Looks like M$ is using ColdFusion....
http://premium.bcentral.com/business.cfm
John Cesta
ColdFusion ASP ActiveState PERL Hosting
Includes 10 Domains - 100% Browser Based Administration
http://www.cybersmarts.net
LogFileManager - IIS LogFile Management Tool
http://www.serverautomationtools.com
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Saul G. Perez [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Friday, March 09, 2001 10:00 AM
> To: CF-Server
> Subject: RE: CF load take
>
>
> I agree but you must consider that most/some people are running multiple
> server oriented applications on just one machine, SQL Server, CFSERVER,
> etc.. and you must realize how the
> applications will react with sharing RAM and the CPU. (Many things come
> into consideration, as far as Network Speed - how many request will be
> queued and how fast can the cpu process them, if there is an error how
> will the machine handle?, once again we run into the Ideal way a machine
> should be setup and having crisp clean code)
>
> Saul
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Benjamin Fitts [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Friday, March 09, 2001 6:43 AM
> To: CF-Server
> Subject: RE: CF load take
>
>
> Wes,
>
> I think I can help you run the logic :)
>
> You've got a dual processor box.
>
> So let's make some assumptions (Without even taking into effect
> session/client vars.)
>
> 5-6 threads per processor. So let's assume 12 threads total for Cold
> Fusion.
> (This is set in the CF Administrator.)
>
> Now let's assume you get 500 hits per hour. At that rate 12 threads
> would be
> more than enough. 500 / 60 = 8.34 which we compare to our number of
> threads
> (12).
>
> But that also is making the bad assumption that your pages take one
> minute
> each to process ;) They'll take less than a second usually, 1.5 to 2
> seconds
> if your site is under heavy load, lots of queries, tons of nested ifs,
> your
> variables aren't scoped, etc. So you should easily be able to process
> something like:
>
> 12 threads per 2 seconds, 30 2 second increments per minute, 60 minutes
> per
> hour = 12 * 30 * 60 = 21,600 cold fusion pages processed per hour. Even
> if
> you had 2000 users hit your site in an hour they'd have to hit more than
> 10
> pages each to put your server at a point where performance could be an
> issue. :)
>
> Turning on session/client vars should NOT affect the performance enough
> for
> it to matter on your site.
>
> Benjamin Fitts
> Web Developer
> uclick, LLC
> www.uclick.com
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Get your favorite comics emailed daily for FREE!
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>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Thursday, March 08, 2001 4:15 PM
> To: CF-Server
> Subject: CF load take
>
>
> Hello
> I have been watching the discussions about the
> problems with cf loads/ram hardware. It is very
> interesting. My cfserver has been doing outstanding and
> hasn't missed a beat. However, I am fixing to implement
> session and client tracking/authorization.
>
> Currently my setup 2 dual 600 with 512mb ram. My
> database (mssql) , cfserver (cf professional), and web
> server reside on the same computer. I am expecting at
> the most 10000 user sessions a day. With max 500 - 2000
> users per hour.
> We have a unix server currently taking the pounding
> without cfserver, but we are slowly merging our web
> sites to the cf server.
>
> How will cf react with this kind of load using
> session/client variables.
>
> What is the suggested configuration or is this
> configuration stable.
>
> Is there any sites that can show me some performance
> statistics.
>
> Thanks
> Wes
>
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