Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: PING pros and cons
Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications Infrastructure Monitoring PING pros and cons Post 302457557 by lhareigh890 on Tuesday 28th of September 2010 09:23:28 AM
Old 09-28-2010
a. how minimal? say i will adding hundreds of servers? network utlization not the utlization of my server?

b. why UDP not TCP?

thankyou
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Pro's and cons for Linux

Hi there thanks for checking in The I T manager over here wants us to convert 1 branch in our company from Win98 to Linux I would just like to know the types of problems that we will have once this is done. I would also like to know the following. Does Linux come with a Office package... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: nemex
3 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

2 simple questions the linux pros will be able to get. Pleese help!

Allright the situation is that i have a dual boot set up with windows xp and red hat 9.0. the problem is that my modem and sound card dont work with linux. I found a driver, and i have to download it with xp. My question is..... How do i actually copy the file to the linux... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: nregenwether
4 Replies

3. AIX

NFS Pros and Cons

Can anyone provide the pros and cons of having an NFS mount on an AIX server. Or direct me to documentation that provides this information. Thanks... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mcateriny
1 Replies

4. AIX

Easy question for you pros

I have a folder with about 4000+ files. I would like to compress all these files with one command. When I type "compress *.ext" for example, I get "arg list too long". I tried the following: for k in * do compress *.ext done Still got "The parameter list is too long." How can I compress... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: bbbngowc
4 Replies

5. AIX

AIX 5.2/5.3 - rootvg on SAN disk - pros and cons

We are considering a DR strategy of booting AIX 5.3 and 5.3 logical partitions from EMC Symmetrix SAN disks, so that we can replicate via SRDF to a recovery site. Has anyone tried configuring AIX 5.x systems to boot from SAN disk? If so, can you provide any information on the pros and cons of... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: jjgarrot
6 Replies

6. Cybersecurity

Password Automation pros/cons

folks, I have a security related question, to all you. Please share your comments with me. I have a situation where i was asked to automate the password in my application, which expires every 6 months. In this case i need to generate a random password and set the password on some... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sudharma
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Pros and cons for Text User Interface and Curses::UI

Anyone has experience or study with Text User Interface and Curses::UI using Perl? - What is the criteria to decide which method is better for a console based UI? - Which DTL (dialog tag language) is supported by these? The background is that I want to write a wrapper over some UNIX tools... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: vikrantl
0 Replies

8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Pros and cons of a Journaled file System

Hello, Could anyone please enumerate some of the pros and cons to using a Journaled FileSystem? ---------- Post updated at 02:46 PM ---------- Previous update was at 02:45 PM ---------- I know clearly not losing data during a failed move or copy is a big pro, correct? Let's build off of... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: glev2005
8 Replies

9. Programming

Ping test sends mail when ping fails

help with bash script! im am working on this script to make sure my server will stay online, so i made this script.. HOSTS="192.168.138.155" COUNT=4 pingtest(){ for myhost in "$@" do ping -c "$COUNT" "$myhost" &&return 1 done return 0 } if pingtest $HOSTS #100% failed... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mort3924
4 Replies
nfsd(8) 						      System Manager's Manual							   nfsd(8)

NAME
nfsd - The remote NFS compatible server SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/nfsd [-t num_tcpthreads] [-u num_udpthreads] The following form of the nfsd command is not recommended and is supported only for backward compatibility: /usr/sbin/nfsd [numthreads] FLAGS
Specifies a number of TCP server threads (per RAD) to spawn. A value of 8 is recommended as a start. Specifies a number of UDP server threads (per RAD) to spawn. A value of 8 is recommended as a start. DESCRIPTION
The nfsd daemon runs on a server machine to service NFS requests from client machines. The daemon spawns a number of server threads that process NFS requests from client machines. At least one server thread must be running for a machine to operate as a server. There are two types of server threads: a server thread that processes NFS requests sent using TCP and a server thread that processes NFS requests sent using UDP. This is necessary because the kernel paths for UDP and TCP NFS messages are different. The -t option specifies the number of TCP threads to run and the -u option specifies the number of UDP threads to run. On systems that support Cache Coherent NUMA, the number of threads is per Resource Affinity Domain (RAD). As you add RADs, the NFS server will automatically scale by creating additional threads. NFS requests are processed by a particular RAD based on the file being accessed; this confines cached information about a file to a single RAD for efficiency. See numa_intro(3) for more information on the NUMA architec- ture. If you use the SysMan Menu to configure NFS, it sets the default at 8 UDP and 8 TCP threads. However, a user can have any number of TCP and UDP nfsd threads running up to a maximum of 128 threads. The optimal number of TCP server threads and UDP server threads depends on many factors. See nfsiod(8) for more information. The server threads are implemented as kernel threads; they are part of Process ID 0, not the nfsd process. The ps axml command displays idle server threads under PID 0. Idle threads will be waiting on nfs_udp_wait or nfs_tcp_wait. Therefore, if 16 server threads are config- ured, only one nfsd process is displayed in the output from the ps command, although 16 server threads are available to handle NFS requests. Files that are larger than 2 gigabytes are exported as 2 gigabyte files when accessed by NFS Version 2. NFS Version 2 is a 32-bit proto- col, therefore, the size and offset fields are 32-bit quantities (on Alpha UFS they are 64-bit quantities). Use caution when accessing files larger than 2 gigabytes from NFS clients. EXAMPLES
In the following example, 16 threads are run (8 for TCP and 8 for UDP): nfsd -t 8 -u 8 FILES
Specifies the command path Specifies the file for logging startup errors (before the server threads are started). Specifies the file for logging NFS errors (after the server threads are started). RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: mount(8), mountd(8), nfsconfig(8), nfsstat(8), portmap(8) System calls: nfssvc(2) delim off nfsd(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:12 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy