On Thu, Jun 29, 2006 at 10:50:00AM -0400, Bill Davidsen wrote: > >Basically the mostlikely end-result is I don't know what there is a > >problem and my customer doesn't know that there is a problem but they're > >just not getting as many hits to their site that they otherwise would. > > > >Ofcourse, this all depends if such a situation is possible. If it is > >possible would it affect dns and mail in a similar manner too? > > > I'm glad David Miller clarified this, because I was about to send a > "don't do that" followup ;-)
:) I don't know how I got the wrong config option to modify but there you go. :) > But your example is misleading, or at least doesn't reflect customers I > know. While a few clients with broken network connections may be > unhappy, disabling scaling will make your web server really, really, > slow, and that will make everyone unhappy. Particularly if the web > content is flash or 2MB jpegs, or other ill-chosen stuff. You don't want > people to think you are running at dial-up speeds. Which would be why I wont move from 2.6.16.x for my servers unless I really, really, really have to. I don't know how many broken sites are out there and I cannot tell. Another datapoint to this is that I've had this my netcat web test running since 8:42pm yesterday. It's 8:37am now. It hasn't progressed in any way. It hasn't quit. It hasn't timed out. It just sits there, hung. This leads me to consider the possibility of a DOS, either intentional or accidental (think about 2.6.17.x running on a mail server and someone mails/spams from a broken place). -- "To the extent that we overreact, we proffer the terrorists the greatest tribute." - High Court Judge Michael Kirby - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe netdev" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html