier Q number.
Also, while your clients may be pointing to your WINS server's IP, are your servers doing the same? They will need to (including the WINS box itself) so the WINS db will properly cache all the IPs and machine roles to each machine name on the network.
Now, if either of those don't work for you and you still have NetBEUI installed, then make sure you have NetBEUI higher up in the binding order than TCP/IP for your NICs. If not, your systems will have to wait for your TCP/IP stack to timeout on its session(s) before moving its way to NetBEUI.
#13
Posted 16 March 2002 - 08:42 PM
#14
Posted 17 March 2002 - 01:48 AM
I do agree NetBEUI is old and not good for larger networks, but you can avoid the collisions by using a SWITCH. We tested throughput between the 2 protos and NetBEUI was faster.
Well, there are many SWITCHES that aren't OPTIMIZED for use with NetBEUI, especially ones in the price segment that a small office would use (plus many small networks still use HUBS anyway). So, why not stop using the "Band-Aid" of Windows-compatible protocols and just use a current one that all the OSs are supporting? It's bad enough to still be on a network that needs NetBIOS for something, but you can at least let that ride on the back of TCP/IP rather than install ANOTHER protocol that MS wants as dead as everybody else has. They have gone out of their way to make a little bit harder to install on their newest OS, and I would imagine that canning it altogether in their next release is a completely reasonable prediction. At some point, you will HAVE to move forward in protocols since almost nothing supports NetBEUI or IPX/SPX (NWLink) anyway. Print servers, WAPs, managed SWITCHES and HUBS, etc. all have support for TCP/IP, but none come screaming to mind that support NetBEUI. And if you have one of these gizmos (or Heaven forbid you want to get ONLINE to the Internet) you will now have 2 protocols to babysit; NetBEUI and TCP/IP. All-in-all, not such a hot choice.
Now, as I asked earlier, what OSs were you testing in throughput? Was it Win2K/XP or 9X-based OSs? The more modern ones have vastly improved performance in TCP/IP, and I am not inclined to believe that NetBEUI is that much faster (if at all) than these newer implementations. What did your test entail? Was it simply copying files over, or were there many networked applications running in the background while you were checking network/CPU utilization? Was it a single large file and/or many small files? What were the results?
#15
Posted 17 March 2002 - 09:54 AM
#16
Posted 17 March 2002 - 10:38 AM
Yes i agree it should only be tcp/ip until you can solve my problem, it's both protos
What problem is that?
#17
Posted 21 March 2002 - 05:38 AM
user a logs into a local computer. using a USERNAME and a PASSWORD
now, when that user goes to brows the domain, the domain asks who is wanting access. So, the 95/98 client uses the USERNAME and PASSWORD the user typed in to log into the local computer, and it goes to match it against the domain list. Unless those accounts match exactly, you'll be forced to authenticate to the domain. It becomes tricky and does take a long time to initiate. Once the users log in to a share or whatever, does it work fast afterwords?
Anyway, Im suprised that you cant log into the domain more than once using a 9x client. that seems rediculous, and should be fixed by now Id imagine. Anyway, I try to not use WINS, use DNS instead. Unless you guys have reasons why youd want to use WINS, Id like to hear.. as Im not very fond of WINS.
jeff
#18
Posted 21 March 2002 - 07:12 AM
#19
Posted 22 March 2002 - 11:06 AM
#20
Posted 22 March 2002 - 06:02 PM

Help










