On 3/22/06, Chris Fong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have gotten request to separate traffic to multiple ports so that
> Network Engineer can manage/debug network traffic easier (by port). I
> totally agree this will make troubleshooting easier, but I am also
> afraid there is performance cost in
> To the Chris, I personally don't think it is the norm since your
average
> site usually don't get that kind of load. I would start with 2 or 3
and
> scale up as needed.
I have gotten request to separate traffic to multiple ports so that
Network Engineer can manage/debug network traffic easier (b
ance be affected by a lot.
Thanks,
--Chris
> -Original Message-
> From: Long [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Tuesday, March 21, 2006 8:52 PM
> To: Tomcat Users List
> Subject: Re: overheads on multiple connectors
>
> : From: "David Rees" <[EMAIL P
: From: "David Rees" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
:
: On 3/21/06, Chris Fong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
: > Let me rephrase original my question.
: >
: > Is it an abnormal configuration to have roughly 20 connectors all
: > listening on different ports for 5.5.15? Have anyone had similar
: > configuration
On 3/21/06, Chris Fong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Let me rephrase original my question.
>
> Is it an abnormal configuration to have roughly 20 connectors all
> listening on different ports for 5.5.15? Have anyone had similar
> configuration for their production environment with heavy traffic?
Y
; From: Chris Fong
> Sent: Tuesday, March 07, 2006 3:03 PM
> To: 'users@tomcat.apache.org'
> Subject: overheads on multiple connectors
>
> Hi,
>
> I would like to how much performance/resource consumption impact there
> will be for the configuration of
>
&
Hi,
I would like to how much performance/resource consumption impact there
will be for the configuration of
1) having a single tomcat instance with 10 connectors all listening on
different ports. The total max threads for all the connectors are 500.
2) having a single tomcat instance with only