> On Aug 26, 2024, at 4:30 PM, Ben Kaufman <[email protected]> wrote: > > Does the analogy apply here? Assuming a steady traffic rate and that the http > request takes a consistent amount of time, all that's added is PDD as long as > latency doesn't increase in the http request with load. > > With a blocking HTTP request, then the number of requests that Kamailio can > handle becomes limited by the number of children. If it's not blocking, then > the limit becomes memory bound, but if the request rate is static, then the > memory limit is also static.
Yes, but what sense of "handle" are you appealing to here? If all requests are HTTP-bound, and all requests take an async code path, then why bother with the async? What are you gaining? There would only be a benefit if the primary children were freed up to do something else. -- Alex -- Alex Balashov Principal Consultant Evariste Systems LLC Web: https://evaristesys.com Tel: +1-706-510-6800 __________________________________________________________ Kamailio - Users Mailing List - Non Commercial Discussions To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected] Important: keep the mailing list in the recipients, do not reply only to the sender! Edit mailing list options or unsubscribe:
