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  3. ADMIN: Update on What's Going On

ADMIN: Update on What's Going On

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  • F Frank Deo

    Hi Chris, This may be my major technogeek side talking, but I once saw an article on Microsoft.com describing the "backoffice" of the microsoft website. The server farm, os, etc...they even had pics of the server room. Any chance we can get an article describing what the CP farm looks like from a server admin's point of view? The article on MS also had pages served, total content, bandwidth per day, etc. Basically all the geek info on what microsoft.com does. Cheers, and good luck on the upgrades. Frank "Keyboard Error - Press F1 to Continue"

    S Offline
    S Offline
    Shog9 0
    wrote on last edited by
    #10

    Frank Deo wrote: The server farm, os, etc...they even had pics of the server room. This... especially the picture (scroll down)... looks rather out of date now... :laugh: How do you move in a world of fog, That's always changing things? Makes me wish that i could be a dog, When i see the price that you pay.

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • F Frank Deo

      Hi Chris, This may be my major technogeek side talking, but I once saw an article on Microsoft.com describing the "backoffice" of the microsoft website. The server farm, os, etc...they even had pics of the server room. Any chance we can get an article describing what the CP farm looks like from a server admin's point of view? The article on MS also had pages served, total content, bandwidth per day, etc. Basically all the geek info on what microsoft.com does. Cheers, and good luck on the upgrades. Frank "Keyboard Error - Press F1 to Continue"

      C Offline
      C Offline
      Chris Maunder
      wrote on last edited by
      #11

      Yep - I'll definitely do a write up like that. For the moment, puzzle over this. cheers, Chris Maunder

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      • C Chris Maunder

        Yep - I'll definitely do a write up like that. For the moment, puzzle over this. cheers, Chris Maunder

        F Offline
        F Offline
        Frank Deo
        wrote on last edited by
        #12

        Cool. Can't wait. Thanks Chris. Frank "Keyboard Error - Press F1 to Continue"

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • C Chris Maunder

          Yep - I'll definitely do a write up like that. For the moment, puzzle over this. cheers, Chris Maunder

          J Offline
          J Offline
          Jon Sagara
          wrote on last edited by
          #13

          Java in 21 Days?!? What?!? :wtf:

          Jon Sagara Vegetarianism is unhealthy. Humans need protein, and lots of it. Put down those sprouts and pick up a T-bone! -- Michael Moore
          Latest Article: Breadcrumbs in ASP.NET

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          • F Frank Deo

            Hi Chris, This may be my major technogeek side talking, but I once saw an article on Microsoft.com describing the "backoffice" of the microsoft website. The server farm, os, etc...they even had pics of the server room. Any chance we can get an article describing what the CP farm looks like from a server admin's point of view? The article on MS also had pages served, total content, bandwidth per day, etc. Basically all the geek info on what microsoft.com does. Cheers, and good luck on the upgrades. Frank "Keyboard Error - Press F1 to Continue"

            K Offline
            K Offline
            Kant
            wrote on last edited by
            #14

            Frank Deo wrote: I once saw an article on Microsoft.com describing the "backoffice" of the microsoft website. The server farm, os, etc...they even had pics of the server room. http://www.microsoft.com/backstage/archives.htm[^] I would love to see the CP's backstage. All we have now is this[^] and this[^]
            Promise only what you can do. And then deliver more than what you promised.
            This signature was created by "Code Project Quoter".

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • J Jon Sagara

              Java in 21 Days?!? What?!? :wtf:

              Jon Sagara Vegetarianism is unhealthy. Humans need protein, and lots of it. Put down those sprouts and pick up a T-bone! -- Michael Moore
              Latest Article: Breadcrumbs in ASP.NET

              K Offline
              K Offline
              Kant
              wrote on last edited by
              #15

              Jon Sagara wrote: Java in 21 Days?!? What?!? Don't worry. I bet they are using that book as coffee coaster or some kind of weight support for the server machine to stop the tilting/tripping. ;)
              Promise only what you can do. And then deliver more than what you promised.
              This signature was created by "Code Project Quoter".

