"Specifies the maximum number of outstanding packets permitted on the system. When the number of outstanding packets reaches this limit, the Packet Scheduler postpones all submissions to network adapters until the number falls below this limit. "Outstanding packets" are packets that the Packet Scheduler has submitted to a network adapter for transmission, but which have not yet been sent. If you enable this setting, you can limit the number of outstanding packets. If you disable this setting or do not configure it, then the setting has no effect on the system. Important: If the maximum number of outstanding packets is specified in the registry for a particular network adapter, this setting is ignored when configuring that network adapter."
Specifies the maximum allowable baud rate, in bits per second (bps). This member can be one of the following values: Value ...
Specifies the maximum amount of disk space that can be used for the Windows File Protection file cache. Windows File Protection ...
Specifies the maximum color resolution (color depth) for Terminal Services connections. You can use this setting to set a ...
Specifies the maximum number of objects the system displays in response to a command to browse or search Active Directory. ...
Specifies the maximum number of outstanding packets permitted on the system. When the number of outstanding packets reaches ...
Specifies the maximum size in bytes of the log file netlogon.log in the directory %windir%\debug when logging is enabled. ...
Specifies the maximum size, in bytes, of the driver's internal input buffer. A value of zero indicates that no maximum value ...
Specifies the maximum size, in bytes, of the driver's internal output buffer. A value of zero indicates that no maximum value ...
Specifies the maximum working set size for all processes associated with the job. Ignored unless LimitFlags specifies Limit ...