Hi,
Unfortunately pings are blocked by our ISP, so how can I measure
network latency or even better, any way to measure http latency? I
googled it but I can't find any article that mention any tool to do that.
Regards,
Miguel
On 23/02/2012 22:14, J.Lance Wilkinson wrote:
Miguel González Castaños wrote:
Hi,
Is there any tool that performs automatic checks against Apache (or
Tomcat) log files? I want to be able to monitor when something is
going wrong that needs attention from me instead of reading all logs
Hi,
Is there any tool that performs automatic checks against Apache (or
Tomcat) log files? I want to be able to monitor when something is going
wrong that needs attention from me instead of reading all logs from Apache.
I'm thinking of a crontab job or something similar
Regards,
Miguel
On 14/02/2012 03:02, Igor Cicimov wrote:
Check this link
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mpm_common.html#acceptmutex
and try to add
AcceptMutex pthread
to your config in case you run mpm_worker.
But in the info it says it can be used with prefork and worker
Since it's a CentOS machine
What OS, kernel, httpd version?
If linux, /var/log/messages|kernel_log|daemon_log can also often
give some indication of problems.
I have checked /var/log/messages (the other two don't exist) and I don't
find anything. What can cause those SSL cache locks to bring the server
down?
Reg
What OS, kernel, httpd version?
If linux, /var/log/messages|kernel_log|daemon_log can also often
give some indication of problems.
Yes, it's linux Centos 5.5 kernel 2.6.18-194.3.1.el5 and
httpd-2.2.3-53.el5.centos.3
Regards,
Miguel
-
Dear all,
I'm the system admin of a web server and I found these errors in my
apache logs:
[Tue Feb 07 10:35:08 2012] [warn] (43)Identifier removed: Failed to
release SSL session cache lock
[Tue Feb 07 10:36:04 2012] [warn] (43)Identifier removed: Failed to
acquire SSL session cache lock
[