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              • C Chris Maunder

                Here's the latest on What's Going On: Yesterday: Someone stuck a back-hoe through one of the fibre cables of our main Telco in downtown Toronto. This affected connection times for us and many other businesses for many hours. We didn't even bother yelling at the appropriate people because they sounded stressed enough as it was. This has now been fixed. Done Today: We now have 90% of our scheduled hardware upgrades done. Some upgraded web servers to handle current load, a new content DB server, dual firewalls with automatic failover, new switches and gigabit ethernet cards for inter-server communication (we're crying over not being able to afford fibre) and new cases all round. I've also installed Port80 Software's HttpZip[^] in the hope of speeding things up for those with slower connections. PLEASE - any comments on caching issues or corrupt downloads please email me at chris@codeproject.com.. Tomorrow: We're moving to our new hosted facility that will provide us with redundant internet connections, backup power, fire, security and a nifty thumbprint scan doorway. We'll also be increasing our bandwidth capacity 10 fold and reducing the latency to the closest backbone. Should mean a nice increase in connection speed and no more bottlenecks at peak times. This will mean an outage tomorrow afternoon starting at around 1pm US Eastern Standard Time. In the works: A complete rewrite of the site. Better DB and caching utilisation, a move to Win2003 and IIS6, and increases in web, download and DB access all round. To be done: clustering of database servers and more web servers. Another mail server to handle the load. Further DB work and caching optimisations. Always happening: More servers. As many as we can afford. The pain over the past few months with slow load time, bandwidth bottlenecks, slow page access due to slow DB servers and outages caused by Things Beyond Our Control have been extremely frustrating to us and we're sure to our readers. We are working our bums off trying to improve access to CodeProject for everyone. cheers, Chris Maunder

                R Offline
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                Roger Wright
                wrote on last edited by
                #16

                Bravo, Chris, et al!!! And continuing thanks!:-D Chris Maunder wrote: Someone stuck a back-hoe through one of the fibre cables of our main Telco in downtown Toronto. We suffered the equivalent a few years ago at the Ace where I was employed - a 2500-pair line between two retail locations dependent upon a single server. I wasn't pretty, and guess who's fault it was as far as management was concerned? Yup, li'l ol' me. The backhoe operator was none other than the telco's own.:doh: Chris Maunder wrote: a nifty thumbprint scan doorway Gotta get me one of those...:cool: Will Build Nuclear Missile For Food - No Target Too Small

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                • J Jon Sagara

                  Java in 21 Days?!? What?!? :wtf:

                  Jon Sagara Vegetarianism is unhealthy. Humans need protein, and lots of it. Put down those sprouts and pick up a T-bone! -- Michael Moore
                  Latest Article: Breadcrumbs in ASP.NET

                  L Offline
                  L Offline
                  l a u r e n
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #17

                  busted!! :laugh:


                  "there is no spoon"
                  biz stuff   about me

                  R 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • C Chris Maunder

                    Yep - I'll definitely do a write up like that. For the moment, puzzle over this. cheers, Chris Maunder

                    M Offline
                    M Offline
                    Michael Dunn
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #18

                    Java? JAVA??!? :wtf: Unless it's being used as a paperweight, in which case it's ok ;) --Mike-- Personal stuff:: Ericahist | Homepage Shareware stuff:: 1ClickPicGrabber | RightClick-Encrypt CP stuff:: CP SearchBar v2.0.2 | C++ Forum FAQ ---- Kosh reminded me of some of the prima-donna programmers I've worked with. Knew everything but when you asked them a question; never gave you a straight answer.   -- Michael P. Butler in the Lounge

                    N 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • J Jon Sagara

                      Java in 21 Days?!? What?!? :wtf:

                      Jon Sagara Vegetarianism is unhealthy. Humans need protein, and lots of it. Put down those sprouts and pick up a T-bone! -- Michael Moore
                      Latest Article: Breadcrumbs in ASP.NET

                      N Offline
                      N Offline
                      Nitron
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #19

                      That's what he musta meant when he said "puzzle"... :rolleyes: ~Nitron.


