At 09:35 AM 3/13/98 -0600, Derek Balling wrote:
>On Fri, 13 Mar 1998, Jonathan Peterson wrote:
>
>> It depends what you are doing. For flat files, Zeus is widely acknowledged
>> as the fastest web server around: http://www.zeus.co.uk/
>
>Does anyone actually HAVE servers that are doing just flat-f
On Fri, 13 Mar 1998, Jonathan Peterson wrote:
> It depends what you are doing. For flat files, Zeus is widely acknowledged
> as the fastest web server around: http://www.zeus.co.uk/
Does anyone actually HAVE servers that are doing just flat-files?
===
At 10:26 AM 3/13/98 +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>We are running Apache, and 2.0.33 kernel. I will even consider
>opinions on
>>other platforms.
>
>It's not really a RedHat (or Linux for that matter) problem per se.
>
>It's unlikely you'll get better performance out of an other HTTP server
>t
>We are running Apache, and 2.0.33 kernel. I will even consider
opinions on
>other platforms.
It's not really a RedHat (or Linux for that matter) problem per se.
It's unlikely you'll get better performance out of an other HTTP server
than Apache. You should come over to the Apache list and rais
On Thu, Mar 12, 1998 at 04:54:48PM -0500, Chad Wagner wrote:
> 1. kernel that can exceed 256 file descriptors (is it dynamic, or do you tweak
>the kernel?)
You can dynamically increase the total number of open file
descriptors allowed by doing
echo 4096 > /proc/sys/kernel/file-max
e
At 04:54 PM 3/12/98 -0500, you wrote:
>We are running Apache, and 2.0.33 kernel. I will even consider opinions on
>other platforms.
Check out
http://www.qosina.com/~awm/apache/linux-tcp.html
and see if that helps.
Mike
--
Mike Johnson - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Software Engineer/Network Admin/Websi