You may be interested in using circular buffers, instead of a log file.
http://www.finalcog.com/replace-logs-emlog-circular-buffer
I've used emlog successfully in the past and been very pleased with
it's performance.
Hope this is useful.
Chris.
2009/4/29 Scott Haneda talkli...@newgeo.com:
I
Hi,
You can forwrd your logs to other machine ( e.g. specially for logs ) and
there you can parse through log file.
It's good solution if you have more than one server.
Best regards,
Sebastian Tymków
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Thanks for the tip, however the main problem that I'm seeing is that
perl + MySQL becomes a bottle-neck if this approach were to be used. I
ran some tests yesterday showing that caching 500k rows in a variable
and send it to MySQL was 10 times as effective (90k vs 9k) than doing
individual writes.
We currently use h2n in a simple configuration. There are redundant DNS
servers that I have not shown here:
-M -y -I ignore -q
-d bart.gov spcl=spcl.bart mode=D
-n 148.165/16 -n
-h Athena
-T RR=IN A 98.129.93.250
-T RR=
In article gtamqt$1k...@sf1.isc.org,
Scott Haneda talkli...@newgeo.com wrote:
I have been having some long standing issues with my secondary
provider that I would like to learn how to solve, and who needs to
look to solve the errors. When I make an update, it seems hit or miss
as to
At Tue, 28 Apr 2009 00:42:29 -0700,
Jeff Pang hostmas...@duxieweb.com wrote:
When a Bind requests another Bind for a name resolving, what's the
timeout value for this resuest?
I mean, within how many seconds peer Bind doesn't answer it, this Bind
will give up the query?
There are various
On Apr 29, 2009, at 5:03 PM, Barry Margolin wrote:
In article gtamqt$1k...@sf1.isc.org,
Scott Haneda talkli...@newgeo.com wrote:
like my machine, .14 is refusing their refresh request. Do I need to
allow-recursion for their NS0?
No, you shouldn't need allow-recursion. You might need
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