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  • Memcached缓存瓶颈分析

    Memcached缓存瓶颈分析

    • 获取Memcached的统计信息

      Shell:

      # echo "stats" | nc 127.0.0.1 11211
      

      PHP:

      $mc = new Memcached();
      $mc->addServer('127.0.0.1',11211);
      $stats = $mc->getStats();
      
    • Memcached缓存瓶颈分析的一些指标
      memcached_bandwidth
      memcache_user_time
      memcached_system_time
      memcache_cache_miss

    Posted in MemcachedPerformance analysis & tuning.

    Nginx配置优化说明

    Nginx配置优化说明

    • Nginx配置可优化项
      # worker_processes的数目应该不多于服务器的CPU的核数目,
      # 每个CPU核超过1个worker不会使得Nginx性能有什么提升
      worker_processes 24;
      
      # 给Nginx使用的文件描述符的数目.这个需要一起设置系统内核参数'ulimit -n 200000'
      # 或修改'/etc/security/limits.conf', 参考《高负载Linux调优》
      worker_rlimit_nofile 200000;
      
      # 设定每个worker进程最多可以服务多少客户端,
      # Max clients = worker_connections * worker_processes
      # "Max clients"其实也受到系统可使用的socket连接(socket connections)的限制,大约是64K
      worker_connections 4000;
      
      # 对于Linux系统来说选择epoll,那样每个线程可以服务更多的客户端
      use epoll;
      
      # 在Nginx获得有新连接的通知之后,接受尽可能多的连接
      # 需要注意的是:如果worker_connections设置太低的话,这样可能会造成拥堵
      multi_accept on;
      
      # 缓存打开的文件描述符(open FDs),经常被访问的文件的信息.
      # 适当设置下面这些值可以极大提高每秒的请求数.
      # 实际设置的值不一定跟下面的一样,请根据具体机器来调优.下面只是测试环境中的一个设置例子.
      open_file_cache max=200000 inactive=20s; 
      open_file_cache_valid 30s; 
      open_file_cache_min_uses 2;
      open_file_cache_errors on;
      
      # 缓冲日志写入可以加速I/O,或是有可能的话甚至可以禁止,看具体的生产环境要求.
      #access_log /var/log/nginx/access.log main buffer=16k;
      access_log off;
      
      # 使用sendfile从Linux内核中的一个文件描述符(FD)拷贝数据到另一个文件描述符比read() + write()更有效率,
      # 因为read() + write()的方式需要在用户空间(user space)来回传输数据
      sendfile on;
      
      # 使用tcp_nopush会使Nginx尝试使用一个数据包发送它的HTTP响应头(HTTP response head),而不是使用部分帧
      # (partial frames).无论是对调用sendfile之前追加头部(prepending headers)或是对是吞吐量优化来说,
      # 都是非常有用的.
      tcp_nopush on;
      
      # 不要缓冲数据发送(data-sends)(禁止Nagle算法).
      # 设置为on非常适合于实时频繁发送小数据.(比如图片,pdf,ppt文件之类不是小数据的,应该设置为off)
      tcp_nodelay on;
      
      # keep-alive连接的超时时间.服务器在这个超时时间之后会关闭这个连接.
      keepalive_timeout 30;
      
      # 可通过keep-alive连接的客户端请求数.下面的值仅是测试环境使用,具体设置请根据实际机器来调.
      keepalive_requests 100000;
      
      # 在客户端停止响应之后,允许服务器关闭连接,释放socket关联的内存
      reset_timedout_connection on;
      
      # 设置客户端读请求的超时时间,默认是60s
      client_body_timeout 10;
      
      # 设置客户端的响应超时时间.如果客户端停止读取数据,在这么多时间之后就释放过期的客户端连接,默认是60s
      send_timeout 2;
      
      # 压缩设置.减少网络传输数据量.
      gzip on;
      gzip_min_length 10240;
      gzip_proxied expired no-cache no-store private auth;
      gzip_types text/plain text/css text/xml text/javascript application/x-javascript application/xml;
      gzip_disable "MSIE [1-6].";
      

      这些nginx配置项所处的位置,请继续往下看.

    • Nginx配置例子

      下面的配置例子仅为说明上面提到的优化项在nginx.conf中的位置,具体的优化值请根据实际机器来调.

      # cat nginx.conf
      user www www;
      worker_processes 2;
      worker_cpu_affinity 0001 0010;
      worker_rlimit_nofile 100000; 
      pid logs/nginx.pid;
      error_log logs/error.log crit;
      
      events {
          # Maximum clients = worker_processes * worker_connections
          worker_connections 4096;
          multi_accept on;
          use epoll;
      }
      #google_perftools_profiles log/profile;
      
      http {
          # Basic Settings
          sendfile on;
          open_file_cache max=100000 inactive=20s;
          open_file_cache_valid 30s;
          open_file_cache_min_uses 2;
          open_file_cache_errors on;
          tcp_nopush on;
          tcp_nodelay on;
          keepalive_timeout 20;
          #keepalive_requests 100000;
          reset_timedout_connection on;
      
          client_max_body_size 15m;
          client_body_timeout 60;
          client_header_timeout 60;
          client_body_buffer_size  128K;
          client_header_buffer_size 1k;
          large_client_header_buffers 4 32k;
          send_timeout 60;
          types_hash_max_size 2048;
          server_tokens off;
          
      
          include mime.types;
          default_type text/html;
          charset utf-8;    
      
          # Log Format
          log_format main '$remote_addr - $remote_user [$time_local] '
                  '"$request" $status $body_bytes_sent "$http_referer" '
                  '"$http_user_agent" "$http_x_forwarded_for"';
         
          # Gzip Settings
          gzip on;
          gzip_static on;
          gzip_disable "MSIE [1-6].";
          gzip_vary on;
          gzip_proxied any;
          # gzip_proxied expired no-cache no-store private auth;
          gzip_comp_level 2;
          gzip_min_length 5000;
          gzip_http_version 1.1;
          gzip_buffers 16 8k;
          gzip_types text/css text/javascript text/xml text/plain text/x-component application/javascript application/x-javascript application/json application/xml  application/rss+xml font/truetype application/x-font-ttf font/opentype application/vnd.ms-fontobject image/svg+xml;
          ignore_invalid_headers on;
      
          #Virtual Host configs
          include conf.d/*;
          include sites-enabled/*.conf;
      }
      

    Posted in Performance analysis & tuning.

