I checked, and all four machines have the heartbeat enabled, and I have administrative rights on all four also. Any other ideas?
 
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]On Behalf Of Thommes, Michael M.
Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2004 2:51 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] Uptime question

Two other points to consider.  Make sure the heartbeat is enabled on each computer (uptime <computername> /s /heartbeat).  And make sure you have admin rights on each computer that you are checking.
 
Mike Thommes
-----Original Message-----
From: Murray Wall [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2004 1:44 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] Uptime question

The uptime utility that you are using calculates information obtained from the event viewer, items differening will cause this discrepancy in my opinion.  Logging levels or cleared event viewer logs will do this. 

 

Murray Wall, MCSE, B.Ed CCNA/DA Master ASE

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Douglas M. Long
Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2004 1:11 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ActiveDir] Uptime question

 

This may be a stupid problem, but here it goes. When I do an "uptime /s" or "uptime /a" on my 2000 servers, two machines return an extended list of information(example below), and two machines dont. Any idea what would be causing the two machines to not return all information? All four machines have the same SP and patch levels, and are virtually identical, very clean machines. 

 

 

System Availability: 99.9981%
Total Uptime: 54d 21h:43m:23s
Total Downtime: 0d 0h:1m:28s
Total Reboots: 1
Mean Time Between Reboots: 54.91 days
Total Bluescreens: 0
Total Application Failures: 0

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