Ot bad pool header

What does bad pool header mean?

Comments

  • MistaraMistara Posts: 38,675
    edited September 2016

    the resort pool is a nice one.  in cart was 8.86 today 

    add some iray tiki torchessmiley

    Post edited by Mistara on
  • McGyverMcGyver Posts: 7,085
    edited September 2016

    Before reading anything else... Option 1- skip the text below and jump to last sentence... Option 2- read it all and get bored and question why you asked this question when there was at least a 5% chance I might see it and respond.

    Around here a "header" is getting zonked in the head with something, or falling on your head... As in "Oooooh, did you see him take that header...geez..." In context to a pool, that would sound like someone taking a painful head injury, diving into a pool... A header is also a part of an automotive exhaust system located on the engine... There is also some kind of high pressure manifold of some sort used in refining, also called a header... I think... I forget, it might be a manifold or it might be a baffle or splitter... Or it might not have been an official term... So in context to a pool, perhaps it might be some sort of large water diverter or manifold, perhaps for really large pump systems like at a water park, and if so, one that went bad or was bad as in "badass" because it was really huge or complex... But I don't know why you would be reading water park trade magazines or asking that... There is of course, the type at the top of a page... Like a title or introduction... I could also look at the link Chohole provided and see if that is what you are asking about, since there is a 99.999059910% chance that she is more in tune to any questions anyone here would ask and not prone to rambling about obscure nonsense like me... I could probably also read any of the other posts and see if that actually answered your question... I'm betting that they do, but I won't because I have nothing better to do at the moment than give long pointless answers to anything I come across here... But anyway, I suppose in industrial terms any word you randomly come up with could be something... You might see a little metal part that looks like a 3 inch "L" shaped bracket, and that's what it is... God forbid you call it that... It's a bifurcated Simpson flange, and if you call it anything else you have sinned, you heathen...

    So to sum it up... I have no idea...

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Forum rule number 256B if you see a post by me... Skip over to the next one.

    Post edited by McGyver on
  • hacsarthacsart Posts: 2,034

    Its a problem with the memory allocation subsystem,and  can be caused by a bad hardware driver, a problem with AV software, or a bad MS update patch. The smallest memory allocation unit at the hardware level is the page, which commonly consists of 4096 bytes. Kernel and device drivers should not need or try to  allocate large chunks of memory. Without some form of allocation management, a lot of memory would be wasted. The way around that is this: System kernel allocates some pages in advance and combines them into a pool. Whenever a routine requests some memory which is less than a page, the kernel will assign it from the pool. The granularity of these assignments is 32 bytes for Windows 2000 and upwards. Each allocation will be preceeded by  small header which helps to keep track of its size and purported owner. This header is called the POOL_HEADER.  If this gets incorrectly generated or if two process go after the same header, - bingo BSOD...

  • all I know is that it is messing up my DS time and I have to rerender the same scene over and over.

  • nonesuch00nonesuch00 Posts: 18,722

    Didn't you just replace your computer? Or was it you harddisk subsystem? It's usually related to hardware failure. You should complete scan your PC with Windows Defender as if can be caused by tampered with low level Windows OS software. 

  • hacsarthacsart Posts: 2,034

    to be honest the hard part is figuring out what bit of software is causing it. There is a small chance it could be a problem with the RAM itself, but there would be other issues cropping up if that were the case.

  • Didn't you just replace your computer? Or was it you harddisk subsystem? It's usually related to hardware failure. You should complete scan your PC with Windows Defender as if can be caused by tampered with low level Windows OS software. 

    I just replaced the hdd with two hdds.  The rest is the same.

  • nonesuch00nonesuch00 Posts: 18,722
    edited September 2016

    Didn't you just replace your computer? Or was it you harddisk subsystem? It's usually related to hardware failure. You should complete scan your PC with Windows Defender as if can be caused by tampered with low level Windows OS software. 

    I just replaced the hdd with two hdds.  The rest is the same.

    You should do a complete scan because the problem can be caused by corrupted OS software - version mismatches and such things.

    Post edited by nonesuch00 on
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