    MySQL配置my.cnf调优项详解

    MySQL配置调优项详解

    以下是一份机器内存:64GB RAM,最大连接数为2000,MySQL使用InnoDB为主的配置说明,
    某些项的最优值请根据实际生产需要来调.

    [root@centos190 conf]# cat my.cnf 
    ### MySQL config 5.0/5.1/5.5
    ### RAM: 64GB RAM dedicated server
    ### Connections: 2000
    
    [mysqld_safe]
    nice = -15
    
    [client]
    socket		          = /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
    default-character-set = utf8
    
    [mysqld]
    #############################
    ### Charset and Collation ###
    #############################
    character-set-server  = utf8
    collation-server      = utf8_general_ci
    
    
    ############################
    ### Basic Settings       ###
    ############################
    user                  = mysql
    pid-file              = /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid
    port		      = 3306
    socket		      = /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
    basedir               = /usr/local/mysql
    datadir               = /db/data01
    tmpdir                = /tmp
    #tmpdir               = /db/tmp01:/db/tmp02:/db/tmp03 #Recommend using RAMDISK for tmpdir
    
    default-storage-engine = InnoDB
    
    skip-external-locking
    skip-name-resolve
    
    ## Table and TMP settings
    max_heap_table_size             = 1G    #recommend same size as tmp_table_size
    tmp_table_size                  = 1G    #recommend 1G min
    
    ## Default Table Settings
    #sql_mode             = NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER
    
    ##############################
    ### Error Logs & Slow logs ###
    ##############################
    
    ## Log Errors
    log_error             = /db/logs01/mysql-error.err
    log_warnings # default: 1, Print out warnings such as Aborted connection... to the error log.
    
    ## Log general queries
    #general_log           = 1
    #general_log_file      = /db/logs01/mysql-gen.log 
    #log-output            = file
    
    ## Log slow queries
    #slow-query-log
    #slow_query_log_file    = /db/logs01/mysql-slow.log
    #log_queries_not_using_indexes
    
    ## It's worth noting that query execution time does not include the time taken to acquire
    ## table locks. If a query regularly runs slowly because of a high level of locking, it 
    ## will not be logged.The value can be specified to a resolution of microseconds.
    ## Default : 10 (s)
    #long_query_time = 10
    
    ## Optionally, you can also restrict the slow query log to those queries that cause 
    ## more than a certain number of rows to be examined.
    ## This feature was introduced in MySQL 5.5.
    #min_examined_row_limit = 500
    
    
    ###########################
    ### Connections         ###                                                                                                                                                    
    ###########################
    
    ## The number of outstanding connection requests MySQL can have. This comes into play 
    ## when the main MySQL thread gets very many connection requests in a very shot time. 
    ## It then takes some time (although very little) for the main thread 
    ## to check the connection and start a new thread.  You need to increase this 
    ## only if you expect a large number of connections in a short period of time.
    ## This value is the size of the listen queue for incoming TCP/IP connections.
    ## Your operating system has its own limit on the size of this queue
    ## Check your OS documentation for the maximum value for this variable. 
    ## back_log cannot be set higher than your operating system limit.
    back_log = 300
    
    ## The maximum permitted number of simultaneous client connections.
    ## Without considering MyISAM buffers, each connection uses about  192KB of memory.
    ## You need to make sure that-(max_connections * 192KB) + innodb_buffer_pool_size is 
    ## less than your total amount of system memory, otherwise MySQL could start swapping.
    ## 2000 connections will use ~400MB of memory.
    ## Set max_connections as high as the theoretical maximum amount of connections 
    ## that your application can ever have.
    ## max_connections = pm.max_children * number of application servers
    ## Default: 151
    max_connections=2000
    
    ## If more than this many successive connection requests from a host are interrupted 
    ## without a successful connection, the server blocks that host from further connections. 
    ## You can unblock blocked hosts by flushing the host cache. To do so, issue a FLUSH HOSTS 
    ## statement or execute a mysqladmin flush-hosts command. If a connection is established
    ## successfully within fewer than max_connect_errors attempts after a previous connection
    ## was interrupted, the error count for the host is cleared to zero. 
    ## However, once a host is blocked, flushing the host cache is the only way to unblock it.
    max_connect_errors = 100
    
    ## The number of seconds that the mysqld server waits for a connect packet 
    ## before responding with Bad handshake.
    ## default: 5 (<= 5.1.22), 10 (>= 5.1.23)
    connect_timeout    = 30
    
    ## The packet message buffer is initialized to net_buffer_length bytes, but can grow up 
    ## to max_allowed_packet bytes when needed. 
    ## This value by default is small, to catch large (possibly incorrect) packets. 
    ## You must increase this value if you are using large BLOB columns or long strings. 
    ## It should be as big as the largest BLOB you want to use. 
    ## The protocol limit for max_allowed_packet is 1GB. The value should be a multiple of 1024; 
    ## nonmultiples are rounded down to the nearest multiple
    ##
    max_allowed_packet = 32M   #max size of incoming data to allow
    
    
    ############################
    ### Table Cache Settings ###
    ############################
    
    ## This controls the maximum number of open tables the cache can hold for all threads.
    ## You can check whether you need to increase the table cache by checking the Opened_tables 
    ## status variable.If the value is very large or increases rapidly and
    ## you do not use FLUSH TABLES often, then you should increase this value. 
    ## Or compared with the number of currently open tables (server status 'Open_tables')
    ## The table_open_cache and max_connections system variables affect the maximum number of 
    ## files the server keeps open.
    ## Range: 64~ 524288, default: 400
    table_open_cache = 2048
    
    ## The number of table definitions (from .frm files) that can be stored in the 
    ## definition cache. If you use a large number of tables, you can create a large
    ## table definition cache to speed up opening of tables. The table definition cache
    ## takes less space and does not use file descriptors, unlike the normal table cache. 
    ## However, table_definition_cache doesn't offer as great a performance increase
    ## as the standard table_cache. The recommended way to utilize it is as a secondary 
    ## caching mechanism when the table cache becomes full.
    ## Range: 400~524288, Default: 400
    table_definition_cache = 400
    
    ########################
    ### File Descriptors ###
    ########################
    
    ## The number of files that the operating system permits mysqld to open. If you find MySQL 
    ## complaining about Too Many Open Files, raising this value should be your first avenue.
    ## The value is 0 on systems where MySQL cannot change the number of open files.
    open_files_limit = 16384
    
