Sent from phone, thus brief.
Am 21.06.2013 16:57 schrieb "Boylan, James" <[email protected]>:
>
> Has anyone made use of the automatic gzip compression in 7.4.1 on a
central logging server? If so, what are your observations regarding
performance? And have you used it in a situation where you have a large
amount of syslog traffic being received by the server?
>
> I'm curious as I currently have a follow up program that compresses
anything older than 4 hours, but as you can imagine it has an overall
impact on the load for the server. I suspect that trying to implement it
through the omfile gzip function would merely offset that load into the
Rsyslog application, but I wanted to see if anyone had direct experience
with it.

This is in use at at least one very high performance environment and
performs well. You need to take into account that you gain some time "back"
by drastically reducing the i/o activity. But of course there is some CPU
toll for the compression. Keep in mind that with rsyslog it is far less in
spikes, so it will probably "slip under" the actual workload.


Rainer

>
> Thanks!
>
> --James
>
> _______________________________________________
> rsyslog mailing list
> http://lists.adiscon.net/mailman/listinfo/rsyslog
> http://www.rsyslog.com/professional-services/
> What's up with rsyslog? Follow https://twitter.com/rgerhards
> NOTE WELL: This is a PUBLIC mailing list, posts are ARCHIVED by a myriad
of sites beyond our control. PLEASE UNSUBSCRIBE and DO NOT POST if you
DON'T LIKE THAT.
_______________________________________________
rsyslog mailing list
http://lists.adiscon.net/mailman/listinfo/rsyslog
http://www.rsyslog.com/professional-services/
What's up with rsyslog? Follow https://twitter.com/rgerhards
NOTE WELL: This is a PUBLIC mailing list, posts are ARCHIVED by a myriad of 
sites beyond our control. PLEASE UNSUBSCRIBE and DO NOT POST if you DON'T LIKE 
THAT.

Reply via email to