I am writing VS 2005 with C++ and ASP.NET.
I am writing network programming between web server in my computer and application gateway in another company.
What the code should be so that I can fully utilize the web server resources?
64bit??32bit??
I am writing VS 2005 with C++ and ASP.NET.
I am writing network programming between web server in my computer and application gateway in another company.
What the code should be so that I can fully utilize the web server resources?
64bit??32bit??
Actually, in my previous IT Job in airline company, My other colleagues did the program for doing multi-thread programming and deploy on windows XP. I am not sure whether windows XP Problem or not. Thread cannot start messages showing in the busy time. I don't where is the reason before. Now in the current company, i am thinking of this and want to ask whether the program problem or windows XP Problem which may be corrected if moving to windows server. Isn't it?
No. That was most likely not the problem. To put it briefly, you shouldn't worry too much about these matters. Focus on learning how to write correct programs and the rest will take care of itself.
Based on the other questions you seem to be asking, I strongly recommend you slow down and go back. You need to learn to understand the fundamentals of computers much better than you do right now. Try writing some basic programs, and understanding everything that is going on. You simply cannot write good code by slapping stuff together that you found online and getting it to magically work. Your code will be extremely unreliable, ugly, and hard to maintain. I don't mean to be rude, but if you are doing this programming in a professional capacity, you need to make some back plans - you're likely to find yourself in some serious trouble very soon.
edit: to answer your original question, the terms 64-bit and 32-bit refer to the natural word-size of the processor. A 64-bit processor is capable of working with 64 bit numbers very naturally, and can easily address 2^64 bytes of memory. A 32-bit number works primarily with 32-bit numbers. It can address more memory and work with larger numbers than that, but it requires mathematical tricks and hacks to do so - and as such, it's a lot slower and less powerful than a 64-bit system. 64-bit operating systems are written to utilize the benefits of a 64-bit architecture. Other than that - there isn't a fundamental difference. Using up all the resources on a web server is, 99.9% of the time, the worst thing you can do. If you really want to, have a look into concurrent programming, but my guess is that you're simply missing some basic fundamentals that you really need to go back and understand.