    
    ######################
    ### Thread Cache ###
    ######################
    
    ## How many threads the server should cache for reuse. When a client disconnects, 
    ## the client's threads are put in the cache. if there are fewer than thread_cache_size 
    ## threads there. By examining the difference between the Connections and Threads_created 
    ## status variables,  you can see how efficient the thread cache is. 
    ## The cache miss ratio = Threads_created/Connections.
    ## default : 0 (effectively disabling this feature), recommend 5% of max_connections 
    thread_cache_size = 100
    
    ## This variable is specific to Solaris systems.
    ## Range: 1~512, Default: 10, recommend 2x CPU cores
    #thread_concurrency = 16
    
    
    ######################
    ### Query Cache    ###
    ######################
    
    ## Disable the query cache. Both of these must be set as 0 due to a bug in MySQL.
    ## The query cache adds a global lock and performs poorly with a non-trivial write-load.
    query_cache_size=0
    query_cache_type=0
    
    #query_cache_size                = 64M   #global buffer
    #query_cache_limit               = 512K  #max query result size to put in cache
    
    ###################################
    ### Per-Thread Buffers          ###
    ###################################
    
    ## The sort buffer is allocated on a per-client basis for any query that needs to perform
    ## a sort operation (that is, ORDER BY and GROUP BY operations).sort_buffer_size is not 
    ## specific to any storage engine and applies in a general manner for optimization.
    ## If you see many 'Sort_merge_passes' per second in the global server status output, 
    ## you can consider increasing this value. 
    ## On Linux, MySQL uses mmap() rather than malloc() for allocating sort buffer sizes larger than
    ## 256 KB, and this is somewhat slower.So, ideally you should keep the sort buffer 
    ## at 256 KB or less. There is a similar threshold at 2 MB. If you do require a value
    ## higher than 256 KB, you should also aim to keep it under 2 MB. 
    ## The maximum permissible setting for sort_buffer_size is 4GB. 
    ## Values larger than 4GB are permitted for 64-bit platforms.
    sort_buffer_size = 2M
    
    ## The read buffer is used for queries that perform sequential scans of tables.
    ## Each thread that does a sequential scan for a MyISAM table allocates a buffer
    ## of this size (in bytes) for each table it scans. 
    ## If you do many sequential scans,  you might want to increase this value.
    ## default: 128K, change in increments of 4K, Maximum allowed: 2G
    read_buffer_size = 2M
    
    ## The read_rnd cache is the counterpart to read_buffer used when reading sorted rows 
    ## (rather than sequential rows). 
    ## When reading rows from a MyISAM table in sorted order following a key-sorting
    ## operation, the rows are read through this buffer to avoid disk seeks.
    ## Setting the variable to a large value can improve ORDER BY performance by a lot. 
    ## However, this is a buffer allocated for each client, so you should
    ## not set the global variable to a large value. Instead, change this session variable
    ## only from within those clients that need to run large queries
    ## default: 256K, Maximum allowed: 2G
    read_rnd_buffer_size = 2M
    
    ## The minimum size of the buffer that is used for plain index scans, range index scans,
    ## and joins that do not use indexes and thus perform full table scans.
    ## In most cases, better column indexing produces a greater performance increase than 
    ## raising this buffer. Care should be taken not to make the join buffer too big
    ## default: 128K, Maximum allowed: 4G
    join_buffer_size = 2M
    
    
    ## Stack size for each thread.The default of 192KB (256KB for 64-bit systems) is large
    ## enough for normal operation. If the thread stack size is too small, it limits the
    ## complexity of the SQL statements that the server can handle, the recursion depth 
    ## of stored procedures, and other memory-consuming actions.
    ## default: 32bit: 192K, 64bit: 256K
    thread_stack = 512k
    
    #############################
    ### MySQL Master Settings ###
    #############################
    
    ## This mandatory variable is a unique number for the server 
    ## within the current MySQL topology.
    server_id = 1
    
    ## auto_increment_* setting For multi-master topology 
    #replicate-same-server-id = 0
    #auto_increment_increment= 2
    #auto_increment_offset   = 1
    
    ## Replication Semi-Synchronous 5.5.x only, requires dynamic plugin loading ability 
    #rpl_semi_sync_master_enabled   = 1 #enable = 1, disable = 0
    #rpl_semi_sync_master_timeout   = 1000 #in milliseconds , master only setting
    
    ## This value controls how the master will wait for a timeout from one or more slaves 
    ## before reverting to asynchronous replication.
    #rpl_semi_sync_master_wait_no_slave = 1 # Default: ON
    
    ## This defines the level of debugging logging. The allowed values are
    ## 1 (general level logging), 16 (detailed level logging), 
    ## 32 (network wait logging), and 64 (function level logging).
    #rpl_semi_sync_master_trace_level = 1
    
    
    ## This enables the binary log and is mandatory for replication on the master host. 
    ## This variable also defines the basename of the binary log files.
    log_bin       = /db/logs01/mysql-bin
    log_bin_index = /db/logs01/mysql-index
    
    ## This variable controls the type of binary logging.
    ## STATEMENT (the default): logs the actual SQL statement to the binary log
    ## ROW : log changed data blocks to the binary log
    ## MIXED: will choose the most applicable method for the given statement necessary 
    ## to ensure data consistency
    binlog_format = MIXED
    
    ## This cache is used to hold changes that are to be written to the binary log
    ## during a transaction. Increasing this value for very large transactions can 
    ## possibly increase performance. The Binlog_cache_use and Binlog_cache_disk_use 
    ## status variables can be useful for tuning the size of this variable.
    ## Default:32k, 
    binlog_cache_size = 10M
    
    ## Beginning with MySQL 5.5.9, this variable specifies the size of the cache 
    ## for the binary log to hold non-transactional statements during transactions
    ## on a per client basis. There may be a benefit total increasing this value 
    ## using large non-transactional statements. In MySQL 5.5.3 through 5.5.8, the size 
    ## for both caches is set using binlog_cache_size. This means that, in these MySQL 
    ## versions, the total memory used for these caches is double the value set for 
    ## binlog_cache_size. The Binlog_stmt_cache_use and Binlog_stmt_cache_disk_use 
    ## status variables can be useful for tuning the size of this variable.
    ## Default: 32k
    binlog_stmt_cache_size = 10M
    
    ## This is the maximum size of the binary log file before a new file is created.
    ## The FLUSH BINARY LOGS command will also dynamically close the current 
    ## binary log and create a new file.
    ## Range: 4k~1G, Default: 1G
    max_binlog_size = 256M
    
    ## This variable defines the number of days binary log files are retained. 
    ## Files older than the number of days are removed (similar in operation 
    ## to a PURGE MASTER LOGS command) when a new binary log file is created.
    expire_logs_days = 30
    
