Contents of Connection Manager Administration Kit Release Notes
ID: Q230300
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The information in this article applies to:
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Microsoft Windows NT version 4.0 Option Pack
SUMMARY
The "More Information" section of this article contains a copy of the Connection Manager Administration Kit Release Notes included with the Windows NT 4.0 Option Pack. It is listed here so that the issues it covers will be included in queries that are performed against the Knowledge Base.
The file containing these Release Notes is located at <%SystemRoot%>\Help\iis\htm\core\cmakread.htm.
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MORE INFORMATION
Connection Manager Administration Kit Readme
Before installing this product, please review this entire document and read
the Connection Manager Administration Kit Guide. The document contains
critical information for ensuring proper installation and use of the
product.
Important This readme contains important,
late-breaking information about this product.
Known
Issues with Connection Manager Administration Kit
- Windows 3.1x features for Connection Manager are not supported for this
release. A version of Connection Manager for Windows 3.1x should be available in
a future release.
- Service profiles built with a version of the wizard from beta 2 or earlier
are not compatible with this version of the wizard. You cannot edit such
profiles with the wizard, or build new profiles based on such profiles.
- Long file names are not supported.
- The service profile cannot install Connection Manager in a subdirectory
whose path name is longer than 256 characters.
- If you need to have a program run immediately after your users run their
service profile executable (for example, if you have a readme file you want to
automatically display, or if you have included a program in the service profile
that copies their dial-up networking settings to their .cmp file so that their
connection setting will be preserved), this functionality is now available.
To do this, create the service profile, and then add the name of the program
you want to run, plus any command line switches or options, to the
[RunPostSetupCommandsSection] section of the .inf file
associated with the service profile (If you want this change to apply to all
other service profiles you create as well, make the same change to the
template.inf file in \Program Files\CMAK\cm32\enu).
For example, if the program is Myprogram.exe, then the
[RunPostSetupCommandsSection] section would appear as follows:
[RunPostSetupCommandsSection]
Myprogram.exe /options?
/switches
- When building PPTP-enabled or browser-agnostic profiles on a computer with
32MB RAM or less, the wizard may become extremely slow or even appear to stop.
To gain better performance, try building the profile on a machine with greater
than 32MB RAM.
- When creating a service profile by using Connection Manager Administration
Kit, do not use characters typed in a double-byte character set (DBCS). To type
characters on a DBCS version of Windows 95 or Windows NT, use an Input Method
Editor (IME) set up to produce single-byte character set (SBCS) numbers.
Examples of DBCS versions include, but are not limited to, Japanese and Hangeul.
- At this time, Microsoft Dial-Up Networking 1.2 (and therefore PPTP
functionality for Windows 95) is only available in English. Service profiles in
other languages cannot include the Microsoft Dial-Up Networking 1.2 upgrade.
Known Issues with Connection Manager
- The IdleThreshold and IdleTimeout parameters are not supported by Connection
Manager on Windows NT. Therefore, the "Disconnect if idle for more than" setting
in Connection Manager may not work properly.
- Connection Manager requires certain files that are supplied by Internet
Explorer 3.0 or later. If you remove Internet Explorer, Connection Manager will
no longer work.
- Do not install two copies of Microsoft Connection Manager in two different
folders on the same computer. This will cause the original service profiles to
become disassociated with Connection Manager. To prevent this, install both
versions into the same folder.
- On Windows 95, if you try to establish a Dial-Up Networking connection with
your ISP, you might see an error message in the Microsoft Connection Manager
dialog box saying that you need to type a phone number. If this happens, click
Settings. When the Location Information dialog box appears, follow the
instructions, and then click OK.
- On Windows NT, if you try to establish more than one connection, you might
see the message, "The modem is not configured properly..." This sometimes
happens if you try to dial too quickly, or if you start Microsoft Connection
Manager when a connection has already been established using Dial-Up Networking.
Disregard the message. Use one connection at a time.
