Avoid oom-killer by limiting simultaneous users

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I'm trying to avoid a situation where I'm running out of ram resulting in the server locking up (oom-killer).



To achieve this I'm trying to update my Amazon Linux AMI instance to limit the number of simultaneous connections.



I have Apache 2.4 and following this guide, added the following to my httpd.conf:



MaxRequestWorkers = 112
ServerLimit = 112


However this results in the following warning on httpd restart:




"MaxRequestWorkers takes one argument, Maximum number of children
alive at the same time"











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  • 1




    nginx use significantly less ram than apache, nginx can easily handle 5,000 connections with less ram than it takes apache to handle 10 connections >.> you could try switching to nginx and see if that helps. - help.dreamhost.com/hc/en-us/articles/…
    – hanshenrik
    Nov 20 at 16:38















up vote
5
down vote

favorite
1












I'm trying to avoid a situation where I'm running out of ram resulting in the server locking up (oom-killer).



To achieve this I'm trying to update my Amazon Linux AMI instance to limit the number of simultaneous connections.



I have Apache 2.4 and following this guide, added the following to my httpd.conf:



MaxRequestWorkers = 112
ServerLimit = 112


However this results in the following warning on httpd restart:




"MaxRequestWorkers takes one argument, Maximum number of children
alive at the same time"











share|improve this question

















  • 1




    nginx use significantly less ram than apache, nginx can easily handle 5,000 connections with less ram than it takes apache to handle 10 connections >.> you could try switching to nginx and see if that helps. - help.dreamhost.com/hc/en-us/articles/…
    – hanshenrik
    Nov 20 at 16:38













up vote
5
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
5
down vote

favorite
1






1





I'm trying to avoid a situation where I'm running out of ram resulting in the server locking up (oom-killer).



To achieve this I'm trying to update my Amazon Linux AMI instance to limit the number of simultaneous connections.



I have Apache 2.4 and following this guide, added the following to my httpd.conf:



MaxRequestWorkers = 112
ServerLimit = 112


However this results in the following warning on httpd restart:




"MaxRequestWorkers takes one argument, Maximum number of children
alive at the same time"











share|improve this question













I'm trying to avoid a situation where I'm running out of ram resulting in the server locking up (oom-killer).



To achieve this I'm trying to update my Amazon Linux AMI instance to limit the number of simultaneous connections.



I have Apache 2.4 and following this guide, added the following to my httpd.conf:



MaxRequestWorkers = 112
ServerLimit = 112


However this results in the following warning on httpd restart:




"MaxRequestWorkers takes one argument, Maximum number of children
alive at the same time"








apache-2.4






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asked Nov 20 at 13:10









Dan382

1435




1435







  • 1




    nginx use significantly less ram than apache, nginx can easily handle 5,000 connections with less ram than it takes apache to handle 10 connections >.> you could try switching to nginx and see if that helps. - help.dreamhost.com/hc/en-us/articles/…
    – hanshenrik
    Nov 20 at 16:38













  • 1




    nginx use significantly less ram than apache, nginx can easily handle 5,000 connections with less ram than it takes apache to handle 10 connections >.> you could try switching to nginx and see if that helps. - help.dreamhost.com/hc/en-us/articles/…
    – hanshenrik
    Nov 20 at 16:38








1




1




nginx use significantly less ram than apache, nginx can easily handle 5,000 connections with less ram than it takes apache to handle 10 connections >.> you could try switching to nginx and see if that helps. - help.dreamhost.com/hc/en-us/articles/…
– hanshenrik
Nov 20 at 16:38





nginx use significantly less ram than apache, nginx can easily handle 5,000 connections with less ram than it takes apache to handle 10 connections >.> you could try switching to nginx and see if that helps. - help.dreamhost.com/hc/en-us/articles/…
– hanshenrik
Nov 20 at 16:38











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The tutorial you followed has a pretty blatant error. Apache directives do not have an = character between the directive name and value.



The directives should read:



MaxRequestWorkers 112
ServerLimit 112


Keep in mind that this isn't likely to help all that much. The first thing you should do is switch to the event MPM (and php-fpm for PHP usage). If you are still using the 25 year old prefork MPM you are sacrificing a lot of performance and memory for little good reason. Just making this switch is likely to reduce your OOM issues while increasing performance dramatically.






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    up vote
    15
    down vote













    The tutorial you followed has a pretty blatant error. Apache directives do not have an = character between the directive name and value.



    The directives should read:



    MaxRequestWorkers 112
    ServerLimit 112


    Keep in mind that this isn't likely to help all that much. The first thing you should do is switch to the event MPM (and php-fpm for PHP usage). If you are still using the 25 year old prefork MPM you are sacrificing a lot of performance and memory for little good reason. Just making this switch is likely to reduce your OOM issues while increasing performance dramatically.






    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      15
      down vote













      The tutorial you followed has a pretty blatant error. Apache directives do not have an = character between the directive name and value.



      The directives should read:



      MaxRequestWorkers 112
      ServerLimit 112


      Keep in mind that this isn't likely to help all that much. The first thing you should do is switch to the event MPM (and php-fpm for PHP usage). If you are still using the 25 year old prefork MPM you are sacrificing a lot of performance and memory for little good reason. Just making this switch is likely to reduce your OOM issues while increasing performance dramatically.






      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        15
        down vote










        up vote
        15
        down vote









        The tutorial you followed has a pretty blatant error. Apache directives do not have an = character between the directive name and value.



        The directives should read:



        MaxRequestWorkers 112
        ServerLimit 112


        Keep in mind that this isn't likely to help all that much. The first thing you should do is switch to the event MPM (and php-fpm for PHP usage). If you are still using the 25 year old prefork MPM you are sacrificing a lot of performance and memory for little good reason. Just making this switch is likely to reduce your OOM issues while increasing performance dramatically.






        share|improve this answer












        The tutorial you followed has a pretty blatant error. Apache directives do not have an = character between the directive name and value.



        The directives should read:



        MaxRequestWorkers 112
        ServerLimit 112


        Keep in mind that this isn't likely to help all that much. The first thing you should do is switch to the event MPM (and php-fpm for PHP usage). If you are still using the 25 year old prefork MPM you are sacrificing a lot of performance and memory for little good reason. Just making this switch is likely to reduce your OOM issues while increasing performance dramatically.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 20 at 13:17









        Michael Hampton

        162k26299612




        162k26299612



























             

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