    
    ## These variables on the master host limit which statements are logged to
    ## the binary log based on the specified database name, preceded by a USE qualifier. 
    ## Use of binlog_do_db and binlog_ingnore_db can make a binary log unusable 
    ## in a point in time recovery of a full primary database.  These options are also
    ## incomplete, as they require all SQL to be preceded by an applicable USE, and do not
    ## handle cross-schema joins as you would expect.
    #binlog-do-db = book3
    #binlog-ignore-db=mysql
    
    ############################
    ### MySQL Slave Settings ###
    ############################
    
    ## By default, when a slave server starts, an implied SLAVE START occurs. 
    ## With this variable specified, the slave is not automatically started and
    ## must be performed manually with START SLAVE.
    #skip_slave_start
    
    ## The relay logs hold replicated database changes retrieved from the 
    ## master binary log and written with the I/O thread
    relay_log = /db/logs01/mysql-relay-bin
    
    ## This variable defines the name of the relay log index that holds the names
    ## of all the relay logs available. The default filename is the relay_log variable
    ## value with the extension .index
    relay-log-index= /db/logs01/mysql-relay-index
    
    ## auto_increment_* in multi-master replication
    #replicate-same-server-id       =  
    #auto-increment-increment       = 
    #auto-increment-offset          = 
    
    
    ## When defined and binary logging is enabled on a slave, all replicated changes
    ## from the SQL thread are also written to the slave server binary log. This option
    ## is used to chain multiple nodes together through replication. For example, if you
    ## have three servers (A, B, and C) and want to connect them in a chain you would 
    ## use log_slave_updates on B. B would replicate from A, and C from B, forming a chain,
    ## (A -> B -> C). 
    ## Binary logging must be enabled on the slave for this variable to have any effect.
    ## Default: FALSE
    log-slave-updates
    
    ## This variable defines that the slave will not accept DML or DDL statements other 
    ## than those applied by the replication slave SQL thread. The exception is a user 
    ## with SUPER privilege will override this setting.
    ## Default: False
    #read_only
    
    ## This variable controls how the relay log files are purged. The default of 1
    ## specifies that the relay log files are removed when they are no longer needed 
    ## for applying replication events. A value of 0 retains the log files.
    ## Default: 1
    #relay_log_purge = 1
    
    ## These variables control how frequently a file sync is performed on the 
    ## respective relay log and relay log info file. The number represents the name of 
    ## executed SQL statements to apply before action. 
    ## The default is 0; the safest durability setting is 1
    sync_relay_log = 1
    sync_relay_log_info = 1
    
    ## These variables are used to filter which recorded master binary log statements
    ## are applied on the slave. The replicate_do_db and replicate_ingnore_db can
    ## cause errors, as they require all SQL to be preceded by an applicable USE and
    ## do not handle cross-schema joins as you would expect.
    #replicate-do-db                =
    #replicate-ignore-db            =
    #replicate-do-table             = 
    #relicate-ignore-table          =
    #replicate-rewrite-db           =
    #replicate-wild-do-table        = b.%
    #replicate-wild-ignore-table    = a.%
    
    ## Replication error codes can be skipped automatically when specified with
    ## this variable. It is rarely a good idea to specify a value for slave_skip_errors,
    ## because there is no accountability of the occurrences of these silent errors,
    ## which will generally lead to data drift and/or loss of data integrity.
    ## Error 1062 means Duplicate entry
    ## Error 1060 means Duplicate column name
    ## Error 1050 means Table already exists
    ## Error 1051 means Unknown table 
    #slave-skip-errors = 1062,1050,1060,1052
    #slave-skip-errors=1062,1053,1146,1051,1050
    
    ## Semisynchronous Replication settings on Slave (MySQL 5.5+)
    ## When this option set to ON, semisynchronous replication on the slave is possible
    #rpl_semi_sync_slave_enabled = 1
    
    ## This defines the level of debugging logging. The allowed values are 1, 16, 32, and 64
    #rpl_semi_sync_slave_trace_level = 16
    
    #######################
    ### MyISAM Settings ###
    #######################
    
    ## This is MyISAM key cache: a memory buffer used to hold frequently accessed 
    ## index (key) blocks. The key cache is used only for buffering indexes, and 
    ## MySQL still needs memory for the tables's contents. For a dedicated MySQL
    ## server, the general rule of thumb is to allocate 25%~50% of the total memory
    ## to the key cache. If the key cache is too large, the system may run out of 
    ## physical memory and start swapping.
    ## Key read miss ratio = Key_reads / Key_read_requests, 
    ## the ratio should normally be less than 0.01.
    ##
    ## Key write miss ration = Key_writes/Key_write_requests, 
    ## the ratio is usually near 1 if you are using mostly updates and deletes,
    ## but might be much smaller if you tend to do updates that affect many rows 
    ## at the same time or if you are using the DELAY_KEY_WRITE table option.
    ## The fraction of the key buffer in use can be determined using 
    ## key_buffer_size in conjunction with the Key_blocks_unused status variable 
    ## and the buffer block size, which is available from the key_cache_block_size
    ## system variable: 1 - ((Key_blocks_unused * key_cache_block_size) / key_buffer_size)
    ## Default: 8388608 (~8M), Max Limit: 4G for each key cache
    key_buffer_size = 30M
    
    ## Multiple Key Caches
    ## 1. through mysql command line.
    ## mysql > SET GLOBAL hot_cache.key_buffer_size = 1024*1024* 16;
    ## mysql > select @@GLOBAL.hot_cache.key_buffer_size, @@GLOBAL.hot_cache.key_cache_block_size;
    ## mysql > CACHE INDEX t1, t2 IN hot_cache;
    ## mysql > LOAD INDEX INTO CACHE t1, t2 IGNORE_LEAVES;
    ##  
    ## 2. through conf file
    ## in .my.cnf:
    #mycache1.key_buffer_size = 512M
    #mycache2.key_buffer_size = 1G
    #init_file=/var/lib/mysql/custom.sql
    ## custom.sql contents as follows:
    ##CACHE INDEX categories, comments IN mycache1
    ##CACHE INDEX userprofiles IN mycache2
    
    ## The size of the buffer that is allocated when preloading indexes.
    ## Range: 1k~1G, Default: 32k
    #preload_buffer_size = 32k 
    
    ## The size in bytes of blocks in the key cache.
    ## Your motivation for changing these is to match the block size used by Linux 
    ## for disk I/O (not to be confused with the filesystem's block size). 
    ## On x86 Linux, use a value of 4 KB.
    ## show the disk I/O block size:  perl -e '$a=(stat ".")[11]; print $a'
    ## Range: 512~16384 (16k), Default: 1024 (1k)
    #key_cache_block_size = 4k
    
