Is there a way to determine how many transactions are pending in the filer?
How many words are required to ask this question before Post button will work? I'll try another sentence.
Is there a way to determine how many transactions are pending in the filer?
How many words are required to ask this question before Post button will work? I'll try another sentence.
On Windows Server 2008 R2, the "Host name" box for editing the https binding is disabled. I'm unable to enable it so that I can enter the hostname for which to bind.
The certificate "issued to" field is in *.example.com format.
How does one enable the Host name box for editing?
EDIT: The proposed duplicate does not answer my ACTUAL question, which is "why is this box grayed out and not enabled?" Additionally, that question is dated, and does not consider an approach used here: https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/varunm/2013/06/18/bind-multiple-sites-on-same-ip-address-and-port-in-ssl/
What problems might arise within a domain when the member servers are not properly time-sync'd? I'm aware that log entries are incorrect making troubleshooting more difficult in time-sensitive operations. But would there be other symptoms, perhaps between file servers, authentication and certificate servers, would manifest themselves?
By what method are most system administrators managing the automatic cleanup of hundreds of thousands of old files across a wide range of folder locations?
These folders are located across the enterprise on many servers. I'm looking to manage their automatic cleanup by describing each location and the specific rules which govern their cleanup.
Such rules might be the age of file, based on date created, last change, or last-modified dates, the size of file, naming convention of folder or filenames.
It would be ideal to set triggers to invoke the cleanup without manual intervention, such as disk free space or percent, or simply a periodic cleanup.
I've never booted with PXE or network share, but now need to reinstall an OS on my laptop with a dead DVD drive and no budget to replace it.
Looking for a free product to host the boot image on Windows 7, then connect to it via PXE or Network Share. I don't know which is better or easier. Looking for advice on that too. This is a one-shot problem and solution.
Let me know if you need more details.
I am having trouble while attempting to send a single email to an aol.com user. I get a rejection reply as follows:
Your message did not reach some or all of the intended recipients.
Sent: Wed, 27 Jul 2011 15:56:24 -0400
Subject: Test
The following recipient(s) could not be reached:
[email protected]
Error Type: SMTP
Remote server (205.188.103.1) issued an error.
hMailServer sent:
Remote server replied: 421 4.7.1 : (DNS:NR) http://postmaster.info.aol.com/errors/421dnsnr.html
Tried 9 time(s)
hMailServer
Troubleshooting using AOL's troubleshooting page, rDNS lookup results are:
RDNS Results
DNS Server Response:
www.scanhelper.com
And using NSLOOKUP myself ..
> 60.158.172.99.in-addr.arpa
Server: homeportal
Address: 192.168.1.254
Non-authoritative answer:
60.158.172.99.in-addr.arpa name = www.scanhelper.com
When using telnet,
C:\>telnet mailin-01.mx.aol.com 25
421 4.7.1 : (DNS:NR) http://postmaster.info.aol.com/errors/421dnsnr.html
Connection to host lost.
My hMailServer is set up correctly, is not an open relay, is not used for spam, is not on any blacklists, and so forth.
Any tips on getting AOL mail servers to accept mail? As far as I can tell, everything is being done correctly on my end.