Subject: handle.exe is showing C:0\ Instead of J:\
Posted: 09 January 2013 at 5:12am
Hi,
Got a problem with the tool handle.exe.
We are using it to track down “Filemapped Shared memories”
after our application was stopped to figure out if
the operating system has successfully unload the “Filemapped Shared memories”
which was used by our application.
But on some of our Servers we something unsuspected:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
C:\>handle.exe -u rout.shm
Handle v3.5
Copyright (C) 1997-2012 Mark Russinovich
Sysinternals - www.sysinternals.com
rout_install.exe pid: 16624 type: File TDOM\user 29C: C:0\folder\rout.shm
rout_install.exe pid: 16812 type: File TDOM\user 29C: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
mfcd.exe pid: 17084 type: File TDOM\user 2F0: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tpssrv.exe pid: 1848 type: File TDOM\user 530: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tpssrv.exe pid: 16460 type: File TDOM\user 534: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tspsa.exe pid: 17544 type: File TDOM\user 5A0: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tspsa.exe pid: 17552 type: File TDOM\user 5B0: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tspsa.exe pid: 17560 type: File TDOM\user 5B0: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tspsa.exe pid: 17568 type: File TDOM\user 5B4: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tspsa.exe pid: 17576 type: File TDOM\user 5BC: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tspsa.exe pid: 17584 type: File TDOM\user 5B4: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tspsa.exe pid: 17592 type: File TDOM\user 5AC: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tspsa.exe pid: 17600 type: File TDOM\user 5B4: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tspsa.exe pid: 17608 type: File TDOM\user 5B0: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tspsa.exe pid: 17616 type: File TDOM\user 5BC: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tspsa.exe pid: 17624 type: File TDOM\user 5BC: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tspsa.exe pid: 17632 type: File TDOM\user 5B8: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tspsa.exe pid: 17640 type: File TDOM\user 5BC: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tspsa.exe pid: 17648 type: File TDOM\user 5E8: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
tspsa.exe pid: 17656 type: File TDOM\user 5E8: C:0\ folder \rout.shm
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Instead of “C:0\” we normally gets the drive letter “J:”
(belongs to a physical disk in a cluster which is hosted by an external shared storage, an presented to the operating system via a LUN)
Thank you for your help
Regards
T. Schmidt
Edited by tschmidt - Yesterday at 5:20am