Yeah, in that case you might see higher-than-normal TCP traffic ☺ - Kevin
From: bind-users-boun...@lists.isc.org [mailto:bind-users-boun...@lists.isc.org] On Behalf Of Shawn Zhou Sent: Thursday, October 16, 2014 6:08 PM To: Barry Margolin; comp-protocols-dns-b...@isc.org Subject: Re: BIND listen backlog too small This is for one of our masters which has about 20K zones and handles zone transfer traffic from few hundred of our slaves. On Thursday, October 16, 2014 2:27 PM, Barry Margolin <bar...@alum.mit.edu<mailto:bar...@alum.mit.edu>> wrote: In article <mailman.1083.1413494517.26362.bind-us...@lists.isc.org<mailto:mailman.1083.1413494517.26362.bind-us...@lists.isc.org>>, Shawn Zhou <shawnzho...@yahoo.com<mailto:shawnzho...@yahoo.com>> wrote: > Hello, > While I was investigating potential SYN flooding warning messages on my Linux > box for our DNS traffic,I was very surprised to see the backlog was set to > very small numbers for BIND tcp sockets. > strace showed backlog was '10' for listening socket for port 53 and '128' for > listening socket for port 953 (rdnc traffic). > I've restarted BIND after I updated somaxconn but BIND didn't pick up the > value. > Why doesn't BIND set the backlog to a huge number and let OSes reduce it to > whatever somaxconn is? Or just set backlog to whatever is is set for > somaxconn? Since TCP queries should be infrequent, why does it need a high backlog? It seems like it's already increasing it, IIRC the default is 5. -- Barry Margolin Arlington, MA _______________________________________________ Please visit https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users to unsubscribe from this list bind-users mailing list bind-users@lists.isc.org<mailto:bind-users@lists.isc.org> https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users
_______________________________________________ Please visit https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users to unsubscribe from this list bind-users mailing list bind-users@lists.isc.org https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users