Hello,
> > Hello,
> >
> > don't want to discourage you, but my slapd (2.4.11 on Debian Lenny)
> > still has problems with more than 1024 files.
> >
> > I have
> > -- ulimit -n 4096 in /etc/default/slapd
> > -- checked the output of /proc/`pidof slapd`/limits
> > -- downloaded the source package from Debian (version 2.4.11),
> > did a grep for FD_SETSIZE and found that it is set to 4096
> > -- built a new package from these sources with configure options:
> > --disable-tcpwrapper
> >
> > In a loop from a python script, I then connect, bind, search the ldap
> > server and keep all the connections open, like so:
> >
> > ...
> > def ldap_connection_func():
> > global n
> > l = ldap.initialize("ldaps://ldap...")
> > l.simple_bind_s(username, password)
> > l.search_s('dc=haiti,...', ldap.SCOPE_SUBTREE, 'objectclass=*')
> > n.append(l)
> >
> > for x in range(0,1100):
> > ldap_connection_func()
> > ...
>
>
> What was the ulimit -n in the shell from which you ran this python script? If
> you are using a single process to generate the load to the server, this
> process obviously also needs to be able to open sufficient files.Ah, I see. I just have adjusted the ulimit size on the server side (to 4096). I never thought about the client's side, where I started the script. Here, the "ulimit -n" is 1024. Indeed, if the client tries to open less than 1024 files, everything is fine. Even if I start the script 3 times (each in a separate shell) everything runs as expected. The clients and the server do not have a problem, in detail, the server opened more than 1024 files at the same time successfully. > > I see the number of open files of the slapd process rise to about 1080, > > then all connections opened from the script are closed while slapd keeps > > running. > > It is funny that slapd opened more than 1024 files then, as it should either > have stopped at less than 1024 fd's (as it has other files open), or the > script > should have reached 1100 connections, or your script is running with a file > descriptor limit. > > > We now will try to set the idletimeout parameter to some sensible value > > It looks like your slapd file descriptor limit is now taking effect, you just > need to test better, and/or interpret the results better .... Yes, you are right. I should set ulimit in the /etc/default/slapd and it will work. > Regards, > Buchan Regards, Klemens -- Klemens Kittan Systemadministrator Uni-Potsdam, Inst. f. Informatik August-Bebel-Str. 89 14482 Potsdam Tel. : +49-331-9773125 Fax. : +49-331-9773122 eMail : [email protected] gpg --recv-keys --keyserver wwwkeys.de.pgp.net 6EA09333
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