SCOUG Logo


Next Meeting: Sat, TBD
Meeting Directions


Be a Member
Join SCOUG

Navigation:


Help with Searching

20 Most Recent Documents
Search Archives
Index by date, title, author, category.


Features:

Mr. Know-It-All
Ink
Download!










SCOUG:

Home

Email Lists

SIGs (Internet, General Interest, Programming, Network, more..)

Online Chats

Business

Past Presentations

Credits

Submissions

Contact SCOUG

Copyright SCOUG



warp expowest
Pictures from Sept. 1999

The views expressed in articles on this site are those of their authors.

warptech
SCOUG was there!


Copyright 1998-2024, Southern California OS/2 User Group. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

SCOUG, Warp Expo West, and Warpfest are trademarks of the Southern California OS/2 User Group. OS/2, Workplace Shell, and IBM are registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation. All other trademarks remain the property of their respective owners.

The Southern California OS/2 User Group
USA

SCOUG-HELP Mailing List Archives

Return to [ 13 | January | 2002 ]

<< Previous Message <<


Date: Sun, 13 Jan 2002 23:41:20 PST7
From: "Steven Levine" <steve53@earthlink.net >
Reply-To: scoug-help@scoug.com
To: scoug-help@scoug.com
Subject: SCOUG-Help: multiple instances

=====================================================
If you are responding to someone asking for help who
may not be a member of this list, be sure to use the
REPLY TO ALL feature of your email program.
=====================================================

In <3C427C8F.D82A51C8@gte.net>, on 01/13/02
at 10:35 PM, "Benedict G. Archer" said:

>> >From the ctrl-switch app menu I see two instances of several
>> >things--peer, pmshell, sysinit and epwmux. Two other systems also have
>> >multiple instances of some of these. One system has three sysinits
>> >running. The systems seem OK, but are these multiple instances normal?

>Thank you. My fears are abated. But can you refer to something I could
>read to learn the reason(s) for these?

There's no single reference. There's two peer daemons because one's the
server and the other's the requester. There's two pmshell instances
because on owns the PM session and the other implements the WPS. The
sysinit's are usually VDM's of one sort or another. I forget exactly what
the epwmux's do. IIRC, they implement the FFST components.

You might want to scan the OS/2 Debugging Handbook in the Warp4 Toolkit.
It's got some good diagrams of how the pieces hang together. There's are
other good references, but you already have this one, since you have eCS.

Steven

--
----------------------------------------------------------------
"Steven Levine" MR2/ICE 2.30a #10183 Warp4/FP15
www.scoug.com irc.webbnet.org #scoug (Wed 7pm PST)
----------------------------------------------------------------

=====================================================

To unsubscribe from this list, send an email message
to "steward@scoug.com". In the body of the message,
put the command "unsubscribe scoug-help".

For problems, contact the list owner at
"rollin@scoug.com".

=====================================================


<< Previous Message <<

Return to [ 13 | January | 2002 ]



The Southern California OS/2 User Group
P.O. Box 26904
Santa Ana, CA 92799-6904, USA

Copyright 2001 the Southern California OS/2 User Group. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

SCOUG, Warp Expo West, and Warpfest are trademarks of the Southern California OS/2 User Group. OS/2, Workplace Shell, and IBM are registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation. All other trademarks remain the property of their respective owners.