Re: Web server requirements

2006-08-20 Thread doug
I did not see the answer to the dynamic content question. I ran 400-500 web 
sites on a 300 MHz processor until it died. My problems were memory, disk space 
and bandwidth. If you are going to use perl or modperl for dynamic content, any 
processor you can buy today will probably be fast enough.


If did not see RAID mentioned in the thread, but I would recommend that. If you 
have a budget, I would spend it on memory, 1GB (more?) and the rest on disks and 
an ata raid controller.


On Sat, 19 Aug 2006, Derek Ragona wrote:

It sounds like you have this older hardware to use, so you can try it and 
see.  It will likely be a bit under powered for the streaming, and may chug 
under the maximum users.  With hardware prices at an all time low, you might 
want to consider something faster with more capacity, but you can always move 
to that later.


   -Derek


At 01:55 PM 8/19/2006, Dearment, Alaric J wrote:
I'm the on-line editor of expo, Ball State University's student-run 
magazine. We're reviving our Web site, and I've been thinking seriously 
about running it off a FreeBSD-based server. However, I'm not sure what 
kinds of system requirements I'll have.


The school has roughly 20,000 students and the magazine comes out once a 
semester. If I were to guess, I'd say we'll be having 100 people on the 
server at once on busy days, most of whom will be on campus. In addition to 
articles, the server will probably offer a 10- to 15-minute video and/or 
podcast to go with the cover story. Also, the server will also be used as a 
mail server and file server, though file services will likely only be 
needed for a couple of days each semester and E-mail accounts will only be 
for staff to do things such as receive feedback on articles and so forth.


What sorts of requirements would such a server need as far as processor, 
RAM and HD are concerned, assuming it would be running on FreeBSD? Would a 
machine with 512M of RAM, a 140G HD and 1.2GHz processor work?


Thank you,
Alaric DeArment
Ball State University
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Web server requirements

2006-08-19 Thread Dearment, Alaric J
I'm the on-line editor of expo, Ball State University's student-run magazine. 
We're reviving our Web site, and I've been thinking seriously about running it 
off a FreeBSD-based server. However, I'm not sure what kinds of system 
requirements I'll have.

The school has roughly 20,000 students and the magazine comes out once a 
semester. If I were to guess, I'd say we'll be having 100 people on the server 
at once on busy days, most of whom will be on campus. In addition to articles, 
the server will probably offer a 10- to 15-minute video and/or podcast to go 
with the cover story. Also, the server will also be used as a mail server and 
file server, though file services will likely only be needed for a couple of 
days each semester and E-mail accounts will only be for staff to do things such 
as receive feedback on articles and so forth.

What sorts of requirements would such a server need as far as processor, RAM 
and HD are concerned, assuming it would be running on FreeBSD? Would a machine 
with 512M of RAM, a 140G HD and 1.2GHz processor work?

Thank you,
Alaric DeArment
Ball State University
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Re: Web server requirements

2006-08-19 Thread Martin Tournoij
On Sat, 19 Aug 2006 20:55:59 +0200, Dearment, Alaric J  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


I'm the on-line editor of expo, Ball State University's student-run  
magazine. We're reviving our Web site, and I've been thinking seriously  
about running it off a FreeBSD-based server. However, I'm not sure what  
kinds of system requirements I'll have.


The school has roughly 20,000 students and the magazine comes out once a  
semester. If I were to guess, I'd say we'll be having 100 people on the  
server at once on busy days, most of whom will be on campus. In addition  
to articles, the server will probably offer a 10- to 15-minute video  
and/or podcast to go with the cover story. Also, the server will also be  
used as a mail server and file server, though file services will likely  
only be needed for a couple of days each semester and E-mail accounts  
will only be for staff to do things such as receive feedback on articles  
and so forth.


What sorts of requirements would such a server need as far as processor,  
RAM and HD are concerned, assuming it would be running on FreeBSD? Would  
a machine with 512M of RAM, a 140G HD and 1.2GHz processor work?




That will probably be enough.

The Slackware site runs on a PIII 600 with 512MB RAM,  
http://www.slackware.org/about/

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Re: Web server requirements

2006-08-19 Thread Darrin Chandler
On Sat, Aug 19, 2006 at 02:55:59PM -0400, Dearment, Alaric J wrote:
 I'm the on-line editor of expo, Ball State University's student-run magazine. 
 We're reviving our Web site, and I've been thinking seriously about running 
 it off a FreeBSD-based server. However, I'm not sure what kinds of system 
 requirements I'll have.
 
 The school has roughly 20,000 students and the magazine comes out once a 
 semester. If I were to guess, I'd say we'll be having 100 people on the 
 server at once on busy days, most of whom will be on campus. In addition to 
 articles, the server will probably offer a 10- to 15-minute video and/or 
 podcast to go with the cover story. Also, the server will also be used as a 
 mail server and file server, though file services will likely only be needed 
 for a couple of days each semester and E-mail accounts will only be for staff 
 to do things such as receive feedback on articles and so forth.
 
 What sorts of requirements would such a server need as far as processor, RAM 
 and HD are concerned, assuming it would be running on FreeBSD? Would a 
 machine with 512M of RAM, a 140G HD and 1.2GHz processor work?

A lot depends on how your web content will be served up. If you're going
to run a very dynamic CMS w/ database then requirements will go up. If
you're serving more or less static pages then the requirements won't be
nearly as high.

Spend money on RAM. Big payoff, and it's pretty cheap. Spend money on a
good disk (SCSI, SAS, High-End SATA) with a good controller and you'll
get your money in performance. Buy a decent network card! These things
will pay off more than processor speed for a web server, usually.

-- 
Darrin Chandler|  Phoenix BSD Users Group
[EMAIL PROTECTED]   |  http://bsd.phoenix.az.us/
http://www.stilyagin.com/  |
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Re: Web server requirements

2006-08-19 Thread Derek Ragona
It sounds like you have this older hardware to use, so you can try it and 
see.  It will likely be a bit under powered for the streaming, and may chug 
under the maximum users.  With hardware prices at an all time low, you 
might want to consider something faster with more capacity, but you can 
always move to that later.


-Derek


At 01:55 PM 8/19/2006, Dearment, Alaric J wrote:
I'm the on-line editor of expo, Ball State University's student-run 
magazine. We're reviving our Web site, and I've been thinking seriously 
about running it off a FreeBSD-based server. However, I'm not sure what 
kinds of system requirements I'll have.


The school has roughly 20,000 students and the magazine comes out once a 
semester. If I were to guess, I'd say we'll be having 100 people on the 
server at once on busy days, most of whom will be on campus. In addition 
to articles, the server will probably offer a 10- to 15-minute video 
and/or podcast to go with the cover story. Also, the server will also be 
used as a mail server and file server, though file services will likely 
only be needed for a couple of days each semester and E-mail accounts will 
only be for staff to do things such as receive feedback on articles and so 
forth.


What sorts of requirements would such a server need as far as processor, 
RAM and HD are concerned, assuming it would be running on FreeBSD? Would a 
machine with 512M of RAM, a 140G HD and 1.2GHz processor work?


Thank you,
Alaric DeArment
Ball State University
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