The output from 'man xinetd.conf' says:

       max_load         Takes a floating point value as the load at
which the service will stop accepting connections.
                        For example: 2 or 2.5.  The service will stop
accepting connections at this load.  This is the
                        one  minute load average.  This is an OS
dependent feature, and currently only Linux, Solaris,
                        and FreeBSD are supported for this.  This
feature is only avaliable if xinetd  was  configured
                        with the -with-loadavg option.

So my assumption would be that when the 1-minute laod average is less
than max_load, it would start accepting connections again.

Kevin

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jan-Frode Myklebust
Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2009 7:00 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [rhelv5-list] xinetd + max_load


I'm feeling quite confused.. I tried setting a max_load=1 
on an xinetd-service, xinetd disabled it once the load
went above "1" -- but how do I get it to enable it again ??

I can't find any relevant timeout-settings to controle this, 
so it seems xinetd permanently disables the service.. I must
be missing something, or .. ?


  -jf

_______________________________________________
rhelv5-list mailing list
[email protected]
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/rhelv5-list

_______________________________________________
rhelv5-list mailing list
[email protected]
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/rhelv5-list

Reply via email to