Maximum number of kilobytes of memory that can be allocated to a process. For operating systems with no virtual memory, this value is typically equal to the total amount of physical memory minus memory used by the BIOS and OS. For some operating systems, this value may be infinity - in which case, 0 should be entered. In other cases, this value could be a constant - for example, 2G or 4G.
Maximum lifetime for user ticket renewal This security setting determines the period of time (in days) during which a user's ...
Maximum lifetime for user ticket This security setting determines the maximum amount of time (in hours) that a user's ticket-granting ...
Maximum number of directly addressable entities supported by this Controller. A value of 0 should be used if the number is ...
Maximum number of incoming named pipe connections reached; new connections will be queued, and may time out or be rejected. ...
Maximum number of kilobytes of memory that can be allocated to a process. For operating systems with no virtual memory, this ...
Maximum number of minutes before the consumer will start a new instance. If zero, consumer lifetime is controlled by the ...
Maximum number of process contexts the operating system can support. If there is no fixed maximum, the value should be 0. ...
Maximum number of properties per document has been reached. The document is most likely corrupt, or it represents a denial ...
Maximum number of scripts run before the consumer will start a new instance. The consumer should be shut down periodically ...