    ## This specifies the percentage of the key cache to allocate to the warm list. 
    ## The default value, 100, effectively causes MIS(Midpoint Insertion Strategy) 
    ## to be disabled (because the hot list will be of zero size).When lowering this value, 
    ## remember that the warm list will be used more than the hot list, and the sizes
    ## of each should reflect this. Broadly speaking, a division limit of approximately
    ## 60 percent to 90 percent should be right in most cases.
    #key_cache_division_limit = 100
    
    ## This controls how long an unused entry should stay in the hot list 
    ## before being moved back into the warm list.
    ## The default is 300 seconds, and permitted values range from 100 seconds upward
    #key_cache_age_threshold=300
    
    ## Enabled by default, the concurrent_insert option enables INSERT statements
    ## to be executed on a table at the same time as SELECT queries are reading from it.
    ## This partly alleviates the table-level locking. (Although it does nothing 
    ## to help the table-level locking that occurs on UPDATE and DELETE queries.)
    ## 0: turns this option off
    ##
    ## 1 (the default) : enables concurrent inserts only when there are no deleted 
    ## rows in the middle of the table.
    ##
    ## 2: enables concurrent inserts even if such deleted rows exist. If any SELECT
    ## queries are running, the data will be inserted at the end of the table. Otherwise, 
    ## it will be inserted in the gap left by the deleted row (the default behavior).
    ## Default : 1
    concurrent_insert  = 2
    
    ## If set to 1, all INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, and LOCK TABLE WRITE statements wait until there is 
    ## no pending SELECT or LOCK TABLE READ on the affected table. 
    ## This affects only storage engines that use only table-level locking (such as MyISAM, MEMORY, 
    ## and MERGE).If you choose not to enable this option globally, it can still be set on a per-query 
    ## basis using the following syntax:
    ## update low_priority into ...
    ## Default : 0
    # low_priority_updates = 0
    
    ## OFF : DELAY_KEY_WRITE is ignored.
    ## ON (the default): MySQL honors any DELAY_KEY_WRITE option specified in CREATE TABLE statements.
    ## ALL : All new opened tables are treated as if they were created with the DELAY_KEY_WRITE
    ## option enabled.
    ## When a MyISAM index/key is updated, the default behavior is to write the changes back to disk.
    ## For frequently modified tables,this can result in a lot of disk writes.By enabling 
    ## delay_key_write (either on a per table basis,or globally by specifying a value of ALL),
    ## changes to the indexes are buffered in memory, and not written out to disk until the table is closed. ## This greatly speeds up index updates. The downside is that if MySQL is not shut down cleanly,
    ## there is a good chance of index corruption (because the buffer will not have been flushed to disk). 
    ## You can fix this with myisamchk, but for big tables, it will take a while to run.
    ## Or if you use this feature, you should add automatic checking of all MyISAM tables by 
    ## starting the server with the --myisam-recover option (for example, --myisam-recover=BACKUP,FORCE).
    ## If you enable external locking with --external-locking, there is no protection 
    ## against index corruption for tables that use delayed key writes. 
    ## delay_key_write = 1
    
    ## The maximum size of the temporary file that MySQL is permitted to use while re-creating 
    ## a MyISAM index (during REPAIR TABLE, ALTER TABLE, or LOAD DATA INFILE).
    ## If the file size would be larger than this value, the index is created 
    ## using the key cache instead, which is slower. The value is given in bytes.
    ## The default value is 2GB. If MyISAM index files exceed this size and disk space is available, increasing the value may help performance. 
    ## The space must be available in the file system containing the directory where the original 
    ## index file is located
    #myisam_max_sort_file_size = 10G. 
    
    ## The size of the buffer that is allocated when sorting MyISAM indexes during a REPAIR TABLE 
    ## or when creating indexes with CREATE INDEX or ALTER TABLE
    ## Default:8388608 (8M), Max Limit: 4G+
    #myisam_sort_buffer_size = 128M
    
    ## MyISAM uses a special tree-like cache to make bulk inserts faster for INSERT ... SELECT, 
    ## INSERT ... VALUES (...), (...), ..., and LOAD DATA INFILE when adding data to nonempty tables. 
    ## This variable limits the size of the cache tree in bytes per thread. 
    ## Setting it to 0 disables this optimization (This is a limit per thread.)
    ## Default: 8M
    #bulk_insert_buffer_size = 8M
    
    ## Set the mode for automatic recovery of crashed MyISAM tables
    myisam-recover = BACKUP,FORCE
    
    ## Thread quantity when running repairs.
    ## If this value is greater than 1, MyISAM table indexes are created in parallel (each index in its own thread) during the Repair by sorting process.
    ## Default: 1
    #myisam_repair_threads = 4
    
    
    #######################
    ### InnoDB Settings ###
    #######################
    
    
    ######################################
    ### InnoDB Table-space and logging ###
    ######################################
    
    ## The common part of the directory path for all InnoDB data files in the shared tablespace. 
    ## This setting does not affect the location of per-file tablespaces when innodb_file_per_table is enabled
    innodb_data_home_dir = /usr/local/mysql/data
    
    ## The paths to individual data files and their sizes.
    innodb_data_file_path=ibdata1:128M;ibdata2:10M:autoextend
    
    ## The directory path to the InnoDB redo log files
    innodb_log_group_home_dir = /usr/local/mysql/data
    
    ## The number of log files in the log group, default: 2
    ## combined size of all logs <4GB. <16G_RAM = 2, >16G_RAM = 3
    innodb_log_files_in_group = 2
    
    ## The size in bytes of each log file in a log group. The combined size of log files 
    ## must be less than 4GB. 
    ## Bigger log file size = less I/O used for writes, longer recovery time during a failure.
    ## Maximum = innodb_buffer_pool_size / innodb_log_files_in_group
    ## Calculation: Check mysql status 'Innodb_os_log_written' to calculate how many MB of data per minute are getting written to the file,
    ## and setting the value to large enough to hold one hour's worth of writes.
    ## Default:5M, on small buffer pool settings (under 4G), advise the same value as innodb_buffer_pool_size 
    ## 64G_RAM+ = 368, 24G_RAM+ = 256, 8G_RAM+ = 128, 2G_RAM+ = 64 
    innodb_log_file_size = 368M
    
