In principle your IT guy is right.......
That is to say that given the millions of applications running under windows 2K and XP, simply calling up the 'Lock Computer' function should not in its self cause a problem.
My all time record for Windows NT 4 was +3000 hours... We had to take it down because there was a critical patch to be applied. Shame really, in the end we used to remotely query the running hours counter - just ticking away.... This was when people said Windows would not run for a day reliably. It became an academic excercise in reliability testing of Windows and the associated hardware / software.
That leaves Labview, well I in common with many people on this forum run Labview for thousands of hours without too many problems....
So where does this leave you????
I would start with the basics....
There are a thousand and one causes for this kind of problem but here are some of the more common ones.
Disk fragmentation
Cross linked files
Dodgy memory
Badly patched system
Lack of system build control (build sequence for software)
Insuficient memory
Dodgy memory
Cheap motherboards and other hardware (even mice or other forgotten peripherals)
I don't think there are going to be many people who see this issue, I think it's most likely to be local to the machine concerned.
Be as methodical as you can be: -
Can you lock the computer before running Labview
Can you load the system memory then lock the computer
Can you lock the computer with Labview running without the application running (I assume its not a 'built application')
Can you lock the computer after just running the I/O config
and so on......
Ohh P.S. I agree with your IT gut... its a real security risk with an unlocked system. The only way round this is to guarantee that your application has control of the machine and prevent any undesired interraction / application. Thus push back and ask him to set the correct policys from the domain!!! That should help keep him busy for a couple of hours.
🙂Good Luck
Message Edited by Conseils on 05-15-2005 02:40 PM