The QuantumLength property defines the number of clock ticks per quantum. A quantum is a unit of execution time that the scheduler is allowed to give to an application before switching to other applications. When a thread runs one quantum, the kernel preempts it and moves it to the end of a queue for applications with equal priorities. The actual length of a thread's quantum varies across different Windows platforms. For Windows NT/Windows 2000 only.
The PurposeDescription property provides a description that extends the value of the Purpose property of this class. Example: ...
The Push Thread was requested for a range of records but could not find any records in the range. Make sure that the replication ...
The Put operation can not continue. The file needs to be resized. However, there is already a signature present. A complete ...
The QuadSpeedThreshold property contains the one of two acceleration threshold values. The system doubles the speed of the ...
The QuantumLength property defines the number of clock ticks per quantum. A quantum is a unit of execution time that the ...
The QuantumType property specifies either fixed or variable length quantums. Windows NT 4.0 Workstation/Windows 2000 defaults ...
The query response interval must be less than or equal to the query interval. Do you want to set it to the recommended value? ...
The queue %1 cannot be opened for retrieving messages. The queue does not have the Receive Message permission. Please grant ...
The queue %1 is not transactional. Transactional retrieval is allowed only for transactional queues. Please change the message ...