Hi Wes,
Thank you for your reply. Is there any way I can find the current value of
'serverRecvBuf' variable? Also, I guess I can set the value based on the
machine's RAM? In that case, I'd like to know how can I find its current
value.
Thanks,
Trupti
On 15 July 2010 19:50, Wes Hardaker <harda...@users.sourceforge.net> wrote:
> >>>>> On Wed, 14 Jul 2010 16:08:57 +0100, "Trupti V.Kulkarni" <
> trupss...@gmail.com> said:
>
> TVK> *serverRecvBuf INTEGER
> TVK> specifies the desired size of the buffer to be used when
> TVK> receiving incoming SNMP requests. If the OS hard limit is lower
> than
> TVK> the serverRecvBuf value, then this will be used instead.
> TVK> Some platforms may decide to increase the size of the buffer actually
> TVK> used for internal housekeeping.*
>
> TVK> Is serverRecvBuf specified in bytes or KB? (Or MB?) How does one
> TVK> find out the "OS hard limit"? I have a Linux box: Linux
> TVK> 2.6.18-128.1.6.el5
>
> Well, it's in bytes. I don't know (personally) how to tell what the OS
> limit might be.
> --
> Wes Hardaker
> Cobham Analytic Solutions
>
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This SF.net email is sponsored by Sprint
What will you do first with EVO, the first 4G phone?
Visit sprint.com/first -- http://p.sf.net/sfu/sprint-com-first
_______________________________________________
Net-snmp-users mailing list
Net-snmp-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Please see the following page to unsubscribe or change other options:
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/net-snmp-users