Yeah i do the same with the IP each nginx process knows the machine to locate via http://172.0.0.1; each machine is assigned its own localhost ip. The only thing that does not use the IP is each servers nginx pulls from static data from the mapped hard drive Z:/ But taken into consideration i run SSD's and i also use a RAID6 setup with the following LSI Mega RAID. http://www.lsi.com/products/rby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
I suppose i should explain my enviorment odly enough i did a picture a while back to explain it too. Here is the pic http://hwdmediashare.co.uk/media/kunena/attachments/19987/Untitled_2014-09-19.png To explain it : A VRack is a virtual rack all my servers are connected to eachother by a ethernet cable. Now The loadbalencer is just a IP that the domain name points to and it will randomlyby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hey Itpp2012 thanks for another fantastic build <3! :D I have a bit of a question to do with PHP running with your builds. So i run a site in the top 20,000 sites on windows ofcourse using your builds and today i had a big influx in traffic not a DDoS but more than PHP could handle it seems. So i have increased the number of PHP process created to 100. (Before it was 50) But with justby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
Yeah i was looking for that script but could not find it. But if converting to lua is easy please elaborate and share how i can convert the following to a lua script. http://documentation.hwdmediashare.co.uk/w/images/6/66/Ubr_upload-2.1.5.zipby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
itpp2012 can you compile your Nginx with Perl i have a few .pl scripts i cant run because of the missing perl module :(by c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
I can't tell if this is working or not so i thought i would just ask and perhaps someone can inform me but with nginx keep alive timeouts can we set different timeout values per each location or file type being accessed ? Example : location ~ \.flv$ { flv; keepalive_timeout 60s; } location ~ \.mp4$ { keepalive_timeout 3600s; }by c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
Fantastic work itpp2012 <3 love every realease of your builds just gets better and better i tested with my servers your builds and was able to output over 100million requests with Nginx, PHP and MySQL with a Joomla 2.5 site and it did not even break a sweat.by c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
Also itpp2012 i don't know if you remember from the last time we talked but would it be better or any difference for you to compile a 64bit Nginx instead of a 32bit ?by c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
Yeah i thought that would not be allowed for some reason. Does anyone know a way you can execute a program via the echo module or another way with the lua module ? location ~* \.(jpg|png|jpeg|ico|gif|bmp)$ { echo "$http_host$request_uri"; } That should echo the url of the image then i just need to input that uri into one of the command line tools to compress it.by c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
Well what i was describing was to compress the original media items. Saving storage/disk space.by c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
I also see LUA can do the job but i get the feeling i will hit a dead end if i did this. location /compress-images { content_by_lua 'os.execute("C:/server/bin/compress.exe")'; }by c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
Thats what i have been doing not enocunterd any issues as such yet with Nginx or PHP i am also curious if it possible to execute compression of images via Nginx, For those of us who use CloudFlare.com already know that cloudflare performs lossless image compression most likely the same way via linux. On windows we have the following tool avaliable what just executes a series of command line tooby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
I also noticed you added the PHP and Nginx User setups for security would you also add a FTP / MySQL option even though it is easy for us to just edit the vb scripts to suit our needs for other services but i was just thinking for others.(Maybe they are lazy) I am not sure if anyone else uses the following program https://bitsum.com/processlasso/ but for me in a server enviorment it works woundby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
Thanks itpp2012 love it <3 any plans for perl in your Nginx Builds ? http://wiki.nginx.org/Modules http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_perl_module.htmlby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
I actualy came accross a setting in my device manager called write cache buffer flushing. When you disable Write Cache Buffer Flushing, this allows application software to blaze ahead after writing data to disk without waiting for the physical write to complete. http://noel.prodigitalsoftware.com/temp/WriteCacheBufferFlushing.jpg I have enabled it rebooted my machine and will post in a fewby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
