DavidJoshua
IS-IT--Management
Folks,
I'm wondering if there are some circumstances in which OFO is not really needed (per a post I saw on an MS forum).
My situation:
Single Dell W2K Server with BUE 8.6
7 workstations
Tax and accounting programs use a database (DBF?) on the server
All users log out every night, so nothing _should_ be open, but that hasn't always been the case.
No SQL or other transactional systems
Backups fail with indication of corrupt (actually open) files. This can be turned off with a registry setting.
I think the safest thing is to get OFO, but is there any circumstance under which OFO isn't really needed?
Thanks!
-=david=-
I'm wondering if there are some circumstances in which OFO is not really needed (per a post I saw on an MS forum).
My situation:
Single Dell W2K Server with BUE 8.6
7 workstations
Tax and accounting programs use a database (DBF?) on the server
All users log out every night, so nothing _should_ be open, but that hasn't always been the case.
No SQL or other transactional systems
Backups fail with indication of corrupt (actually open) files. This can be turned off with a registry setting.
I think the safest thing is to get OFO, but is there any circumstance under which OFO isn't really needed?
Thanks!
-=david=-