Resolutioners straightdope sdmb12/14/2023 PS C:\Users\Administrator> netstat. Scope Name Interface Index RSS Capable RDMA Capable Speed IpAddress PS C:\Users\Administrator> Get-SmbServerNetworkInterface PS C:\Users\Administrator> Get-SmbServerConfiguration | Select EnableMultichannel Name Segment Bus Device Function Slot NumaNode PcieLinkSpeed PcieLinkWidth Version PS C:\Users\Administrator> Get-NetAdapterHardwareInfo fastnet Name InterfaceDescription Enabled PFC ETSįastnet Mellanox ConnectX-5 Adapter True False False PS C:\Users\Administrator> Get-NetAdapterRDMA fastnet Here is the server configuration: PS C:\Users\Administrator> Get-NetOffloadGlobalSetting | Select NetworkDirect On the client, Get-SmbMultichannelConnection is empty. I have enabled SMB Direct feature on the client. The switch has global pause enabled and PFC disabled Server: Win2019 Datacenter with Mellanox ConnectX-5 100GbEĬlient: Win10 Pro for Workstations with Mellanox ConnectX-4 Lx 25GbEīoth machines have WinOF2 0 driver with Flow Control Rx/Tx enabled You might think that would be easy enough, but you’d be wrong I go along slowly for a while, then OUCH, used the damn right one again. Yesterday started trying to use the left thumb. I verified RDMA connectivity using nd_write_bw in both directions. I learned to touch type in HS, so been using that thumb to hit the space bar for 65 years. I can tell because RDMA performance counters remain at zero and actual bandwidth is displayed in Task Manager. I think I've set up everything correctly, but SMB Direct is not being used. Over the past two decades, the SDMB earned a reputation among its loyal. Its been running nearly stock vB 3.8.7 for close to a decade. After starting off with UBB, the site switched to vBulletin a few years later. I wanted to test first with Global Pause for simplicity before switching to PFC. The Straight Dope Message Board is a 'legacy forum' - online for over 20 years, and one of the longest-established big boards. It may be worth the effort.In a Windows lab environment, I'm trying to test performance of SMB Direct using Mellanox RDMA adapters with global pause. the entire look of the site is very, ahem, retro (as much as it is content that matters). I do suggest that the SDMB look into this. And IE, sucky as it might be, still holds a very large percentage of the market, I believe.Īn accessible website must be viewable on all devices, and the diversity of web browsing devices and screen sizes out there is definitely growing. There are all kinds of people with eyesight deficiencies and impediments that routinely need to adjust their font sizes. The issue, though, is relevant not only for people surfing from a couch (which I believe is a very small minority). I guess it is just one more case of IE being sucky (yes, I know, I should have uninstalled it years ago) I just tried it in Netscape and it does work. A scroll bar does appear at larger sizes, but the text of the thread remains visible without need for scrolling. In Firefox, if you hold down the CTRL key and use the mouse wheel the font size can be adjusted. Is there any chance that this will be addressed? Is it in the pipeline? I am surprised that a site that houses so many technically inclined people and also so many minorities and people sensible to minority needs, has remained blind to this. So long story short, There is no way I can adjust this site so I don’t have to squint at the screen or sit closer to the screen.Ĭhanging the DPI settings in the Displays Control Panel does help a bit, but you can only go so far with that. That means that adjusting it on my browser has absolutely no effect.Īlso, although the layout is liquid (it adjust to the window width), when you zoom in, it keeps the width of the original window, forcing you to side-scroll. I am afraid that the SDMB is failing miserably in this aspect.įont sizes are fixed. This has opened my eyes to the matters of website accessibility (as in their flexibility to adapt to users special needs). My new computer setup (PC on the TV from the sofa) forces me to fiddle with zooms and font sizes to make reading long texts sufferable.
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