Eric Shubert wrote:
> I gather that you're trying to reduce the load on the network by 
> essentially using the blacklist_ip file as a sort of RBL facility.
> Is RBL processing actually creating that much network traffic, or is 
> this just a guess?
>
> Do you have a caching nameserver installed on your server? You should, 
> as that will drastically reduce network traffic.
>
> How many / which RBLs are you presently using? You shouldn't need more 
> than a few. Also, if you've specified an unresponsive or slow RBL, that 
> can hinder your performance quite a bit
I had some problems with my nameserver last week ... long story...  so I 
was looking at my RBL list, and thought that I could reduce the overhead 
of the RBL lookups by adding the IP to my blacklist_ip file... I've got 
the makings of a script that will find all the new RBL rejects, add them 
to the blacklist_ip file and then unique them... I would suspect that 
there could be 10's of thousands of IPs in this file - eventually - but 
over time could really have an impact on performance (increase my server 
load, but decrease network traffic)  I suppose that it could be 
considered polite to do this to the RBL servers by reducing their 
overhead as well.

I belive (but not 100% sure) that I have a cacheing nameserver.  I'm 
using the default that plesk gives me (named), but I haven't modified it 
myself. Is there anything simple I can do to check or configure?  I'm 
technical, but never played with named, so don't really have a clue on 
where to start looking ....

I'm using 4 RBL's - not too many, but not too little either.  As far as 
I can tell, they are responsive, but I don't track them...

I guess my main worry is:  what happens if there are 10,000 IP's or 
20,000 IP's in my blacklist_ip file?  does my server start smoking?

Matt


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