James Harper:
> > Hi at all,
> >
> > I got a trouble: a server of our server farm runs some perl scripts
>
> that
>
> > are bad influenced by Bacula backup.
> > Until our developers will return from holiday (damn), I need to limit
> > bacula speed.
> > Our servers are connected by 100Mbps ethe
>
> Hi at all,
> I got a trouble: a server of our server farm runs some perl scripts
that
> are bad influenced by Bacula backup.
> Until our developers will return from holiday (damn), I need to limit
> bacula speed.
> Our servers are connected by 100Mbps ethernet network, should I tune
> Maximu
On 08/13/2010 05:59 PM, Alex Chekholko wrote:
> On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 17:00:21 +0200
> Simone Martina wrote:
>
>>Hi at all,
>> I got a trouble: a server of our server farm runs some perl scripts that
>> are bad influenced by Bacula backup.
>> Until our developers will return from holiday (damn
On 08/13/2010 05:59 PM, Alex Chekholko wrote:
> If you are running Linux, you probably want to use the tc command to
> throttle traffic to the bacula port.
>
> Search Google for "linux tc throttle". Something like this:
> http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-traffic-shaping-using-tc-to-control-htt
On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 17:00:21 +0200
Simone Martina wrote:
> Hi at all,
> I got a trouble: a server of our server farm runs some perl scripts that
> are bad influenced by Bacula backup.
> Until our developers will return from holiday (damn), I need to limit
> bacula speed.
> Our servers are con
Hi at all,
I got a trouble: a server of our server farm runs some perl scripts that
are bad influenced by Bacula backup.
Until our developers will return from holiday (damn), I need to limit
bacula speed.
Our servers are connected by 100Mbps ethernet network, should I tune
Maximum Network Buff