    ## If innodb_file_per_table is disabled (the default), InnoDB creates tables in the system tablespace. 
    ## If innodb_file_per_table is enabled, InnoDB creates each new table using its own .ibd file 
    ## for storing data and indexes, rather than in the system tablespace.
    ## It only impacts new tables and will not affect old "monolithic file" style InnoDB tables
    ## default: On (>= 5.5.0, <= 5.5.6), Off (>= 5.5.7)
    innodb_file_per_table = 1
    
    ## InnoDB has two different versions: Antelope (the older version) and Barracuda (the newest).
    ## This applies only for tables that have their own tablespace, so for it to have an effect, innodb_file_per_table must be enabled.
    ## Tell InnoDB that we always want to use the Barracuda.
    ## Default:Barracuda (>= 5.5.0, <= 5.5.6), Antelope(>=5.5.7)
    innodb_file_format=barracuda
    
    ## This specifies the maximum number of .ibd files that MySQL can keep open at one time.The file descriptors 
    ## used for .ibd files are for InnoDB tables only. They are independent of those specified by the --open-files-limit 
    ## server option, and do not affect the operation of the table cache.
    ## What is the right setting? check: sudo lsof | grep -c ".ibd$" (myisam you should count the *.MYD)
    ## Minimum: 10, default: 300
    innodb_open_files = 16384
    
    ############################
    ### InnoDB I/O resources ###
    ############################
    
    ## Tells the operating system that MySQL will be doing its own caching and that it should skip using the file system cache.
    ## Prevents double caching of the data (once inside of MySQL and again by the operating system.)
    ## Default: fdatasync
    innodb_flush_method=O_DIRECT
    
    ## Set this to 1 on your master server for safest, ACID compliant operation (sync after every transaction, high I/O).
    ## Set this to 2 on your slave, which can cause up to a second of data loss after an operating system crash, but frees up I/O
    ## because it only fsyncs data to disk once per second.
    ## default: 1
    innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit=1
    
    ## If the value of this variable is greater than 0, the MySQL server synchronizes its binary log to disk 
    ## after every sync_binlog writes to the binary log. There is one write to the binary log per statement if autocommit is enabled, 
    ## and one write per transaction otherwise. A value of 1 is the safest choice, because in the event of a crash 
    ## you lose at most one statement or transaction from the binary log.However, it is also the slowest choice.
    ## Default: 0 (no synchronizing to disk). Set this to 1 on your master server.
    sync_binlog=1
    
    ## Background Threads
    ## InnoDB uses background threads to prefetch and store data. The default is 4 threads, but should really be 4 * # of CPU cores.
    ## Each thread can handle up to 256 pending requests, and a maximum of 64 threads may be configured.
    ## Before rushing to increase these limits, remember that they will not increase bandwidth on individual disks; although they will 
    ## potentially help to alleviate bottlenecks in high-load environments, where data is spread across multiple disks.
    ## Then Pending reads and Pending writes columns of the InnoDB monitor's output can help you judge if the thread concurrency would benefit
    ## from being raised. Recalling that each thread can queue up to 256 requests, if you see more than 256 x [number of threads] pending reads or writes,
    ## this will clearly cause a bottleneck, and a gradual increase in the number of read/write threads would be beneficial.
    ## Range: 1 ~ 64, Default: 4
    innodb_read_io_threads=32
    innodb_write_io_threads=32
    
    ## innodb_io_capacity enables you to specify the number of I/O operations per second that the disk subsystem can handle.
    ## This should be set as the maximum amount of IOPS that your system has. It sets a max cap on how much I/O that InnoDB can use.
    ## IOPS available from Disk: 
    ## Drive Type              Value
    ## Enterprise SSD          50,000
    ## Single Consumer SSD     10,000
    ## 4 Drives in a RAID-10   5000
    ## Single 7200RPM Drive    200
    ##
    ## Range: 100~2**64-1, Default: 200
    innodb_io_capacity = 5000
    
    ## Enables InnoDB support for two-phase commit in XA transactions, causing an extra disk flush for transaction preparation. 
    ## This setting is the default. The XA mechanism is used internally and is essential for any server that has its binary log 
    ## turned on and is accepting changes to its data from more than one thread. If you turn it off, transactions can be written 
    ## to the binary log in a different order from the one in which the live database is committing them. This can produce different 
    ## data when the binary log is replayed in disaster recovery or on a replication slave
    ## Recommend 0 on read-only slave, disable xa to negate extra disk flush
    innodb_support_xa = 1
    
    ## By default, InnoDB stores all data twice, first to the doublewrite buffer, and then to the actual data files.
    ## For benchmarks or cases when top performance is needed rather than concern for data integrity or possible failures,
    ## doublewrite can be turn off.
    #skip-innodb-doublewrite
    
    ## The number of background threads devoted to the InnoDB purge operation.
    ## 0 (the default): the purge operation is performed as part of the master thread.
    ## 1 : Running the purge operation in its own thread can reduce internal contention within InnoDB, improving scalability.
    ## In theory, a separate thread should improve performance. But in many situations, it simply shifts
    ## the bottleneck from one place (queue in the thread) to another (disk contention).
    ##innodb_purge_threads = 0
    
    ## read-ahead Requests
    ## In InnoDB, memory pages are grouped in extents, where an extent consists of 64 consecutive pages. If more than a certain number of pages
    ## from an extent exists in the buffer cache, MySQL preloads the remaining pages in the extent.
    ## This variable controls the number of sequential pages in an extent that must be accessed (and be in the buffer cache) to trigger a read-ahead 
    ## for the remaining pages. When the last page of a sequence falls at the end of an extent, InnoDB will also read in the whole of the next extent.
    ## Monitor via : mysql> show status like '%ahead%';
    ## or checking "Pages read ahead, evicted without access, Random read ahead" in BUFFER POOL AND MEMORY via "mysql> show engine innodb status G"
    ## Range: 0 ~64, default: 56                                                                                                                                                   
    #innodb_read_ahead_threshold = 56
    
    ## The main thread in InnoDB tries to write pages from the buffer pool so that the percentage of dirty (not yet written) pages will not exceed this value
    ## Range: 0~99, Default:75
    #innodb_max_dirty_pages_pct = 90
    
    ## Adaptive Flushing
    ## With adaptive flushing, InnoDB attempts to calculate the rate at which flushing needs to occur, based on the number of dirty pages and
    ## the rate at which they have historically been flushed. This allows the master thread to perform flushing based on workload at a much more constant rate,
    ## eliminating I/O spikes in disk usage. Adjusting the flush rate dynamically is intended to avoid bursts of I/O activity.
    ## Default: ON
    #innodb_adaptive_flushing = 1
    
