Scripsit Olaf van der Spek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > On 12/13/05, Henning Makholm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Alternatively each user can spread his load over all three servers; >> his download now takes 5 minutes, and each server _still_ sees >> 600*5 = 3000 active connections at any time. Thus _all_ users get > That's not true. Suppose you've only got 3 users. If each user > connects to one (different) mirror, he gets 1/1 of that mirror's > bandwidth. No he won't, because the 14 users who started in the previous 14 minutes have not finished downloading yet. He can get 1/15 of the mirror's bandwidth. > If each user connects to each mirror, he only gets 1/3 of that > mirror's bandwidth. No. There will now be three new users connecting to the server that minute, but because all of the _previous_ users have finished faster, only the users from the previous *four* minutes will still be downloading. So each of the three new users get 1/15 of the server capacity (now 15 is 3 users from each of the previous 4 minutes plus three new users), but now each of them gets 1/15 of _each_ server's capacity. -- Henning Makholm "We're trying to get it into the parts per billion range, but no luck still." -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]