hello friends,

Thanks for replying - no hard feelings for getting fast up from the seat :)

I was thinking the MPM might have a saying, since the process management of a certain worker might be optimal for the way Subversion operates - i notice that many requests are sent to the server from even smaller operations in an SVN client.

What i have picked up from your bag of tricks - is LDAPcaching - now i referred to apaches docs for mod_ldap and defined cache TTL to 1 hour which is reasonable for my herd of users. It seems that it might have had an impact, but i have to have a users verify that it shortened runtime, and how much it possibly was.

But im chasing anything that i can on this, and surely i have a lot to learn about how to properly operate Subversion for production purposes. So what MPM have you guys configured for apache? -and what sort of other information could you be interested in Stefan?
Currently i am using event MPM..
As background, yes i authenticate on LDAP, no encryption towards AD, and i interface AD directly on IP, so no delay looking up DNS. Also i only host the service via mod_dav_svn on http for the local network, so theres no https encryption in play in the webserver. I have no per directory restrictions, if a user has access to / then he has access to all repos underneath - now then i just host several vhosts with different having different restrictions.. so in many ways its a very simple solution.


cheers
Carmen



On 2020-04-07 18:20, Nathan Hartman wrote:
On Tue, Apr 7, 2020 at 3:44 AM Stefan Sperling <s...@elego.de> wrote:
Keep in mind most of the work performed during merges occurs client-side.
If people are running old clients, ask them to upgrade.

There are some server-configuration factors which can increase latency
between client and servers, or which affect server-side performance in
general, and those could be relevant:

(snip)

This is an important question, and an important thread.

I'm not aware of a consolidated list of client/server performance tips
in our documentation, so I'd like to address that by saving the above
list and whatever else we learn here. (Perhaps as a FAQ.) I'll wait
for now, in case more suggestions come up. (e.g., delays due to DNS)

Nathan

Reply via email to