On Mon, Jan 11, 2010 at 2:47 PM, Ray Saintonge wrote:
> Gregory Maxwell wrote:
>> Today Wikimedia's world-wide five-minute-average transmission rate
>> crossed 10gbit/sec for the first time ever, as far as I know. This
>> peak rate was achieved while serving roughly 91,725 requests per
>> second.
Gregory Maxwell wrote:
> Today Wikimedia's world-wide five-minute-average transmission rate
> crossed 10gbit/sec for the first time ever, as far as I know. This
> peak rate was achieved while serving roughly 91,725 requests per
> second.
The rate can't be that rough if we already know it to 5 sign
2010/1/11 Domas Mituzas :
>> . This
>> peak rate was achieved while serving roughly 91,725 requests per
>> second.
> I don't think this is good number - as there were around 9000
> requests-a-second handled by a separate server (That is not included in
> request stats).
> Also the increase in b
> . This
> peak rate was achieved while serving roughly 91,725 requests per
> second.
I don't think this is good number - as there were around 9000 requests-a-second
handled by a separate server (That is not included in request stats).
Also the increase in bandwidth could be because were blacklis
Today Wikimedia's world-wide five-minute-average transmission rate
crossed 10gbit/sec for the first time ever, as far as I know. This
peak rate was achieved while serving roughly 91,725 requests per
second.
This fantastic news is almost coincident with Wikipedia's 9th
anniversary on January 15th.