I used below command to get the number of established sessions on the server.
netstat -an|grep x.x.x.x:80|grep ESTABLISHED To my surprise, it gave me total number as 728. 128 connections more what I have set up in my Apache. In apache I have set up max clients as 600. I want to know what is this extra 128 connections? How it is possible when Apache is configured to spawn only 600 child? On Sat, Dec 7, 2013 at 3:32 AM, tejas sarade <tejas.a.sar...@gmail.com>wrote: > You can use netstat command to see the current concurrent connections to > server. > > http://linuxers.org/howto/how-find-out-active-connections-or-which-ports-are-openlistening-linux > > > On Fri, Dec 6, 2013 at 3:01 PM, Kumar Bijayant <bijayant....@gmail.com>wrote: > >> Hello All, >> >> The below setting is configured in one of our apache webserver >> >> ServerLimit 600 >> StartServers 5 >> MinSpareServers 5 >> MaxSpareServers 15 >> MaxClients 600 >> >> >> There are 2 virtual servers are hosted on this instance. So as per my >> understanding this max connections at any point of time to this apache will >> be 600 and this will be shared by both virtual webserver? >> >> How could I know that how many current connections are open or how many >> unique requests this apache instance is handling? I know through >> server-status we can achieve this kind of info but sadly that option is not >> enabled. >> >> Is there any other way, like through some command if I can achieve this? >> I googled for this answer but nothing specific I could find. So, thought to >> check it here. >> >> Thanks & Regards, >> Bijayant Kumar. >> > >