CORBA 2.6.1 Administration Guide

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Interoperable Location Service Daemon (ILSD) Properties
The Interoperable Location Service Daemon (ILSD) is an interoperable Naming Service forwarding agent. The ILSD receives requests targeted
at corbaloc and corbaname URLs. The ILSD uses the object key to determine how to forward requests.
Basic Configuration
Server Configuration Options
Troubleshooting Options
Basic Configuration
Property Description
Host
address
IP address of the host system on which the server is listening. The host systems available in the drop-down list are
those managed by the selected TCP process.
Port
number
Port number on the host system to which the server is listening. The port number cannot be used by any other
process on the host system. At installation, this port number is set to a value based on the port number you specify
for TCP/IP. If you have more than one copy of NonStop CORBA installed on a NonStop server, each copy must have
a different port number.
TCP
process
Name of the TCP process that is managing the selected host address. One TCP process can manage multiple host
addresses. TCP processes can be spread across CPUs for load balancing. If the check box for Use Parallel Library
TCP/IP is checked, you must specify a TCP process that is enabled for Parallel Library TCP/IP.
URL
directory
Location where the Interoperable Location Service Daemon expects to find object reference files.
Use
Parallel
Library
TCP/IP
If checked, enables the ILSD to use Parallel Library TCP/IP.
Server Configuration Options
Property Description
Maximum
servers
If the check box for Use Parallel Library TCP/IP is not checked, this field is set to one. If it is checked, you may
specify the number of servers.
Static
servers
If the check box for Use Parallel Library TCP/IP is not checked, this field is set to one. If it is checked, this field is set
to match the number of Maximum Servers you specify. Or if you enter a number of Static Servers, the Maximum
Servers field will be set to match what you enter here.
Process
name
Name of the server process. If you do not choose a name, the system assigns one when the process starts. If the
check box for Use Parallel Library TCP/IP is checked you must enter at least as many names as the number of
servers that have been specified.
Processors List of CPUs in which server processes can run. Separate the CPU numbers with commas; for example, 1,2,5. If you
do not specify a list of CPUs, the system runs server processes in any available CPU. Specifying certain CPUs
requires the system to use only the CPUs in the list. If the check box for Use Parallel Library TCP/IP is checked you
must enter at least as many CPU numbers as the number of servers that have been specified. This field cannot
contain duplicate CPU numbers.
Process
priority
Priority at which the server process is run. The range of values is 1 through 199, the highest priority being 199.
Autorestart
attempts
Number of attempts to restart the server process, in the event of its abnormal termination. The maximum number is
32767.
Create
delay
Length of time in microseconds requests are queued while a LINKMON process waits for a server (static or dynamic)
to become available. When this time period is exceeded, the PATHMON process creates a dynamic server to process
requests. The maximum time is 18 hours.
Delete
delay
Length of time in microseconds the PATHMON process waits before deleting unused dynamic server processes. The
maximum time is 18 hours.
Max links Maximum number of links that a server process in a server pool can have to all LINKMON processes on the host
system. For example, if the Link depth field is set to 10 and there are 3 CPUs in the host system, set the Max links
field to 30 to avoid queueing requests at the server process. While a server process is processing a request, the