I got your messages and was able to fix the issue, using the lever (configuration parameter) that we installed at that time. I just had no time to reply here.
Details: The problem is that some higher frequency workunits need a lot of data files, and with three download URLs for each file this fills up the buffer available for the XML blob that holds the file specifications. The configuration parameter is the number of URLs passed to the client for each file, I now reduced it to two, which should be more than enough. Our download servers are pretty reliable these days.
No worries, thanks for resolving it so promptly, I appreciate how busy you are.
I suppose I'd have to understand the inner workings of the server code, but I don't really make the connection between number of download mirrors and the improperly terminated string buffer in the server output. Regardless, the issue was resolved within 12 hours so that was great. Thanks again.
Thanks a lot for
)
Thanks a lot for reporting!
I got your messages and was able to fix the issue, using the lever (configuration parameter) that we installed at that time. I just had no time to reply here.
Details: The problem is that some higher frequency workunits need a lot of data files, and with three download URLs for each file this fills up the buffer available for the XML blob that holds the file specifications. The configuration parameter is the number of URLs passed to the client for each file, I now reduced it to two, which should be more than enough. Our download servers are pretty reliable these days.
BM
No worries, thanks for
)
No worries, thanks for resolving it so promptly, I appreciate how busy you are.
I suppose I'd have to understand the inner workings of the server code, but I don't really make the connection between number of download mirrors and the improperly terminated string buffer in the server output. Regardless, the issue was resolved within 12 hours so that was great. Thanks again.
Soli Deo Gloria
Thanks for fixing it so
)
Thanks for fixing it so promptly!
Looks like you may have avoided a flood of 'me too' reports :-).
Cheers,
Gary.