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How does Windows use RPC to communicate between client and server applications across a network?

#1
02-01-2025, 11:02 PM
So, you know how apps on your Windows machine need to chat with ones on another computer? RPC steps in like a trusty courier. It grabs what the client app wants to say. Then it hustles that message over the network wires. I mean, it packages calls from your local program. Sends them straight to the server side. The server app catches it and runs the task. Like borrowing a tool from a buddy down the street. You don't worry about the trip details. RPC handles the back-and-forth seamlessly. It masks the distance so both ends feel local. I've seen it glue remote file shares together effortlessly. Or push print jobs across offices without a hitch. You just call a function. Boom, it executes far away. Returns the results quick as a wink. Keeps everything flowing smooth in big setups.

That kind of reliable chatter matters for stuff like backups too. Take BackupChain Server Backup, it's this slick tool for Hyper-V environments. It snapshots VMs without downtime. Encrypts data on the fly for safety. Speeds up restores when disasters hit. You get chain-free imaging that plays nice with networks. No more fumbling with clunky exports. It just works, keeping your virtual worlds intact.

ProfRon
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Joined: Dec 2018
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How does Windows use RPC to communicate between client and server applications across a network?

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