Boa tarde senhores.
Queria saber qual o motivo de depois de muitas requisições o Mikrotik apresenta nos status timeouts, mas depois continua normalmente a aceitar as requisições.
Alguns pontos:
- Por exemplo, em uma RB tem "148749 Requests", "149130 Accepts", "452 Resends" e "4 Timeouts".
- Nossa rede tem 5 mil clientes e o ping das RBs não passam de 10ms.
- O servidor onde foi instalado o Mk-Auth tem 12 processadores Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU X5670 @ 2.93GHz, 6GB de memória, 120GB de HD e conexão Giga. Acredito que falta de recursos não deve ser.
Isso pode ser normal (estou querendo perfeição demais, rsrsrsrsrs) ou alguma configuração para o Mk-Auth usar estes recursos?
Respostas
Lembrando que eu iniciei o radius com o comando "freeradius -X".
Obrigado desde já.
Muito depende do banco de dados. Alguns parâmetros no acerto do MySQL — /etc/mysql/my.conf — podem fazer a diferença.
Recursos como o memcached ajudam a manter dados muitos usados na memória. Creio que existe um módulo memcached para o Freeradius.
Este é meu arquivo my.cnf:
[client]
port = 3306
socket = /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
# Here is entries for some specific programs
# The following values assume you have at least 32M ram
# This was formally known as [safe_mysqld]. Both versions are currently parsed.
[mysqld_safe]
socket = /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
nice = 0
[mysqld]
# Basic Settings
user = mysql
pid-file = /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid
socket = /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
port = 3306
basedir = /usr
datadir = /var/lib/mysql
tmpdir = /tmp
lc-messages-dir = /usr/share/mysql
#set-variable = max_connections=1024
#log-slow-queries
#safe-show-database
key_buffer_size = 384M
max_allowed_packet = 16M
table_open_cache = 2048
sort_buffer_size = 8M
read_buffer_size = 2M
read_rnd_buffer_size = 8M
myisam_sort_buffer_size = 64M
thread_cache_size = 8
query_cache_size = 64M
# Try number of CPU's*2 for thread_concurrency
thread_concurrency = 32
back_log = 50
max_connections = 100
max_connect_errors = 99999
binlog_cache_size = 1M
join_buffer_size = 8M
query_cache_limit = 2M
ft_min_word_len = 4
default-storage-engine = MYISAM
thread_stack = 240K
transaction_isolation = REPEATABLE-READ
tmp_table_size = 64M
binlog_format=mixed
slow_query_log
long_query_time = 5
bulk_insert_buffer_size = 64M
# Point the following paths to a dedicated disk
#tmpdir = /tmp/
# Don't listen on a TCP/IP port at all. This can be a security enhancement,
# if all processes that need to connect to mysqld run on the same host.
# All interaction with mysqld must be made via Unix sockets or named pipes.
# Note that using this option without enabling named pipes on Windows
# (via the "enable-named-pipe" option) will render mysqld useless!
#
#skip-networking
# Replication Master Server (default)
# binary logging is required for replication
log-bin=mysql-bin
# required unique id between 1 and 2^32 - 1
# defaults to 1 if master-host is not set
# but will not function as a master if omitted
server-id = 1
# Replication Slave (comment out master section to use this)
#
# To configure this host as a replication slave, you can choose between
# two methods :
#
# 1) Use the CHANGE MASTER TO command (fully described in our manual) -
# the syntax is:
#
# CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_HOST=<host>, MASTER_PORT=<port>,
# MASTER_USER=<user>, MASTER_PASSWORD=<password> ;
#
# where you replace <host>, <user>, <password> by quoted strings and
# <port> by the master's port number (3306 by default).
#
# Example:
#
# CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_HOST='125.564.12.1', MASTER_PORT=3306,
# MASTER_USER='joe', MASTER_PASSWORD='secret';
#
# OR
#
# 2) Set the variables below. However, in case you choose this method, then
# start replication for the first time (even unsuccessfully, for example
# if you mistyped the password in master-password and the slave fails to
# connect), the slave will create a master.info file, and any later
# change in this file to the variables' values below will be ignored and
# overridden by the content of the master.info file, unless you shutdown
# the slave server, delete master.info and restart the slaver server.
# For that reason, you may want to leave the lines below untouched
# (commented) and instead use CHANGE MASTER TO (see above)
#
# required unique id between 2 and 2^32 - 1
# (and different from the master)
# defaults to 2 if master-host is set
# but will not function as a slave if omitted
#server-id = 2
#
# The replication master for this slave - required
#master-host = <hostname>
#
# The username the slave will use for authentication when connecting
# to the master - required
#master-user = <username>
#
# The password the slave will authenticate with when connecting to
# the master - required
#master-password = <password>
#
# The port the master is listening on.
# optional - defaults to 3306
#master-port = <port>
#
# binary logging - not required for slaves, but recommended
#log-bin=mysql-bin
#
# binary logging format - mixed recommended
#binlog_format=mixed
# Uncomment the following if you are using InnoDB tables
#innodb_data_home_dir = /var/lib/mysql
#innodb_data_file_path = ibdata1:2000M;ibdata2:10M:autoextend
#innodb_log_group_home_dir = /var/lib/mysql
# You can set .._buffer_pool_size up to 50 - 80 %
# of RAM but beware of setting memory usage too high
#innodb_buffer_pool_size = 384M
#innodb_additional_mem_pool_size = 20M
# Set .._log_file_size to 25 % of buffer pool size
#innodb_log_file_size = 100M
#innodb_log_buffer_size = 8M
#innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit = 1
#innodb_lock_wait_timeout = 50
# this is only for embedded server
[embedded]
[myisamchk]
key_buffer_size = 512M
sort_buffer_size = 512M
read_buffer = 8M
write_buffer = 8M
[mysqld_safe]
# Increase the amount of open files allowed per process. Warning: Make
# sure you have set the global system limit high enough! The high value
# is required for a large number of opened tables
open-files-limit = 8192
# This group is only read by MariaDB-5.5 servers.
# If you use the same .cnf file for MariaDB of different versions,
# use this group for options that older servers don't understand
[mysqld-5.5]
# These two groups are only read by MariaDB servers, not by MySQL.
# If you use the same .cnf file for MySQL and MariaDB,
# you can put MariaDB-only options here
[mariadb]
[mariadb-5.5]
Tente aumentar o valor de
query_cache_size
Faça a comparação antes e depois com:
show status like '%cache%';
até que é pouco esse timeout amigo, as vezes um pq travada de um swicth pode causa isso, acho que não é motivo de preocupação...
Otimizando o cache do banco de dados as respostas ficam mais rápidas. Uma ferramenta muita boa para tunning é o MySQLTuner.pl. Eu recomendo.
Aumentar o Timeout para o máximo (10.000 ms) pode ajudar.
Uma dúvida, Pedro.
Aquele tablespace InnoDB é usado pelo MK-AUTH?
no mk-auth antigos era o MyISAM, mais agora estou trocando para o XtraDB que é um InooDB melhorado...
Marco de Freitas disse:
É uma novidade do MariaDB?
Pedro Filho disse:
sim, a nova ISO usa MariaDB no lugar do MySQL: www.goo.gl/PXErG
Marco de Freitas disse: