On Wednesday 27 June 2007, Colin Wetherbee wrote:
Since upgrading apache2 to 2.2.3-4 last week, I have had to
restart
Apache numerous times because it will grow in memory size and
eventually slow my server severely.
php5
I have seen some other reports indicating that the php5 in Debian
Stefan Fritsch wrote:
I have seen some other reports indicating that the php5 in Debian etch
leaks memory. If your php scripts work with php4, you could try
replacing php5 with php4. I would be interested if that improves the
situation.
As much as I would like to try that, I'm afraid one of
Stefan Fritsch wrote:
Try setting MaxRequestsPerChild to 1000, causing each apache process
to be restartet after 1000 requests (the 0 in your settings means
unlimited). If that doesn't help, you may want to try 250 or 100.
This will reduce your performance, but it is probably still better
Since upgrading apache2 to 2.2.3-4 last week, I have had to restart
Apache numerous times because it will grow in memory size and eventually
slow my server severely. The only way to regain control is to be
physically at the terminal and (very slowly) login as root and restart
apache2.
With
On Mittwoch, 27. Juni 2007, Colin Wetherbee wrote:
Since upgrading apache2 to 2.2.3-4 last week, I have had to restart
Apache numerous times because it will grow in memory size and
eventually slow my server severely.
Can you please also post the complete list of enabled modules
(ls
Stefan Fritsch wrote:
On Mittwoch, 27. Juni 2007, Colin Wetherbee wrote:
Since upgrading apache2 to 2.2.3-4 last week, I have had to restart
Apache numerous times because it will grow in memory size and
eventually slow my server severely.
Can you please also post the complete list of enabled
On Mittwoch, 27. Juni 2007, Colin Wetherbee wrote:
As a workaround, you might want to look at MaxRequestsPerChild
and/or MaxChilds
These are my current settings:
StartServers 3
MinSpareServers 3
MaxSpareServers 7
MaxClients 75
7 matches
Mail list logo