I didn't fix my problem but this explanation of the ESTABLISHED connections is from Russell Page: "Established" means the operating system has accepted the connection (Completed the three way SYN ACK SYN handshake). The connection is now in a queue waiting for the application to process it. Every time apache closes a connection there will be another one waiting to be processed. Obviously, if the requests arrive more quickly than apache processes them, the "Established" queue in the OS will fill up. Most likely users will experience a timeout in their browsers when this happens. Incidently, I have seen a Sun 450 running a Netscape server handling 50000 simultaneous requests! -----Original Message----- From: Bousquet Francois Sent: July 6, 2004 3:03 PM To: Mailing List - SunManagers (E-mail) Subject: More ESTABLISHED connection than Apache child process Hi, One of my server (E450 2 x UltraSPARC-II@400MHz, 1 Gb RAM Solaris 7 ) is running Apache 1.3.31 to serve about 10 websites (http and https). This server is behind a firewall (CheckPoint) which allows only connections to port 80 and 443. Apache is configured with MaxClients 300 (compiled in consequence). We were having test by a 3rd party vendor this afternoon and the number of ESTABLISHED connection is netstat coming from the 3rd party IP was greater than the number of max Apache child process. netstat -an | grep ESTABLISHED | grep -c 123.123.123.123 380 How this is possible ? Can ESTABLISHED connection be jammed in the IP stack and only cleared after some time ? Another question, this 3rd party is telling me that they are only doing 10 request at a time on my server but they were able to flood us in a way that it was impossible to reach our website during that time. Do you have cues on what may be wrong with my webserver ? Is the great number of ESTABLISHED connection is the problem ? - Frangois _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Wed Jul 7 16:33:39 2004
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Thu Mar 03 2016 - 06:43:35 EST