                      ññòòïðïðB A
                      start

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • C Chris Maunder

                        Here's the latest on What's Going On: Yesterday: Someone stuck a back-hoe through one of the fibre cables of our main Telco in downtown Toronto. This affected connection times for us and many other businesses for many hours. We didn't even bother yelling at the appropriate people because they sounded stressed enough as it was. This has now been fixed. Done Today: We now have 90% of our scheduled hardware upgrades done. Some upgraded web servers to handle current load, a new content DB server, dual firewalls with automatic failover, new switches and gigabit ethernet cards for inter-server communication (we're crying over not being able to afford fibre) and new cases all round. I've also installed Port80 Software's HttpZip[^] in the hope of speeding things up for those with slower connections. PLEASE - any comments on caching issues or corrupt downloads please email me at chris@codeproject.com.. Tomorrow: We're moving to our new hosted facility that will provide us with redundant internet connections, backup power, fire, security and a nifty thumbprint scan doorway. We'll also be increasing our bandwidth capacity 10 fold and reducing the latency to the closest backbone. Should mean a nice increase in connection speed and no more bottlenecks at peak times. This will mean an outage tomorrow afternoon starting at around 1pm US Eastern Standard Time. In the works: A complete rewrite of the site. Better DB and caching utilisation, a move to Win2003 and IIS6, and increases in web, download and DB access all round. To be done: clustering of database servers and more web servers. Another mail server to handle the load. Further DB work and caching optimisations. Always happening: More servers. As many as we can afford. The pain over the past few months with slow load time, bandwidth bottlenecks, slow page access due to slow DB servers and outages caused by Things Beyond Our Control have been extremely frustrating to us and we're sure to our readers. We are working our bums off trying to improve access to CodeProject for everyone. cheers, Chris Maunder

                        N Offline
                        N Offline
                        Nitron
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #20

                        Chris, You should consider setting up a "donation fund" for stuff like this. There are many of us who dont have the $$$ for .NET or MSDN, but can surley throw down $20 or more to support our site! Maybe even offer a minimum donation level for "supporter" status, or different levels of "supporter" status... Just a thought. ~Nitron.


                        ññòòïðïðB A
                        start

                        S S 2 Replies Last reply
                        0
                        • M Michael Dunn

                          Java? JAVA??!? :wtf: Unless it's being used as a paperweight, in which case it's ok ;) --Mike-- Personal stuff:: Ericahist | Homepage Shareware stuff:: 1ClickPicGrabber | RightClick-Encrypt CP stuff:: CP SearchBar v2.0.2 | C++ Forum FAQ ---- Kosh reminded me of some of the prima-donna programmers I've worked with. Knew everything but when you asked them a question; never gave you a straight answer.   -- Michael P. Butler in the Lounge

                          N Offline
                          N Offline
                          Navin
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #21

                          I think it's needed to get the :java: emoticon working properly. Remember, even if you win the rat race, you're still a rat.

                          1 Reply Last reply
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                          • H Heath Stewart

                            When you upgrade to IIS6, compressed HTTP streams are already "built-in" if you didn't know. You have to use a shell script to enable it in the metabase, but there's some easy step-by-step documents in Microsoft's KB about how to do this. Just seems better to have it handled by the product code than to use some third-party filter. Glad to see everything's coming along well! I suppose I'll have to do some real work tomorrow afternoon through the evening now, though. :((

                            Microsoft MVP, Visual C# My Articles

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                            R Offline
                            Rocky Moore
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #22

                            Heath Stewart wrote: You have to use a shell script to enable it in the metabase, but there's some easy step-by-step documents in Microsoft's KB about how to do this. Do you mean for individual sites? When I right click and go to the properties of the main web node (the one that all other sites are under in IIS Manager), under the "service" tab, I can enable HTTP Compression. I do remember reading an article on how to specify which files will be compressed. Rocky <>< www.HintsAndTips.com www.GotTheAnswerToSpam.com

                            H 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • J Jon Sagara

                              Java in 21 Days?!? What?!? :wtf:

                              Jon Sagara Vegetarianism is unhealthy. Humans need protein, and lots of it. Put down those sprouts and pick up a T-bone! -- Michael Moore
                              Latest Article: Breadcrumbs in ASP.NET

                              S Offline
                              S Offline
                              Steven Hicks n 1
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #23

                              Like lauren said ... busted -Steven Hicks

                              CPA

                              CodeProjectAddict

                              Actual Linux Penguins were harmed in the creation of this message.

                              More tutorials: Ltpb.8m.com: Tutorials |404Browser.com (Download Link)

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                              • N Nitron

                                Chris, You should consider setting up a "donation fund" for stuff like this. There are many of us who dont have the $$$ for .NET or MSDN, but can surley throw down $20 or more to support our site! Maybe even offer a minimum donation level for "supporter" status, or different levels of "supporter" status... Just a thought. ~Nitron.


                                ññòòïðïðB A
                                start

                                S Offline
                                S Offline
                                Steve Mayfield
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #24

                                And we could have an icon (ribbon) similar to what is used to show awareness/support[^] Steve

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • N Nitron

                                  Chris, You should consider setting up a "donation fund" for stuff like this. There are many of us who dont have the $$$ for .NET or MSDN, but can surley throw down $20 or more to support our site! Maybe even offer a minimum donation level for "supporter" status, or different levels of "supporter" status... Just a thought. ~Nitron.


