On Monday, January 24, 2005 8:01 AM [GMT], Joris (Stg Ideeel Internet) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi List > > We are running analog for over 200 domains. THe logs process over 2 > years of data. This is all running on a fast DSL line, whihch > normally gives no problems. However, now that logs files are > increasingly large, running analog pretty much kills my router > (draytek vigor 2200 or 2900) which builds the connnection to the DSL > provider. I expect this to originate from the enormeous amounts of > DNS traffic that analog generates, despite the DNS caching which > seems to be workeing completely. It is unfortunately not possible to > hook up the machine directly to the DSL. At the moment we have no > other option than to turn of logging or move to sequential logging > software like w3perl. Can anyone tell me how to keep analog in place > without destroying my router? Most "broadband routers" will provide basic DNS relaying, and if you use DHCP to allocate addresses, they will specify their own address as the DNS address that machines on the LAN should use. But you can usually specify the IP address of your ISPs DNS server instead on the machine that you are running Analog on. That might improve matters. Aengus +------------------------------------------------------------------------ | TO UNSUBSCRIBE from this list: | http://lists.meer.net/mailman/listinfo/analog-help | | Usenet version: news://news.gmane.org/gmane.comp.web.analog.general | List archives: http://www.analog.cx/docs/mailing.html#listarchives +------------------------------------------------------------------------

