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LinkBack | Outils de la discussion |
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#1 |
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I m creating a capacity sheet for our dns servers and wondered if
anyone has DNS capacity stats for Win2k or 2k3, in particular, maximum number of zones supported. |
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#2 |
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Hébergeur: |
<Brandon.S.Lay@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1163528312.104281.191040@m73g2000cwd.googlegr oups.com... >I m creating a capacity sheet for our dns servers and wondered if > anyone has DNS capacity stats for Win2k or 2k3, in particular, maximum > number of zones supported. How big is your domain or largest sites? It is doubtful that you will be able to overrun any of this unless you are a) a GIANT company or b) an ISP with many thousands of (DNS zone) customers. Only as an ISP (or DNS registrar) are you likely to have enough zones to even CONSIDER such limits because in any realistic enterprise (non-ISP) situation the zones will be in hierarchies and so each DNS server will not be required to hold or even know directly about every domain/zone -- only the "tops of trees" and immediate children will be required on each DNS server. (This is why the Internet can contain many millions of zones without the 13 or so root servers becoming overloaded.) Even for large companies the physical distribution of the computers on different LANs (separated by WANs) generally dictates adding DNS servers before the actual number of clients or requests become a problem. Any such "stats" will be dependent on the actual pattern of usage, and I find that collecting such info is usually a waste of time. And most of the time you are going to want to use DNS AD Integration which changes any such requirements as well. Generally, you measure the performance and add more DNS servers as performance drops below prescibed/promised thresholds (e.g., service level contracts.) -- Herb Martin, MCSE, MVP Accelerated MCSE http://www.LearnQuick.Com [phone number on web site] |
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#3 |
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In news:1163528312.104281.191040@m73g2000cwd.googlegr oups.com,
Brandon.S.Lay@gmail.com <Brandon.S.Lay@gmail.com> stated, which I commented on below: > I m creating a capacity sheet for our dns servers and wondered if > anyone has DNS capacity stats for Win2k or 2k3, in particular, maximum > number of zones supported. 10's of thousands. I'm sure there are ISPs out there using Windwos DNS that can attest this. Of course the server would need to be beefed up to support such a scenario with lot's of RAM, fast fault tolerant harddrives, gigabit connections, etc, and of course we need to also consider how many requests per second, and realistically, if the internet connection will handle the requests. We must also take into account EDNS0 support (whether routers support it). If not supported, it will decrease performance. You can write a script to create 10,000 zones, then create a script (or use some of the tools below) to nail the server with concurrent requests while watching Performance Monitor configured to log DNS data only. Curious, how many zones are you considering to support? Some tools and more info below... Load Testing Monitors - Antara.net Performance Counters http://www.mercury.com/us/products/p...rs/antara.html Avalanche SmartBits (numerous tests and load simulators) http://www.spirentcom.com/documents/664.pdf Agilent NetworkTester (not cheap) - will test numerous types of apps, including DNS http://advanced.comms.agilent.com/networktester/ Pv6-draft-ietf-dnsext-message-size-04.txt [Explains UDP equals increased performance] http://www.greatplains.net/activitie...ge-size-04.txt Nnameservers: BIND and NSD Perf Testing https://www.centr.org/docs/2006/10/nameserver-perf.pdf List of other types of testing tools: http://www.softwareqatest.com/qatweb1.html -- Ace Innovative IT Concepts, Inc (IITCI) Willow Grove, PA This posting is provided "AS-IS" with no warranties or guarantees and confers no rights. Ace Fekay, MCSE 2003 & 2000, MCSA 2003 & 2000, MCSE+I, MCT, MVP Microsoft MVP - Directory Services Microsoft Certified Trainer Having difficulty reading or finding responses to your post? Instead of the website you're using, I suggest to use OEx (Outlook Express or any other newsreader), and configure a news account, pointing to news.microsoft.com. This is a direct link to the Microsoft Public Newsgroups. It is FREE and requires NO ISP's Usenet account. OEx allows you to easily find, track threads, cross-post, sort by date, poster's name, watched threads or subject. It's easy: How to Configure OEx for Internet News http://support.microsoft.com/?id=171164 Infinite Diversities in Infinite Combinations Assimilation Imminent. Resistance is Futile "Very funny Scotty. Now, beam down my clothes." The only constant in life is change... |
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