"H. Peter Anvin" wrote:
> 
> Followup to:  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> By author:    Neil W Rickert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> In newsgroup: linux.dev.kernel
> >
> > "Jeff V. Merkey" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > >The problem of dropping connections on 2.4 was related to the O RefuseLA
> > >settings.  The defaults  in the RedHat, Suse, and OpenLinux RPMs are
> > >clearly set too low for modern Linux kernels.  You may want them cranked
> > >up to 100 or something if you want sendmail to always work.
> >
> > If a modern Linux kernel requires high load average defaults, I will
> > stop using Linux.
> >
> 
> Numerically high load averages aren't inherently a bad thing.  There
> isn't anything bad about a system with a loadavg of 20 if it does what
> it should in the time you'd expect.  However, if your daemons start
> blocking because they assume this number means badness, than that is
> the problem, not the loadavg in itself.

Well, here's what the sendmail folks **REAL** opinion of Linux is and
the way load average is calculated (senders name removed)

[... sendmail person ...]

 Ok, here's my blunt answer: Linux sucks.  Why does it have a load
> average of 10 if there are two processes running? Let's check the
> man page:
> 
>             and the three load averages for the system.  The load
>             averages  are  the average number of process ready to
>             run during the last 1, 5 and 15 minutes.   This  line
>             is  just  like  the  output of uptime(1).
> 
> So: Linux load average on these systems is broken.

So I guess we know where we stand with the sendmail folks.  If the US
post office delivered mail at Christmas time using a size based priority
the way sendmail does, folks would all get their Christmas presents
about mid-February unless O NumberOfPostalWorkers=20 was set high
enough.  

Jeff


> 
>         -hpa
> 
> --
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> at work, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> in private!
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