I hear that nginx is very fast for a certain class of web serving.  But what 
happens if a web page needs to do a SELECT?  Is nginx single-threaded, thereby 
sitting "idle" waiting for the SELECT?  And, should you run 8 nginx web servers 
on an 8-core box?

> -----Original Message-----
> From: spameden [mailto:spame...@gmail.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, April 02, 2013 7:10 AM
> To: Reindl Harald
> Cc: mysql@lists.mysql.com
> Subject: Re: How to change max simultaneous connection parameter in
> mysql.
> 
> 2013/3/24 Reindl Harald <h.rei...@thelounge.net>
> 
> >
> >
> > Am 24.03.2013 05:20, schrieb spameden:
> > > 2013/3/19 Rick James <rja...@yahoo-inc.com>:
> > >>> you never have hosted a large site
> > >> Check my email address before saying that.
> > >
> > > :D
> >
> > as said, big company does not have only geniusses
> >
> 
> I do not judge only on 1 parameter, Rick has been constantly helping
> here and I'm pretty sure he has more knowledge on MySQL than you.
> 
> 
> >
> > >> 20 may be low, but 100 is rather high.
> > > Never use apache2 it has so many problems under load..
> >
> > if you are too supid to configure it yes
> >
> 
> Ever heard about Slow HTTP DoS attack?
> 
> 
> >
> > > The best combo is php5-fpm+nginx.
> > > Handles loads of users at once if well tuned
> >
> > Apache 2.4 handles the load of 600 parallel executed php-scripts from
> > our own CMS-system
> >
> 
> Nginx serves static content way better than apache2 (did few benchmarks
> already).
> 
> nginx+php5-fpm handles better load than apache2-prefork+mod_php
> 
> you can google benchmarks if you dont trust me
> 
> also nginx eats much less memory than apache2
> 
> php5-fpm can be tuned as well to suit your needs if you have lots of
> dynamic content
> 
> 
> > maybe you guys should learn what a opcode-cache is and how to compile
> > and optimize software (binaries and config)
> >
> > o'rly?

--
MySQL General Mailing List
For list archives: http://lists.mysql.com/mysql
To unsubscribe:    http://lists.mysql.com/mysql

Reply via email to