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Full Discussion: Prize of being an Admin
The Lounge War Stories Prize of being an Admin Post 302597582 by admin_xor on Friday 10th of February 2012 04:40:16 PM
Old 02-10-2012
This was an app server. The running service was serving around 83 clients (the research group). I am primarily responsible for the server's performance and health. Also, as per our process, the server admin (my team) is the on-duty person for any issue with the server. We will RCA the issue and if there's nothing to be done from our side, we have to pass it to the correct team.

I admit I took a bold step here. All my intentions were to resume the normal service.
 

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NFSD(8) 						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						   NFSD(8)

NAME
nfsd -- remote NFS server SYNOPSIS
nfsd [-6rut] [-n num_threads] DESCRIPTION
nfsd runs on a server machine to service NFS requests from client machines. At least one nfsd must be running for a machine to operate as a server. Unless otherwise specified, four servers for UDP transport are started. The following options are available: -r Register the NFS service with rpcbind(8) without creating any servers. This option can be used along with the -u or -t options to re-register NFS if the portmap server is restarted. -n Specifies how many server threads to create. The default is 4. A server should run enough threads to handle the maximum level of concurrency from its clients. -6 Listen to IPv6 requests as well as IPv4 requests. If IPv6 support is not available, nfsd will silently continue and just use IPv4. -t Serve TCP NFS clients. -u Serve UDP NFS clients. For example, ``nfsd -t -u -n 6'' serves UDP and TCP transports using six threads. nfsd listens for service requests at the port indicated in the NFS server specification; see Network File System Protocol Specification, RFC 1094 and NFS: Network File System Version 3 Protocol Specification. The nfsd utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs. SEE ALSO
nfsstat(1), nfssvc(2), mountd(8), rpcbind(8) HISTORY
The nfsd utility first appeared in 4.4BSD. BSD
March 17, 2008 BSD
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