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Inbound connections limit in WindowsArticle ID: 122920 - View products that this article applies to. This article was previously published under Q122920 NoticeThis article applies to Windows 2000. Support for Windows 2000 ends on July 13, 2010. The Windows 2000 End-of-Support Solution Center
(http://support.microsoft.com/?scid=http%3a%2f%2fsupport.microsoft.com%2fwin2000)
is a starting point for planning your migration strategy from Windows 2000. For more information see the Microsoft Support Lifecycle
Policy
(http://support.microsoft.com/lifecycle/)
.SYMPTOMS
When a user at a computer that is running Windows NT or Windows 2000 Professional attempts to connect to a Windows NT Workstation system that already has ten users connected to it, the following error message appears:
No more connections can be made to this remote computer at this time
because there are already as many connections as the computer can
accept.
Error 71. The network request was not accepted.
CAUSE
The maximum number of other computers that are permitted to
simultaneously connect over the network to Windows NT Workstation 3.5,
3.51, 4.0, and Windows 2000 Professional is ten. This limit includes all transports and resource sharing protocols combined.
This limit is the number of simultaneous sessions from other computers the
system is permitted to host. This limit does not apply to the use of
administrative tools that attach to the system from a remote computer.
WORKAROUND
Any file, print, named pipe, or mail slot session that does not have any
activity on it will be automatically disconnected after the AutoDisconnect
time has expired; the default for this is 15 minutes. Once the session is
disconnected, one of the 10 connections will be available so that another
user can connect to the Windows NT Workstation system. Therefore, lowering
the AutoDisconnect time can help to reduce some of the problems users may
encounter with the 10-connection limit or 5-connection limit on a system that is not used heavily
for server purposes.
You can configure the AutoDisconnect time by running the following command from a command prompt:
net config server /autodisconnect:time_before_autodisconnect
Specify the time in minutes.
Note The Windows NT Server service is self-tuning, normally the server configuration parameters are auto-configured (calculated and set) each time you boot Windows NT. If you run NET CONFIG SERVER in conjunction with the /AUTODISCONNECT, /SERVCOMMENT or /HIDDEN switches, the current values for the automatically tuned parameters are displayed and written to the registry. Once these parameters are written to the registry, you cannot tune the Server service using Control Panel Networks. If you changed any of the Server service settings, Windows NT is no longer able to automatically tune the Server service for your new configuration. To avoid losing the Server service's auto self-tuning capability, make the change through registry editor instead from a command line or Control Panel Network. For more information, see the following articles in the Microsoft Knowledge base: 128167
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/128167/EN-US/
)
Server Service Configuration and Tuning
138365
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/138365/EN-US/
)
How the Autodisconnect Works in Windows NT
MORE INFORMATION
All logical drive, logical printer, and transport level connections
combined from a single computer are considered to be one session;
therefore, these connections only count as one connection in the 10-
connection limit. For example, if a user establishes two logical drive
connections, two Windows sockets, and one logical printer connection to a
Windows NT Workstation system, one session is established. As a result,
there will be only one less connection that can be made to the Windows NT
Workstation system, even though three logical connections have been
established.
The only way system A will have multiple sessions to another system, system Z, is if system A is running services that create logical connections to system Z. For example, if a user is logged on to system A as guest and a service is running on system A under the user1 account, and both the user and the service (as user1) establish connections to system Z, two sessions will be established. Each logon session that uses the Server service counts against the connection limit. Properties | Article Translations
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