Maxim Dounin Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Hello! > > On Sat, Jun 28, 2014 at 12:38:12AM -0400, c0nw0nk wrote: > > > Latest picture > > http://s633.photobucket.com/user/C0nw0nk/media/Untitled-7.png.html > > > > Everything utilizing the read's and writes is nginx and when i set > the > > following buffersby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
I ran a couple more tests with 2000mb then 4000mb ----------------------------------------------------------------------- CrystalDiskMark 3.0.3 x64 (C) 2007-2013 hiyohiyo Crystal Dew World : http://crystalmark.info/ ----------------------------------------------------------------------- * MB/s = 1,000,000 byte/s Sequential Read : 167.799 MB/sby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
After benchmarking this was my output. I have no idea if it is good or bad or what, i am rather hoping someone with more understanding of I/O usage and if i have hit my max or not can tell me. This is the version of crystal mark i benchmarked with http://crystalmark.info/redirect.php?product=CrystalDiskMark I used their 64bit not the 32bit. ----------------------------------------------------by c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
Latest picture http://s633.photobucket.com/user/C0nw0nk/media/Untitled-7.png.html Everything utilizing the read's and writes is nginx and when i set the following buffers i get massive spikes like that. location ~ \.mp4$ { mp4; mp4_buffer_size 9000m; mp4_max_buffer_size 9000m; }by c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
Paul Schlie Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > I don't know if what you're experiencing is related to a problem I'm > still tracking down, specifically that multiple redundant read-streams > and corresponding temp_files are being opened to read the same file > from a backend server for what appears to be a single initial get > request by a clientby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
So a disk spinning at 15000 rpm compared to my current hard drive spinning at 7000 rpm does better than a SSD still ? This is my current hard drive i posted earlyer i do believe http://www.hgst.com/hard-drives/enterprise-hard-drives/enterprise-sata-drives/ultrastar-7k4000by c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
My new soloution did not last very long everything shot up again so the mp4 function is needed to drop I/O usage but as of what the optimal setting for the buffers are realy does baffle meby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
I think i found the soloution rather than buffer or envolve pseudo streaming mp4 already html5 compatible videos. I just leave it to the browsers rather than my server. So to solve my I/O usage issue i dropped "mp4;" from my server config "#mp4;" and now my I/O usage is basically back at 0. Perhaps nginx should look at the I/O usage to do with that function and see ifby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hmm well i have figured out it is my mp4 buffers that need fixing but i recon my largest video file size on the server is maybe 700mb as of figuring out what to set this to i am currently just playing around with it to see what works best.by c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
The results got even more fascinating as i increased the buffer size's to the following. client_max_body_size 0; client_body_buffer_size 1000m; mp4_buffer_size 700m; mp4_max_buffer_size 1000m; http://s633.photobucket.com/user/C0nw0nk/media/Untitled-6.png.htmlby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
Since i have never had to benchmark a hard drive before this will be a new experience for me any tools you recommend to use specifically.by c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
So the soloution could be a different hard drive possibly a solid state drive ? This is my current hard drive http://www.hgst.com/hard-drives/enterprise-hard-drives/enterprise-sata-drives/ultrastar-7k4000by c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
I also just to try and check if it was my connection limit enabled nginx_status and this was my output. Active connections: 1032 server accepts handled requests 8335 8335 12564 Reading: 0 Writing: 197 Waiting: 835 How can i fix the I/O issue why is nginx consuming so much in the first place if i close the nginx process nothing else is even using it.by c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
When i said "my bandwidth output looks like its very jumpy". on a 1gig per second connection my output jumps up and down 10% (100mb) used then it will jump to like 40% (400mb) and it changes so much before when i had less traffic it used to be a very stead and stable 400-500mb output and hardly ever changed so dramaticly. In the following screenshot you will see me I/O usage from Nginby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English
Now i am clueless because i dropped keepalive requests i also dropped any send_timeout values. And this is what my bandwidth output looks like its very jumpy when it should not be and my page loads are very slow even on static files like html, mp4, flv etc and considering its nginx that delievers them i am very sure nginx is the problem. http://i633.photobucket.com/albums/uu52/C0nw0nk/Untitledby c0nw0nk - Nginx Mailing List - English