Thanks to Yura Pismerov Andrew J Caines and a few more people whose emails I probably deleted. The consensus seemed to be to remove the values from /etc/system that I migrated over from a similar server, and then to just go into production with the defaults, with the exception of set noexec_user_stack = 1 set noexec_user_stack_log = 1 for security purposes, and set hme:hme_adv_autoneg_cap=0 set hme:hme_adv_100T4_cap=0 set hme:hme_adv_100fdx_cap=1 set hme:hme_adv_100hdx_cap=0 set hme:hme_adv_10fdx_cap=0 set hme:hme_adv_10hdx_cap=0 to force 100 mbit full duplex ethernet On Andrew Caines' suggestion I've installed orca to collect performance data so I can make an intelligent decision if I see a performance problem, instead of blindly changing /etc/system values because the "kernel tuning folklore" says so. Adrian Cockroft says about the same thing in his performance tuning book, don't believe in /etc/system folklore. It's not to say that you can't reap performance gains from kernel tuning, you should just have a good documented reason why you make each change. Dave Lowenstein Programmer/Analyst Instructional Technology Services San Diego State University (619)594-0270 http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/dept/its _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Tue Aug 13 11:47:21 2002
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