On Wed, 17 Mar 2010, Evan Hunt wrote:
No, not at all. Threaded works fine--I use it myself. It's just a little
touchy about file permissions. On linux, I'm given to understand, a
multi-threaded application can't relinquish its root privileges and then
get them back later if it needs to open a
> [Jack Tavares] So, for bind 9.6.x and 9.7.0 is the recommendation to run
> nonthreaded?
No, not at all. Threaded works fine--I use it myself. It's just a little
touchy about file permissions. On linux, I'm given to understand, a
multi-threaded application can't relinquish its root privileges
You said:
>On most operating systems, the default is threaded.
>On linux, the default is unthreaded, for historical reasons having t
>do with an odd interaction between linux threads and linux process
>privileges. I expect we'll correct this fairly soon; it's on the
>to-do list for 9.7.1.
[Jack
On 16.03.10 15:18, Jack Tavares wrote:
> What is the default build on linux (2.6) with regard to threads.
> If I don't explicitly enable or disable threads, does named
> run threaded or unthreaded?
On most operating systems, the default is threaded.
On linux, the default is unthreaded, for histor
On 16.03.10 15:18, Jack Tavares wrote:
> What is the default build on linux (2.6) with regard to threads.
> If I don't explicitly enable or disable threads, does named
> run threaded or unthreaded?
from the manpage for named(8):
-n #cpus
Create #cpus worker threads to take advan
Jack Tavares wrote:
Hello -
What is the default build on linux (2.6) with regard to threads.
If I don't explicitly enable or disable threads, does named
run threaded or unthreaded?
Threaded.
Thanks
--
jack
---
Hello -
What is the default build on linux (2.6) with regard to threads.
If I don't explicitly enable or disable threads, does named
run threaded or unthreaded?
Thanks
--
jack
___
bind-users mailing list
bind-users@lists.isc.org
https://lists.isc.org/ma
7 matches
Mail list logo