On 08/10/13 21:35, Andrew Galdes wrote:
Hi all,
I'm looking for some guidance with Nginx. We have inherited a
web-server that experiences heavy load. The server is running: Ubuntu
Server 12.4, 24 Cores, 50~GB RAM.
The CPU usage during peak time is 100%. Memory is about 50%.
The client has asked that we configure Nginx to give the best user
experience for the first X number of visitors while the others are
503'd. So a visitor to the website can experience good usage from
start to purchase (it's a commerce site). While others who visit (over
a threshold) would get 503 errors. This would ensure that, if you can
get in, your experience would be nice. If you can't, 503 and try again
later.
I see there are some modules that can do this with a recompile but
we'd rather not go down that path at this stage. Given that http is
session-less, i suppose cookies have been used to achieve this. Or
based on IP address.
Any thoughts?
--
-Andrew Galdes
Managing Director
RHCSA, LPI, CCENT
AGIX Linux
Ph: 08 7324 4429
Mb: 0422 927 598
Site: http://www.agix.com.au
Twitter: http://twitter.com/agixlinux
LinkedIn: http://au.linkedin.com/in/andrewgaldes
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Hi Andrew,
I seem to be doing exactly this for a living at the moment ( especially
Magento installs ), and not that many timezones away. If you want to
drop me a line offlist, please do!
Steve
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