    ## The maximum delay between polls for a spin lock.
    ## The os_waits column of the SHOW ENGINE INNODB MUTEX output shows the number of times that InnoDB failed to acquire a lock through polling, 
    ## and fell back on the operating system's thread sleeping. Rapidly increasing values here (remember that you're usually interested in the rate of increase,
    ## rather than the absolute figure) could signify that the mutex is causing a bottleneck, and it may be worth experimenting with 
    ## raising innodb_spin_wait_delay in the hope that less threads need to be sent to sleep.
    ## Range:0~4294967295(2**32-1), Default: 6
    #innodb_spin_wait_delay = 6
    
    ###############################
    ### InnoDB Memory resources ###
    ###############################
    
    ## The size in bytes of the buffer that InnoDB uses to write to the log files on disk.
    ## If you have big transactions, making the log buffer larger saves disk I/O
    ## default:8M, General recomendations range: 8M~256M
    innodb_log_buffer_size = 128M
    
    ## The size in bytes of the memory buffer InnoDB uses to cache data and indexes of its tables. 
    ## The larger you set this value, the less disk I/O is needed to access data in tables. On a dedicated database server, 
    ## you may set this to up to 90% of the machine physical memory size
    ## When the size of the buffer pool is greater than 1GB, setting innodb_buffer_pool_instances to a value 
    ## greater than 1 can improve the scalability on a busy server.
    ## 64GB -> 57GB, 32GB -> 28GB, 16GB -> 14GB, 8GB -> 7GB.
    ## On a read-heavy workload, if you use iostat and see that you have a very high utilization or service time, 
    ## you can usually add more memory (and increase innodb_buffer_pool_size) to improve performance.
    ## On a write-heavy workload (i.e., MySQL Master), it's far less important.
    ## Default: 128MB
    ##
    innodb_buffer_pool_size = 57000M
    
    ## InnoDB uses a modified LRU for the buffer pool, based on an MIS. With the InnoDB buffer pool, 
    ## the default division is for the cold list (containing less frequently accessed items) to occupy 37 percent
    ## of the pool size, with the hot list (frequently accessed items) taking the remaining space.
    ## For applications that occasionally access large tables, it often make sense to reduce innodb_old_blocks_pct,
    ## to prevent this less commonly accessed data from being cached so heavily. Conversely, for small,frequently accessed tables, 
    ## raising innodb_old_blocks_pct increases the likelihood that this data will be kept in memory for future use.
    ## Default: 37 (3/8 of the pool), Range: 5~95
    #innodb_old_blocks_pct = 37
    
    ## As with other MIS algorithms, new pages are inserted at the top of the cold list, making them prime candidates for promotion to the hot list.
    ## innodb_old_blocks_time specifies how long in milliseconds (ms) a block inserted into the old sublist must stay there after its first access 
    ## before it can be moved to the new sublist. The default value is 0: A block inserted into the old sublist moves immediately to the new sublist
    ## the first time it is accessed, no matter how soon after insertion the access occurs.If the value is greater than 0, blocks remain
    ## in the old sublist until an access occurs at least that many ms after the first access.
    ## Monitor BUFFER POOL AND MEMORY via 'show engine innodb status'.
    ## 'youngs (not-youngs)/s' shows the rate (in seconds) at which pages in the cold list have or have not been promoted to the hot list.
    ## A low number of youngs/s shows that few pages are promoted to the hot list. In an application that regularly accesses the same data, 
    ## this would suggest that innodb_old_blocks_time be lowered. Conversely, a high number of youngs/s on applications that perform 
    ## frequent large scans would suggest that innodb_old_blocks_time be raised.
    #innodb_old_blocks_time = 0
    
    ## The size in bytes of a memory pool InnoDB uses to store data dictionary information and other internal data structures.
    ## The more tables you have in your application, the more memory you need to allocate here. If InnoDB runs out of memory in this pool,
    ## it starts to allocate memory from the operating system and writes warning messages to the MySQL error log.
    ## Default: 8M, Typical setting: 16M ~ 128M
    innodb_additional_mem_pool_size = 20M
    
    ## Using Multiple Buffer Pools,  New as of MySQL 5.5
    ## On busy systems with large buffer pools, there will typically be many threads accessing data simultaneously
    ## from the buffer pool, and this contention can be a bottleneck. Since MySQL 5.5, InnoDB enables multiple buffer pools to be created.
    ## Each is managed independently and maintains its own LRU and mutual exclusion (mutex).
    ## The innodb_buffer_pool_instances configuration option is used to control this and takes a value between 1 (the default) and 64. 
    ## Because the use of multiple pools is intended only for high-end systems, this option has no effect when innodb_buffer_pool_size is lower than 1 GB.
    ## The main benefit of changing this from the default value is to increase concurrency when using larger buffer pools
    ## that have a high rate of data being changed. MySQL recommends setting this to a value such that each buffer pool instance
    ## remains at a minimum size of 1 GB or more.
    ## Range: 1~64, Default: 1
    innodb_buffer_pool_instances = 4
    
    ## Whether InnoDB performs change buffering, an optimization that delays write operations to secondary indexes 
    ## so that the I/O operations can be performed sequentially. The permitted values are: 
    ## none : do not buffer any operations
    ## inserts: Caches insert operations only
    ## deletes: Caches delete operations; strictly speaking, the writes that mark index records for later deletion during a purge operation
    ## changes: Caches both inserts and deletes
    ## purges: Caches purges only, the writes when deleted index entries are finally garbage-collected
    ## all: buffer insert, delete-marking, and purge operations(physical deletion). This is the default value.
    #innodb_change_buffering = all
    
    ## Adaptive hashing is a feature of InnoDB designed to improve performance on machines with large amounts of physical memory.
    ## This value controlls whether the InnoDB adaptive hash index is enabled or disabled. The adaptive hash index feature is useful for some workloads, 
    ## and not for others; conduct benchmarks with it both enabled and disabled, using realistic workloads
    ## Default: ON
    #innodb_adaptive_hash_index = 1
    
    ## Whether InnoDB uses the operating system memory allocator (ON) or its own (OFF).
    ## The default value is ON.
    #innodb_use_sys_malloc = 1
    
    
    ##################################
    ### InnoDB Concurrency settings ###
    ##################################
    
