80ms was with the server saturated and running 100% CPU utilization. Min times were in the 10ms range, with the more db intensive pages having min times in the 60ms range.
Here's my complete testing results. http://www.mhsoftware.com/caldemo/manual/en/pageFinder.html?page=622.html I'm sure a large part of my overhead was that the testing took place with the DB, and tomcat app on the same consumer grade machine. George Sexton MH Software, Inc. http://www.mhsoftware.com/ Voice: 303 438 9585 > -----Original Message----- > From: Leon Rosenberg [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Monday, January 30, 2006 3:18 PM > To: Tomcat Users List > Subject: Re: Tuning Tomcat , i need some advice > > On 1/30/06, George Sexton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Database interaction is by far the major issue. In my > application, a page > > with no db interaction runs in something like 80ms, while a > page with DB > > interaction takes something like 350-400ms. There's no > silver bullet to > > tuning tomcat applications, and most of the advice you'll > get here won't > > make any difference (use this connector, instead of that). > So, my advice is: > > Hmm, 80 ms per page is extremely slow. We have a high traffic > application here with approx. 100 request / per second / per > webserver. Our middle execution time is by 10 ms (both db and not db). > Requests without calls to backend are served in below 1 millisecond > (mostly ajax). > > I would say that the most important point is the size of the jsp. > Large jsps need time, and CPU. > > Other points are: > Avg. Request duration.( see above). With 30 requests per second you > can't afford spending more than 33 ms per request. > > Connection Speed: If you have keep-alive on, the thread will be > blocked until the data is delivered. Http 1.1 (keep-alive) connections > consume 1.5 threads per connection. My advice: use http 1.0. Zipping > can also reduce thread consumption (but increase cpu consumption). > > WIth all above said, if you can serve fast enough, use no http1.1 and > zip, you can use tomcat default settings (max 150 threads). > > Alas, do you know your read/update ratio for the db? If you have > 80-90% reads on the DB, you can win a lot of performance through > caches. > > Regards > Leon > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]