The DGA Tempest distance driver has exceptional glide and control and is a staple driver for any disc golfers arsenal for drives requiring pinpoint accuracy on even the longest holes. For advanced players, the Tempest will generate predictable high-speed turns plus lots of glide with an added understable finish.
-->The Disk Integrity Checking feature of Driver Verifier monitors all hard disk access to determine whether the disk accurately stores information. If the data on the disk appears to change, a bug check is issued.
This Driver Verifier option was introduced in Windows Server 2003 and was removed as an option starting with Windows 7.
- DiSC is a tool, but not a bludgeon. You’re likely to overhear people talking about how they might agree with the DiSC style we associate with a quote, but they’ll want to offer examples of how they acted outside their own style.
- If you are looking for Intel® Chipset Software information or chipset drivers: Go to Intel Download Center. On its Search Engine, type chipset software and press Enter. Select the product you're interested in and look under the Driver section. Chipset support for Intel® hardware products is available through support sites: Intel® Desktop Boards.
How Disk Integrity Checking Works
When you activate Disk Integrity Checking, you can choose to verify any or all of the physical disks attached to your computer.
As soon as Windows and its drivers are loaded, Driver Verifier begins to monitor all read and write actions made to these drives. Driver Verifier calculates a CRC (cyclic redundancy check) checksum value for each sector that is accessed and saves this value. The next time this sector is accessed, Driver Verifier recalculates this checksum and compares it to the previous value.
If the checksum value changes, this indicates a disk integrity problem -- either the read operation is returning faulty information, or the disk medium has altered its contents since the last access was made. When this happens, Driver Verifier issues bug check 0xC4 with Parameter 1 equal to 0xA0. The other parameters identify the IRP making the request, the device object of the lower device, and the sector in which the error occurred. For details, see Bug Check 0xC4 (DRIVER_VERIFIER_DETECTED_VIOLATION).
Performance Issues
The Disk Integrity Checking feature makes hard disk access perceptibly slower. If the computer is low on RAM, this performance decrease is even more significant. Use Disk Integrity Checking to investigate disk problems, but do not activate whenever when you are running Driver Verifier to test drivers.
Note The Disk Integrity Checking feature is not designed to work on systems that use clustered shared disks. If you enable the Disk Integrity Checking feature on such a system, the disk integrity check might falsely cause a bug check to occur. Therefore, it is strongly recommended that you do not enable this feature on systems with clustered shared disks.In addition, there are some circumstances that might lead to false bug checks on systems with non-clustered disks. These circumstances include:
Memory writes to in-flight write buffers
Concurrent in-flight reads and writes to the same sector
Activating This Option
You can activate the Disk Integrity Checking option by using Driver Verifier Manager or the Verifier.exe command line. Driver Verifier Manager lets you determine which disks are verified. If you use the command line, all disks are verified. For details, see Selecting Driver Verifier Options.
At the command line
At the command line, the Disk Integrity Checking option is represented by the /disk parameter. For example:
The feature will be active after the next boot. You cannot activate the Disk Integrity Checking option without rebooting the computer on any version of Windows.
Using Driver Verifier Manager
- Select Create custom settings (for code developers) and then click Next.
- Select Select individual settings from a full list.
- Select (check) Disk integrity checking.
Device drivers improve sound, graphics, networking, and storage performance. If you perform a custom VMware Tools installation or reinstallation, you can choose which drivers to install.
The set of drivers that are installed when you install VMware Tools depends on the guest operating system and the VMware product. For detailed information about the features or functionality that these drivers enable, including configuration requirements, best practices, and performance, see the documentation for your VMware product. The following device drivers can be included with VMware Tools.
On Windows guest operating systems whose operating system is Windows Vista or later, the VMware SVGA 3D (Microsoft - WDDM) driver is installed. This driver provides the same base functionality as the SVGA driver, and it adds Windows Aero support.
For example, Windows Server 2008 defaults to LSI Logic SAS, which provides the best performance for that operating system. In this case, the LSI Logic SAS driver provided by the operating system is used.
VMware supplies a special SCSI driver for virtual machines that are configured to use the BusLogic virtual SCSI adapter. Virtual machines do not need this driver if they do not need to access any SCSI devices or if they are configured to use the LSI Logic virtual SCSI adapter.
The driver is included as part of the VMware Tools package or comes bundled with VMware ESX/ ESXi. It is available on the host as a floppy image at /vmimages/floppies/vmscsi.flp. The driver can be used in Windows XP, Windows Server 2003, or Windows 2000.
When you install VMware Tools, a VMXNET NIC driver replaces the default vlance driver.
Disc Ice Driver Wanted
- File Introspection Driver: The File Introspection driver uses the hypervisor to perform antivirus scans without a bulky agent. This strategy avoids resource bottlenecks and optimizes memory use.
- Network Introspection Driver: The Network Introspection driver supports NSX for vSphere Activity Monitoring.


Do not delete or replace existing inbox drivers for Linux that are distributed by your OS vendors. Deleting or replacing these drivers might cause conflict with future updates to the drivers. Contact your OS vendor or OS community for availability of specific updates to drivers.
See http://kb.vmware.com/kb/2073804 for information about availability, maintenance, and support policy for inbox drivers for Linux.
Disc Ice Driver's License Photos
If you use Workstation or Fusion, you can install the Shared Folders component. With Shared Folders, you can easily share files among virtual machines and the host computer. The VMHGFS driver is a file system redirector that allows file system redirection from the guest operating system to the host file system. This driver is the client component of the Shared Folders feature and provides an easy to use alternative to NFS and CIFS file sharing that does not rely on the network. For Linux distributions with kernel version 3.10 and later, a new FUSE based Shared Folders client is used as a replacement for the kernel mode client.
Disc Ice Driver Updater
VMware Tools installation include the VMware AppDefense, a security management and monitoring solution. AppDefense agent can be installed on the guest virtual machine using the VMware Tools installer. However, VMware Tools cannot install the AppDefense component automatically. You need to install the component manually.
