If you want to narrow down whether it's a Tomcat issue, maybe you
could try running Nutch on another app server like Resin to see if
there's a difference. It's been a while since I used Tomcat, but I
did find the performance to be kind of slow. I think things are
supposed to be better now, but many claim that Resin is still faster.

Howie

That's correct, we're not using ndfs. As far as I know it's an out of the box installation of Mandrake 2006, tomcat, and nutch.

Byron's suggestion of merging to one index cut speeds by about 1/3 or 1/2. I think we've already looked at the tomcat memory settings but I'll ask our developer to look deeper. I'm suspicious that something's cycling somewhere, it's hard for me to imagine a regular process taking 25 seconds when cpu and memory show nothing really happening. (I also suspect that the problem is not with nutch, but instead with something at the OS or tomcat level, or with another system process that nutch is using).




Stefan Groschupf wrote:

This is very slow!
You can expect results in less than a second from my experience.
+ check memory settings of tomcat.
+ you do not use ndfs, right?


Am 06.03.2006 um 00:23 schrieb Insurance Squared Inc.:

Asking again for the patience of the list, we're still working on speed. I guess what I need to know is if we still have a 'problem' or if the following search speeds are normal for nutch.

query: 'term life insurance'; first search 25 seconds, second search 6 seconds. query: 'stratford bed and breakfast'; first search 8 seconds, second search 2 seconds query: 'mortgage broker'; first search 6 seconds, second search 5 seconds

Is this the type of speed you'd expect from a nutch install? I keep feeling that it should be far faster than what we're seeing.

Specs: nutch 0.71, merged index. Dedicated server, 4 million pages indexed, dual xeon, 8gigs RAM, 3 Scsi HD's in Raid 0.


---------------------------------------------
blog: http://www.find23.org
company: http://www.media-style.com







-------------------------------------------------------
This SF.Net email is sponsored by xPML, a groundbreaking scripting language
that extends applications into web and mobile media. Attend the live webcast
and join the prime developer group breaking into this new coding territory!
http://sel.as-us.falkag.net/sel?cmd=lnk&kid=110944&bid=241720&dat=121642
_______________________________________________
Nutch-general mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/nutch-general

Reply via email to