Prioritizing Inventory Beacons
FlexNet Manager Suite
2024 R2
(On-Premises)
A number of registry settings affect the way in which a target inventory device manages its
failover list of inventory beacons. The first two are attached to each record of an
upload or download location, and the others are generalized settings controlling the overall
process:
AutoPrioritydetermines whether this location can take part in the process of determining priorities (see AutoPriority). WhenAutoPriorityis true, the target inventory device uses the approved algorithm(s) to determine the priority of this location at the time of upload or download. This is the recommended behavior, as it optimizes system performance over time, despite variations in network configuration. WhenAutoPriorityis false, the value of thePriorityregistry key declares the inventory beacon’s fixed priority.Prioritymay be manually set to a fixed value for use whenAutoPriorityis false (see Priority). (In the normal case, whenAutoPriorityis true, the value ofPriorityis calculated dynamically.)SelectorAlgorithmspecified which one (or more) of the available algorithm(s) the inventory device should use (and in what order the algorithms should be applied) when determining the prioritized failover list of inventory beacons (see SelectorAlgorithm).HighestPriorityandLowestPriorityset the upper and lower bounds for the normalized range of priorities on which the inventory device settles. For example, the inventory device may initially calculate a set of values as 34, 96, 12, and 242. It then normalizes these figures to order them with the range set inHighestPriorityandLowestPriority. For example, if these had the respective values of 1 and 5, the inventory beacons now receive the values 2, 3, 1, and 4 (in matching order). It is only the ordering, and not any measure of deviation, that matters in the selection process. (Normally, ignore these settings, but if you really need them, details are in HighestPriority and LowestPriority.)
FlexNet Manager Suite (On-Premises)
2024 R2