I was inspired to write an article about stress testing web servers
after I did some consulting for a client whose server fell over when put
into production after testing out flawlessly during development. This
was a consumer eCommerce site that was put online just in time for the
Christmas shoppi
On Fri, Jan 18, 2002 at 02:36:28PM -0800, Alvin Oga wrote:
>
> hi ya
>
> you can try to do a stress test on your server from the outside world
> and see if its response time is still acceptable
>
> or simple way...
> - when yur ids/monitoring tools says that the server doesnt
> exist
hi ya
you can try to do a stress test on your server from the outside world
and see if its response time is still acceptable
or simple way...
- when yur ids/monitoring tools says that the server doesnt
exist or doesnt respond... you know its too heavily loaded
and it'd be
Hello,
I have a Dell PIII 800 MHz with 256 Meg Ram running debian and apache,
along with mysql and sendmail. I have a redundant t1 connection to this
server.
I have a website that gets about 80 hits per month and transfers
about 8403274 KB per month.
The site gets an average of about 922 Hits p
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