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Posted by Brent Baisley on 02/24/05 16:11
I noticed you have your error_reporting level set really high (2039),
which is pretty close to everything. That may be fine on a development
server, but I wouldn't set it that high on a production server. I'd be
curious what you log looks like. Perhaps this is causing your slowness,
perhaps not.
Also, you seem to use the short open tag style '<?'. Not that it's
causing your problem, but for compatibility you should probably use the
long style '<?php'.
On Feb 24, 2005, at 4:54 AM, Gerard wrote:
> Hello people,
>
> Recently, one of my webservers became rather slow. At first we thought
> it
> was the MySQL backend, but when logged in on MySQL using the command
> line
> tool over SSH, it runs as smooth as ever.
> Static content (normal html pages) also load without delay. It seems
> that
> the bottleneck is PHP itself.
> For the sake of comparison, I created 2 test pages:
>
> http://www.debuginc.com/test.html
> http://www.debuginc.com/test.php
>
> Everyone I asked says that the PHP page takes over 5 seconds to load
> while
> the HTML one instantly displays. The only code in the PHP page is <?
> echo
> 'hello world'; ?>. No MySQL stuff, so that eliminates the initial idea
> of
> MySQL causing the slowness.
>
> Nevertheless, it IS slow and I have no idea why or where to start
> looking.
> The phpinfo() can be found on www.debuginc.com/info.php. Any help or
> hints
> are highly appreciated.
>
> Another interesting note; this problem started a couple of days ago
> without
> any changes in the config or anything. At first I upped the amount of
> connections Apache would accept, but it soon turned out that was not
> the
> problem.
>
> Thanks,
> - Gerard
>
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>
>
>
--
Brent Baisley
Systems Architect
Landover Associates, Inc.
Search & Advisory Services for Advanced Technology Environments
p: 212.759.6400/800.759.0577
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