Alexander S. Kunz:
> AFAIK you're running TB permanently (and at very short poll intervalls).
St:
> True - although 30 seconds isn't what I would consider to be _very_
> short intervals. Or?
Roelof Otten:
> But nevertheless it is extremely short. When a server has multiple
> users with suc
Hallo St,
On Fri, 27 Aug 2004 02:25:04 +0200GMT (27-8-2004, 2:25 +0200, where I
live), you wrote:
>> AFAIK you're running TB permanently (and at very short poll intervalls).
SMN> True - although 30 seconds isn't what I would consider to be _very_ short
SMN> intervals. Or?
But nevertheless i
s checking thebat.IPC - because (as you
later found out): "TB itself writes the .IPC file when you access it via the
commandline?!?". Yes, it does - I have always said that (or at least implied
it strongly)! :) It was crucial in the discussion and is a major reason for
topic of &qu
Alexander S. Kunz:
> Have you investigated why this is happening? SysInternals
> FileMon may be of help. Maybe your on-access virus scanner
> blocks the file, something like that?
Funny that you ask - I am currently running FileMon here
(with an exclusive logging of thebat.IPC-accesses. Wha
Hello St - Musaic.Net,
14-Aug-2004 17:35, you wrote:
> My point is this: For no reason, TB may at any time simply stop
> looking for thebat.IPC - and thus TB won't know of the _future_
> commands you "send" it (by the way of the command line).
Have you investigated why this is happening? S
St:
> ..."exactly how do you send TB that IPC command when TB fails
> to read the file that contains the request"!?!
Alexander S. Kunz:
> You don't send an IPC command, you use the command line which
> passes its commands to the running TB instance. That is in the
> helpfile, too.
Don't be
Hello St - Musaic.Net,
14-Aug-2004 16:17, you wrote:
> "exactly how do you send TB that IPC command
> when TB fails to read the file that contains the request"!?!
You don't send an IPC command, you use the command line which passes its
commands to the running TB instance. That is in the helpfi
From the TB help file:
"For those who are familiar with programming, here's a handy hint:
The Bat! checks a file called TheBat.IPC which is located in the
same directory in which The Bat! executable (TheBat.exe) file is
located. Within this text file, each line represents one command
t
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