the os of my box is CentOS 5.3 and httpd is the built-in one.

> it may mean that the requests didn't take long to server AND the clock
> is not high resolution

I thought so as well, but about 90% of the requests are around
10_000-100_000µs. Meanwhile 0µs requests are about 5%.
It's hard to believe that is a resolution issue.
Also the rate of 0µs request goes up with server's load going up, not
a good sign, I guess.

Arrrr, it might be something like the requests under 1000µs goes to
0µs into log file by chance?

On Thu, Jul 15, 2010 at 12:20 AM, Jeff Trawick <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 14, 2010 at 10:19 AM, Hu Hailin <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/en/mod/mod_log_config.html#formats
>>
>> I'm using %D to log the time taken to serve requests.
>> I found the time might be 0 in nonspecific requests. The rate of 0
>> serving time goes the same trend with server load.
>>
>> Does it mean some kind of timeout?
>
> no
>
> it may mean that the requests didn't take long to server AND the clock
> is not high resolution
>
> is this Windows?  if I understand correctly, expensive (in CPU)
> mechanisms are required to get good resolution on Windows
>
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islue

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