If num is set to a value larger than zero, Ice applications print warning messages for certain exceptional conditions in connections. The default value is 0.
If num is set to a value larger than zero, servers print a warning message if they receive a datagram that exceeds the servers' receive buffer size. (Note that this condition is not detected by all UDP implementations—some implementations silently drop received datagrams that are too large.) The default value is 0.
If num is set to a value larger than zero, Ice applications print warning messages for certain exceptions that are raised while an incoming request is dispatched.
If num is set to a value larger than zero, a warning is printed if a stringified proxy contains an endpoint that cannot be parsed. (For example, on versions of Ice that do not support SSL, stringified proxies containing SSL endpoints cause this warning.) The default value is 1.
If num is set to a value larger than zero, warnings are printed if an AMI callback raises an exception. The default value is 1.
If num is set to a value larger than zero, the Ice run time prints a warning about unknown properties for object adapters (see Section
C.4) and proxies (see Section
C.9). The default value is 1.
If num is set to a value larger than zero, the Ice run time prints a warning about properties that were set but not read. The warning is emitted when a communicator is destroyed; it is useful to detect mis-spelled properties, such as
Filesystem.MaxFilSize. The default value is 0.