Enabling RPC State Information

Two different levels of RPC run-time state information can be gathered: Server information and Full information. This information gathering must be enabled before the debugger or DbgRpc can be used to analyze state information.

Only Windows XP and later versions of Windows support the gathering of RPC state information.

Gathering Server state information is very lightweight. It costs about 100 machine instructions per RPC call, resulting in no detectable load, even during performance tests. However, gathering this information does use memory (about 4KB per RPC server), so it is not recommended on a machine that is already experiencing memory pressure. Server information includes data about endpoints, threads, connection objects, and Server Call (SCALL) objects. This is sufficient to debug most RPC problems.

Gathering Full state information is more heavyweight. It includes all the information gathered at the Server level and, in addition, includes Client Call (CCALL) objects. Full state information is usually not needed.

To enable state information to be gathered on an individual machine, run the Group Policy Editor (Gpedit.msc). Under the Local Computer Policy, navigate to Computer Configuration/Administrative Templates/System/Remote Procedure Call. Under this node you will see the Maintain RPC Troubleshooting State Information item. When you edit its properties, you will see five possible states:

None
No state information will be maintained. Unless your machine is experiencing memory pressure, this is not recommended.

Server
Server state information will be gathered. This is the recommended setting on a single computer.

Full
Full state information will be gathered.

Auto1
On a computer with less than 64 MB of RAM, this is the same as None. On a computer with at least 64 MB of RAM, this is the same as Server.

Auto2
On a computer running Windows Server 2003 with less than 128 MB of RAM, or on any Windows XP computer, this is the same as None. On a Windows Server 2003 computer with at least 128 MB RAM, this is the same as Server.

This is the default.

If you want to simultaneously set these levels on a set of networked computers, use the Group Policy Editor to roll out a machine policy to the preferred set of machines. The policy engine will take care that the settings you want are propagated to the preferred set of machines. The Auto1 and Auto2 levels are especially useful in this case, because the operating system and amount of RAM on each computer may vary.

If the network includes computers running versions of Windows that are earlier than Windows XP, the settings will be ignored on those machines.