Add two more reasons why ssld_count>1 can be useful: bugs and fd limits.

This commit is contained in:
Jilles Tjoelker 2009-11-18 00:00:07 +01:00
parent e99f612205
commit fa1a7bef02
2 changed files with 10 additions and 4 deletions

View file

@ -56,8 +56,11 @@ serverinfo {
/* ssl_dh_params: DH parameters, generate with openssl dhparam -out dh.pem 1024 */
ssl_dh_params = "etc/dh.pem";
/* ssld_count: number of ssld processes you want to start, if you have a really busy
* server, using N-1 where N is the number of cpu/cpu cores you have might be useful
/* ssld_count: number of ssld processes you want to start, if you
* have a really busy server, using N-1 where N is the number of
* cpu/cpu cores you have might be useful. A number greater than one
* can also be useful in case of bugs in ssld and because ssld needs
* two file descriptors per SSL connection.
*/
ssld_count = 1;

View file

@ -142,8 +142,11 @@ serverinfo {
/* ssl_dh_params: DH parameters, generate with openssl dhparam -out dh.pem 1024 */
ssl_dh_params = "etc/dh.pem";
/* ssld_count: number of ssld processes you want to start, if you have a really busy
* server, using N-1 where N is the number of cpu/cpu cores you have might be useful
/* ssld_count: number of ssld processes you want to start, if you
* have a really busy server, using N-1 where N is the number of
* cpu/cpu cores you have might be useful. A number greater than one
* can also be useful in case of bugs in ssld and because ssld needs
* two file descriptors per SSL connection.
*/
ssld_count = 1;