- On Windows NT, you might have problems with Remote Access Services (RAS),
which is automatically installed by the Connection Manager service profile. Make
sure RAS is configured to use a manual startup type, and that you have
privileges to start RAS. To do this,
- Click Start, point to Settings, then click Control Panel, and then
double-click Services.
- In the Services list, double-click Remote Access Service.
- In the Service dialog box, click Manual, and then click OK.
- On Windows NT, if you change the "Disconnect if idle for more than" setting,
the change you made will not take effect until you quit Microsoft Connection
Manager and then restart it.
- If you type or edit the phone number in the Dialing tab of the Connection
Settings dialog box, make sure you use the proper form for the phone number. If
you do not, the Connection Manager will not use the Dialing Properties that you
have set up when dialing the telephone number.
The proper form is as
follows:
+[country code] (area code) phone number
For example, if your
country code is 1, your area code is 800, and your phone number is 555-1212, you
should type the phone number as follows, making sure to include the '+' sign,
spaces, and parentheses:
+1 (800) 5551212
If you do not use this form,
make sure you enter the number exactly as it is to be dialed.
- If you are using Microsoft Dial-Up Networking 1.2, and the following message
appears, disregard it:
This DHCP client was unable to obtain an IP network
address from a DHCP server. Do you want to see future DHCP messages?
- Microsoft Connection Manager does not work on Windows NT 4.0 with some
internal ISDN network adapters, including the Diamond Supra NetCommander ISDN
Modem.
- Connection Manager supports using single-channel ISDN. You can manually
configure Connection Manager to to use dual-channel ISDN.
If you are
running Windows 95, use the following steps to set up dual-channel ISDN:
- Click Start, then point to Programs, then point to Accessories, and then
click Dial-Up Networking.
- Right-click the connection icon for your ISP and then click Properties.
- Click the Multilink tab.
- Click Use additional devices, and then click Add.
- In the Edit Extra Device dialog box, select the device for your extra ISDN
channel, and then type the phone number for that device.
If you
want to use dual-channel for your backup connection icon, repeat the above steps
for your backup connection icon.
Once you have used this technique to
set up a dual-channel connection icon for use with Connection Manager, if you
change either your primary or backup phone number, you will also have to edit
the multilink phone number that you entered in step 5.
If you are
running Windows NT, see your Windows NT documentation for information on setting
up dual-channel ISDN connections.
- Connection Manager will automatically install the TCP-IP protocol, but no
other protocols. If you use a connection icon that requires a protocol other
than TCP-IP, make sure you install it before attempting to connect to your ISP.
To do this:
- Click Start, point to Settings, click Control Panel, and then double-click
Network.
- Click the Services tab, click Remote Access Service, and then click
Properties.
- Click the modem or VPN adapter, and then click Network.
- In the Dial out Protocol list, click the protocol that your service profile
uses.
- If you are running Windows NT and using Connection Manager to establish a
Dial-up Networking connection, Connection Manager does not support popping up a
terminal window after dialing. (Bringing up a terminal window before dialing,
however, is supported.) If your ISP requires that your connection causes a
terminal window to pop up after you connect, contact your ISP and ask for a
dial-up script that will bring up the terminal window.
- Windows 95 users may see problems in Connection Manager displays, resulting
from the installation of a service profile that uses a different language than
that configured for use by the operating system.
- Numbers typed in a double-byte character set (DBCS) are not accepted. To
type numbers on a DBCS version of Windows 95 or Windows NT, use an Input Method
Editor (IME) set up to produce single-byte character set (SBCS) numbers.
Examples of DBCS versions include, but are not limited to, Japanese and Hangeul.
For More Information
For help in using the Connection Manager Administration Kit, read the
Microsoft Connection Manager Administration Kit documentation.
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© 1997 Microsoft Corporation
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© 1997 by Microsoft
Corporation. All rights reserved.
Additional query words:
cmak NTOP iis kbreadme readme cmakread.htm cmakread
Keywords : kbtool
Version : winnt:
Platform : winnt
Issue type : kbinfo