swiftonfile/etc/object-server.conf-gluster
Peter Portante e94cf06f87 Fix typ-o for default network chunk size
Change-Id: I1d9ac223f3aede531fba86e213e9dd4f48739f0a
Signed-off-by: Peter Portante <peter.portante@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/5766
Reviewed-by: Luis Pabon <lpabon@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Luis Pabon <lpabon@redhat.com>
2013-09-05 09:30:31 -07:00

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[DEFAULT]
devices = /mnt/gluster-object
#
# Once you are confident that your startup processes will always have your
# gluster volumes properly mounted *before* the object-server workers start,
# you can *consider* setting this value to "false" to reduce the per-request
# overhead it can incur.
mount_check = true
bind_port = 6010
#
# Maximum number of clients one worker can process simultaneously (it will
# actually accept N + 1). Setting this to one (1) will only handle one request
# at a time, without accepting another request concurrently. By increasing the
# number of workers to a much higher value, one can prevent slow file system
# operations for one request from starving other requests.
max_clients = 1024
#
# If not doing the above, setting this value initially to match the number of
# CPUs is a good starting point for determining the right value.
workers = 1
# Override swift's default behaviour for fallocate.
disable_fallocate = true
[pipeline:main]
pipeline = object-server
[app:object-server]
use = egg:gluster_swift#object
user = root
log_facility = LOG_LOCAL2
log_level = WARN
#
# For performance, after ensuring things are running in a stable manner, you
# can turn off normal request logging for the object server to reduce the
# per-request overhead and unclutter the log files. Warnings and errors will
# still be logged.
log_requests = off
#
# Adjust this value to match the stripe width of the underlying storage array
# (not the stripe element size). This will provide a reasonable starting point
# for tuning this value.
disk_chunk_size = 65536
#
# Adjust this value match whatever is set for the disk_chunk_size initially.
# This will provide a reasonable starting point for tuning this value.
network_chunk_size = 65536