On Tue, Jan 28, 2003 at 08:48:00PM +0100, Bernd Eidenschink wrote: > Hi there, > > with all that great ways of caching data - nscache, nsv... - in AOLserver and > a strategy of caching as much data as possible, at what point would you say > the size of the processes becomes a "problem" for the application running > AOLserver? I don't think of physical RAM and swap, I think of AOLserver and > starting new threads, using ns_eval to propagate changes from APIs to all > other processes, responding to requests and similar things.
I don't know the answer to your question, but I'm interested in answers. openacs.org runs at around 168 Mib, and it does lots of caching. -Roberto -- +----| Roberto Mello - http://www.brasileiro.net/ |------+ + Computer Science Graduate Student, Utah State University + + USU Free Software & GNU/Linux Club - http://fslc.usu.edu/ + Linux: because a PC is a terrible thing to waste -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] put this on Tshirts in '93