                                  ññòòïðïðB A
                                  start

                                  S Offline
                                  S Offline
                                  Steve McLenithan
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #25

                                  Nitron wrote: are many of us who dont have the $$$ for .NET or MSDN, but can surley throw down $20 or more to support our site! Agreed. Where's the donation link? :)

                                  // Steve McLenithan

                                  Cluelessnes:
                                     There are no stupid questions, but there are a lot of inquisitive idiots.

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                                  0
                                  • L l a u r e n

                                    busted!! :laugh:


                                    "there is no spoon"
                                    biz stuff   about me

                                    R Offline
                                    R Offline
                                    Roger Wright
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #26

                                    Well, he did say that a complete rewrite of the site is in the works. Will Build Nuclear Missile For Food - No Target Too Small

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • C Chris Maunder

                                      Heath Stewart wrote: compressed HTTP streams are already "built-in" Yep, and Port80 expressly recommends using the built in compression since II6 compression out of the box is better even than what they can provide. They have a product called ZipEnable that provides a GUI for the compression and caching setup in IIS 6 cheers, Chris Maunder

                                      N Offline
                                      N Offline
                                      Nick Parker
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #27

                                      Chris Maunder wrote: Yep, and Port80 expressly recommends using the built in compression since II6 compression out of the box is better even than what they can provide. They have a product called ZipEnable that provides a GUI for the compression and caching setup in IIS 6 I just gave a speech on HTTP Compression yesterday. It's funny that content encoding has been around since HTTP 1.1 (fully) and browser support has been around for quite a while too, however many servers don't implement compression - be it third-party or natively. Glad to hear you have implementing it. :) - Nick Parker
                                        My Blog

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • C Chris Maunder

                                        Here's the latest on What's Going On: Yesterday: Someone stuck a back-hoe through one of the fibre cables of our main Telco in downtown Toronto. This affected connection times for us and many other businesses for many hours. We didn't even bother yelling at the appropriate people because they sounded stressed enough as it was. This has now been fixed. Done Today: We now have 90% of our scheduled hardware upgrades done. Some upgraded web servers to handle current load, a new content DB server, dual firewalls with automatic failover, new switches and gigabit ethernet cards for inter-server communication (we're crying over not being able to afford fibre) and new cases all round. I've also installed Port80 Software's HttpZip[^] in the hope of speeding things up for those with slower connections. PLEASE - any comments on caching issues or corrupt downloads please email me at chris@codeproject.com.. Tomorrow: We're moving to our new hosted facility that will provide us with redundant internet connections, backup power, fire, security and a nifty thumbprint scan doorway. We'll also be increasing our bandwidth capacity 10 fold and reducing the latency to the closest backbone. Should mean a nice increase in connection speed and no more bottlenecks at peak times. This will mean an outage tomorrow afternoon starting at around 1pm US Eastern Standard Time. In the works: A complete rewrite of the site. Better DB and caching utilisation, a move to Win2003 and IIS6, and increases in web, download and DB access all round. To be done: clustering of database servers and more web servers. Another mail server to handle the load. Further DB work and caching optimisations. Always happening: More servers. As many as we can afford. The pain over the past few months with slow load time, bandwidth bottlenecks, slow page access due to slow DB servers and outages caused by Things Beyond Our Control have been extremely frustrating to us and we're sure to our readers. We are working our bums off trying to improve access to CodeProject for everyone. cheers, Chris Maunder

                                        K Offline
                                        K Offline
                                        KaRl
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #28

                                        I've never seen CP so fast. Good job, and many thanks to help us to be more and more addicted


                                        Dansez sur moi, dansez sur moi, Le soir de mes funerailles Que la vie soit feu d'artifice Et la mort un feu de paille Claude Nougaro (1929-2004)

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • R Rocky Moore

                                          Heath Stewart wrote: You have to use a shell script to enable it in the metabase, but there's some easy step-by-step documents in Microsoft's KB about how to do this. Do you mean for individual sites? When I right click and go to the properties of the main web node (the one that all other sites are under in IIS Manager), under the "service" tab, I can enable HTTP Compression. I do remember reading an article on how to specify which files will be compressed. Rocky <>< www.HintsAndTips.com www.GotTheAnswerToSpam.com

                                          H Offline
                                          H Offline
                                          Heath Stewart
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #29

                                          By default, IIS6 only compression files with the extensions .htm, .html, and .txt. Using the script allows you to specify compression for other extensions. See http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;234497[^] for more information.

                                          Microsoft MVP, Visual C# My Articles

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