‎08-23-2006 03:46 AM
‎08-25-2006 08:33 AM
‎08-29-2006 12:44 AM
Absolutely no success (completely empty search directories - of course my applications won't work than)!
Empty recent file list - no result!
‎08-29-2006 10:02 AM
‎08-29-2006 04:50 PM
bestware and kphite -
We have not heard of any issue like this. Please confirm that the delay is between the display of the splash screen and before the display of the main window of the sequence editor?
If you are up for it, please try each of the following separately to determine which one might be the issue. Each of these could block or slow down the startup of the application is some way so we want to try each of them to isolate or run them out.
‎08-30-2006 01:49 AM
Thanks a lot, Scott !
It's the network - removed the cable, then it starts up within few seconds!
There's no error message that something cannot be found. Absolutely no settings accessing any network-drive etc. (search directories).
So I'm wondering what it's looking for via network ?
Reconnect network cable startup time is high again.
Christian
‎08-30-2006 01:33 PM
Christian -
I assume that there are applications out there that could monitor the inbound and outbound activity from your computer to tell you what is going on, but I have never tried to use one of these.
The other items in my previous post are the only things that I can think of. You could try to each of these individually with the network connected to see if one of these is the culprit.
Another thing that I have seen on my personal system is that when I have a network connected shares that are sometimes not available, that removing these can make a difference for some applications. I have only seen TestStand affected by an unavailable network shared when using the File Open dialog box.
‎02-22-2010 06:22 PM
I have found two tools useful for diagnosing issues with network access and program performance.
Wireshark (http://www.wireshark.org/) can be used to monitor network traffic at the packet level.
Process Monitor (http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb896645.aspx) shows what programs are performing file I/O and what paths and files they are accessing. This can be useful for tuning the search directory settings in TestStand.
In the case of this problem you would have seen that TestStand was accessing network drives and what file(s) it was looking for.