----- "Julio Gómez Belmonte" <julio(a)openinside.es> wrote:
Hello everybody,
This is my first message to the list, so I hope don't make recurring
questions.
My question concerns the performance of directory server, I have a
directory with a large number of entries, ~ 20,000 objects. My
question is: When I receive a too large query,
Can you be more specific about what you mean by "too large query"?
the directory will be
suspended until they answer this query
What is your platform? What version of directory server? How do you know the directory
server is suspended?
I could see that there are
options to determine the threads that will use the directory
(nsslapd-threadnumber), persistent searches and apply administrative
limits to the queries.
Did you change any of these settings from the defaults?
I am evaluating what changes to implement but I
have several doubts. When I run the directory, I get a single process
(ns-slapd) which is consuming 100% CPU when doing too long queries,
More details please - search base, scope, filter - how many entries match the query - what
user are you running as - have you changed any of the default administrative limits,
database caching options, etc. etc.
if
we have a multi-thread support, should appear multiple processes or
Directory threads (ns-slapd)?
single process with multiple threads
Recommendations that could be followed
in a case like this?
Thanks and best regards,
--
389 users mailing list
389-users(a)redhat.com
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-directory-users