freeradius 1.4 on CentOS 4.4 How can I verify the number of threads? I only see one process with
ps aux | grep radiusd I could have sworn I used to see each thread with 0.9 and I am concerned that the threads are not starting correctly as defined in radiusd.conf: thread pool { start_servers = 5 max_servers = 32 min_spare_servers = 3 max_spare_servers = 10 max_requests_per_server = 0 }
-- Regards, Andrew Long
On Monday 19 February 2007 13:13, Andrew Long wrote:
freeradius 1.4 on CentOS 4.4 How can I verify the number of threads? I only see one process with
ps aux | grep radiusd
I could have sworn I used to see each thread with 0.9 and I am concerned that the threads are not starting correctly as defined in radiusd.conf: thread pool { start_servers = 5 max_servers = 32 min_spare_servers = 3 max_spare_servers = 10 max_requests_per_server = 0 }
http://wiki.freeradius.org/FAQ#I_see_only_one_radiusd_in_the_process_list.__... Freshly added to the Wiki FAQ as this has been covered countless times on the users list. Kevin Bonner
On Mon, Feb 19, 2007 at 02:01:53PM -0500, Kevin Bonner wrote:
On Monday 19 February 2007 13:13, Andrew Long wrote:
freeradius 1.4 on CentOS 4.4 How can I verify the number of threads? I only see one process with
ps aux | grep radiusd
I could have sworn I used to see each thread with 0.9 and I am concerned that the threads are not starting correctly as defined in radiusd.conf: thread pool { start_servers = 5 max_servers = 32 min_spare_servers = 3 max_spare_servers = 10 max_requests_per_server = 0 }
http://wiki.freeradius.org/FAQ#I_see_only_one_radiusd_in_the_process_list.__...
Freshly added to the Wiki FAQ as this has been covered countless times on the users list.
Kevin, it may be better to add a bit more info to wiki, since combining SysV and BSD flags of ps is usually not permitted and -H flag is not recognized by older versions of ps. What about this: For older versions of ps, use: - ps -efm - ps auxm For newer versions of ps, you may prefer to use: - ps -efL - ps auxH th.
On Tuesday 20 February 2007 03:10, Tomas Hoger wrote:
Freshly added to the Wiki FAQ as this has been covered countless times on the users list.
Kevin, it may be better to add a bit more info to wiki, since combining SysV and BSD flags of ps is usually not permitted and -H flag is not recognized by older versions of ps.
What about this:
For older versions of ps, use:
- ps -efm - ps auxm
For newer versions of ps, you may prefer to use:
- ps -efL - ps auxH
th.
Sounds fine with me. As it is a wiki, feel free to register an account and make that change. I only included the ps versions I had available at the time. -Kevin
participants (3)
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Andrew Long -
Kevin Bonner -
Tomas Hoger