Article ID: 141709 - Last Review: November 1, 2006 - Revision: 2.1 Limit of 49 Named Pipe Connections from a Single WorkstationThis article was previously published under Q141709 SYMPTOMS
A named pipe server application running on a Windows NT Server creates a
large number (for example, 100) of separate, distinct named pipes (for
example, \\pipe\pipe001, \\pipe\pipe002, etc.).
A named pipe client application then tries to connect to all of the named pipes created by the server application. If the named pipe client is running on the same computer as the named pipe server, the client can successfully simultaneously connect to all the named pipes created by the server application. However, if the named pipe client is running on a Windows NT Workstation, the client can connect to only 49 of the server's named pipes across the network. CAUSE
This limit on the number of network connections to named pipes from a
single client is imposed by the MaxMpxCt registry value for the
LanmanServer service on the Windows NT Server.
MORE INFORMATION
The MaxMpxCt Registry value is described as follows in the Windows NT
Resource Kit Registry Help file:
Registry path:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM
\CurrentControlSet
\Services
\LanmanServer
\Parameters
MaxMpxCt REG_DWORD
Range: 1 to 100 requests
Default: 50
Provides a suggested maximum to clients for the number of simultaneous requests outstanding to this server. A higher value can increase server performance but requires higher use of server work items. RESOLUTION
Either increase the server's MaxMpxCt registry value, or redesign the
client/server application to use fewer named pipes. Redesigning the
client/server application is recommended, because this minimizes server
resource usage and results in a much more scaleable solution.
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