Low Kian Seong wrote:
Wow ... a bit of ip information there could someone please take out
the last email i sent ? How do i request an email be removed ?
And in your reply, you copied the entire previous message - I've contacted Red Hat support to remove the messages from the archive. But there is no way to revoke the messages once they are sent.

This information is interesting:

----- Total Connection Codes -----

B1                    11480    Bad Ber Tag Encountered
U1                     5877    Cleanly Closed Connections
T1                     2187    Idle Timeout Exceeded

B1 usually means the client just exit()'ed without first calling close() or shutdown() on the TCP/IP socket. Which is fine. It's the T1 which are odd. Of these 2187, 1864 come from the same client:

13800  XXX.XXX.XXX.129
                   8254 -  B1   Bad Ber Tag Encountered
                   3608 -  U1   Cleanly Closed Connections
                   1864 -  T1   Idle Timeout Exceeded

Take a look at the access log where you get the T1 error upon disconnect. You want to find out what the conn=XXXXX is. From there, go back in the access log looking for the operations on that connection. What are they? What application are they from? Why is that application opening connections and just leaving them open? If it is a monitoring application like nagios, you will need to increase the idle timeout for that application. You can do this by using a dedicated BIND dn for that application, then you can increase the idle timeout for that user without affecting any of the other users - see http://tinyurl.com/2sy8bl

If you have a lot of applications that open connections and leave them open for a long time, you will need to figure out how many file descriptors you need for other clients, and you will need to increase the number of file descriptors available for the directory server as well as the size of the directory server connection table - http://tinyurl.com/35qddb and http://directory.fedoraproject.org/wiki/Performance_Tuning#Linux

See http://tinyurl.com/35qddb for real time server connection monitoring information.


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