    ## This limits the number of threads that InnoDB can perform concurrently at a given time. Once the number of threads reaches this limit, 
    ## additional threads are placed into a wait state within a FIFO queue for execution. Threads waiting for locks are not counted 
    ## in the number of concurrently executing threads. Setting it to 0 means 
    ## that it's infinite and is a good value for Percona 5.5.
    ## For non-Percona setups, a recommended value is 2 times the number of CPUs plus the number of disks.
    ## Range: 0~1000, Default: 0
    #innodb_thread_concurrency = 0
    
    ## The number of threads that can commit at the same time. A value of 0 (the default) permits
    ## any number of transactions to commit simultaneously
    ## Default: 0
    #innodb_commit_concurrency = 0
    
    ##################################
    ### InnoDB Timeout settings ###
    ##################################
    
    ## The timeout in seconds an InnoDB transaction waits for a row lock before giving up.
    ## When a lock wait timeout occurs, the current statement is rolled back (not the entire transaction).
    ## To have the entire transaction roll back, start the server with the --innodb_rollback_on_timeout option
    ## You might decrease this value for highly interactive applications or OLTP systems, 
    ## to display user feedback quickly or put the update into a queue for processing later. 
    ## You might increase this value for long-running back-end operations, such as a transform step 
    ## in a data warehouse that waits for other large insert or update operations to finish.
    ## innodb_lock_wait_timeout applies to InnoDB row locks only. The lock wait timeout value does
    ## not apply to deadlocks, because InnoDB detects them immediately and rolls back one of 
    ## the deadlocked transactions. 
    ## Default: 50
    innodb_lock_wait_timeout = 50
    
    ## In MySQL 5.5, InnoDB rolls back only the last statement on a transaction timeout by default.
    ## If this configuration option is enabled, a transaction timeout causes InnoDB to abort and 
    ## roll back the entire transaction.
    ## Setting to 1 can avoid error 1052 in MySQL Slave.
    ## Default: 0
    #innodb_rollback_on_timeout = 1
    
    
    [mysqldump]
    quick
    max_allowed_packet = 16M
    
    [mysql]
    no-auto-rehash
    # Remove the next comment character if you are not familiar with SQL
    #safe-updates
    
    [myisamchk]
    key_buffer_size = 20M
    sort_buffer_size = 20M
    read_buffer = 2M
    write_buffer = 2M
    
    [mysqlhotcopy]
    interactive-timeout
    

    Posted in Performance analysis & tuningPerformance Optimization.

    高负载PHP-FPM调优

    高负载PHP调优

    针对PHP的Linux调优

    • 调整文件描述符限制
      # ulimit -n 1000000
      # vi /etc/security/limits.conf
      
      # Setting Shell Limits for File Descriptors
      *  soft nofile 1000000
      *  hard nofile 1000000
      
    • 禁止PHP代码文件所在分区的文件系统访问时间更新
      # vi /etc/fstab
      

      比如PHP代码所在分区:

      /dev/sdb1   ext4    errors=remount-ro  0  1
      

      修改为:

      /dev/sdb1   ext4    noatime,nodiratime,errors=remount-ro  0  1
      
    • 将临时文件存储到tmpfs

      在需要处理大量的小图片(比如:用户头像)上传的时候,使用内存文件系统tmpfs来存储,可以减少一些I/O的开销.但是如果用户是上传非常大的文件(比如:视频)的话,就不适合使用tmpfs.

      # vi /etc/fstab
      
      tmpfs                   /tmp                    tmpfs   defaults,nosuid,noatime 0 0
      

    PHP配置调优

    • php.ini配置调优
      # vi php-app.ini
      
      [PHP]
      engine = On
      expose_php = Off
      
      max_execution_time = 5
      memory_limit = 256M
      error_reporting = E_ALL & ~E_DEPRECATED
      display_errors = Off
      display_startup_errors = Off
      html_errors = Off
      default_socket_timeout = 5
      
      file_uploads = On
      upload_tmp_dir = /tmp/php
      upload_max_filesize = 50M
      post_max_size = 50M
      max_file_uploads = 20
      
      date.timezone = 'Asia/Shanghai'
      

      注意这里设置max_execution_time只有5秒.对于一个快的web应用来说,我们真的不想要web应用里有任何长时间运行的web请求,一个web请求持续超过5秒通常意味着有些东西出了问题.我们的目标是页面响应在300-500ms(微秒)之内.

    • PHP-FPM配置调优
      # vi php-fpm.conf
      
      [my_app]
      ;FastCGI/PHP-FPM使用UNIX Sockets
      listen = /data/my_app/tmp/php.sock
      listen.backlog = 300
      user = www
      group = www
      pm = dynamic
      ;估算pm.max_children = (MAX_MEMORY - 500MB) / 20MB
      pm.max_children = 100
      ;推荐为最大的pm.max_children的%10
      pm.start_servers = 10
      pm.min_spare_servers = 5
      pm.max_spare_servers = 15
      pm.max_requests = 1000
      pm.status_path = /php_status
      
      request_terminate_timeout = 0
      request_slowlog_timeout = 0
      slowlog = /data/my_app/logs/slow.log
      

    Posted in Performance analysis & tuning.

    高负载Linux调优

    高负载Linux调优

    • 调整内核参数

      调整内核参数:

      # vi /etc/sysctl.conf
      
      # tells the Kernel it's ok if services bind to non-existant IP ADDR
      # net.ipv4.ip_nonlocal_bind = 1
      
      # defines the size of the kernel queue for accepting new connections, Defaults to 128
      net.core.somaxconn = 40000
      
      # Maximum number of remembered connection requests, Defaults to 1024
      net.ipv4.tcp_max_syn_backlog = 40000
      
      # Tuning TCP Ports, increase the range to allow for more connections. 
      # The number of avaliable ports limits the number of simultanious open connections.
      net.ipv4.ip_local_port_range = 1024 65535
      
      # Tell kernel to reuse faster the connection in TIME_WAIT
      net.ipv4.tcp_tw_reuse = 1
      net.ipv4.tcp_tw_recycle = 1
      
      # Resetting the File Descriptors, the maximum number of open files allowed per process
      fs.file-max = 1000000
      

      使设置生效:

      # sysctl -p
      
    • 调整最大打开文件描述符限制
      调整文件描述符限制:
      # ulimit -n 1000000
      # vi /etc/security/limits.conf
      
      # Setting Shell Limits for File Descriptors
      *  soft nofile 1000000
      *  hard nofile 1000000
      

      使用PAM模块限制资源:

      # vi /etc/pam.d/login
      
      session  required  pam_limits.so
      

    Posted in Performance analysis & tuning.

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  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/virusolf/p/4329214.html
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