The only way that localization can work out fully is if all the involved computers use UTF-8 encoding or the exact same locale. This applies to the whole chain, from the manager to the scalability server down to the agent. It is thus preferable to use UTF-8 everywhere. Not doing so and sending out jobs containing files and directories that contain National Language Characters (NLCs), can result in failed jobs.
On Linux versions that do not support the CIFS file system, the Samba protocol may not work correctly when trying to access files and directories that contain NLCs. This means that jobs, that succeed in mounting the file shares, may fail because they cannot access files and directories that contain NLCs. The software delivery functions automatically detect, if CIFS is available and use it whenever possible.
SuSE 9 ES and RedHat 4 support CIFS, but SuSE 9 Pro and RedHat 3.x do not.
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