Httpd worker MPM Configuration

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Internal

Overview

worker MPM Concepts

Configuration Example

<IfModule worker.c>
    StartServers        4
    ServerLimit         16
    ThreadLimit         50
    ThreadsPerChild     50
    MinSpareThreads     50
    MaxSpareThreads     300
    MaxRequestsPerChild 0
    MaxClients          300
</IfModule>

Diagram

The configuration elements described below are represented on the mod_jk Concepts Diagram.

Sizing Procedure

woker MPM Compilation

Enabling woker MPM Mode

If you configure httpd yourself, make sure you compiled it with worker MPM support.

If you use Red Hat EWS, worker support comes pre-compiled into $APACHE_HOME/sbin/httpd.worker, make sure the start script is using that.

For more details about compiling httpd with the right MPM mode, see:

woker MPM Compilation

MaxClients, MaxRequestWorkers

"MaxClients" and "MaxRequestWorkers" are equivalent, since 2.3.13 "MaxClients" was renamed "MaxRequestWorkers", but for the time being, both names are valid and supported.

MaxClients represents the maximum number of connections that will be processed simultaneously by the entire server, seen as the sum of all active children processes. The default value is 400 = 16 (ServerLimit) * 25 (ThreadsPerChild). The directive restricts the total number of threads that will be available to serve clients.

Any connection attempts over the MaxClients limit will normally be queued, up to a number based on the ListenBacklog directive. Once a child process becomes available after handling at least one of its current requests, the connection will then be serviced.

Even if ServerLimit is set to a high value (ThreadsPerChild left to default), the number of concurrent connection is limited by MaxClients. This was tested and proven.

MaxClients Idiosyncrasies

  • MaxClients must be at least equals with ThreadsPerChild. If not, httpd will warn at startup and automatically adjust the value to be equals with ThreadsPerChild.
  • MaxClients must be an integer multiple of ThreadsPerChild. If it's not, it will be adjusted automatically, and the server will issue an error message similar to the one presented below:
MaxClients (12) is not an integer multiple of ThreadsPerChild (10), lowering MaxClients to 10

ServerLimit

Upper limit on configurable number of httpd processes. Default is 16. It is a hard limit, any attempts to change this directive during a restart will be ignored.

Note: if ServerLimit is n, ps will show n + 2 server processes. For a ServerLimit value of 1:

[webr@rangiroa ~]$ ps -ef | grep httpd
root      7535     1  0 11:15 ?        00:00:00 /home/webr/httpd-2.2.21-worker/bin/httpd -k start
webr      7536  7535  0 11:15 ?        00:00:00 /home/webr/httpd-2.2.21-worker/bin/httpd -k start
webr      7537  7535  0 11:15 ?        00:00:00 /home/webr/httpd-2.2.21-worker/bin/httpd -k start

The first one (7535) is root-owned, the second one (7536) is ? and the third one (7537) is the actual child.

If ServerLimit is set to a value much higher than necessary, unused shared memory will be allocated. If both ServerLimit and MaxClients are set to values higher than the system can handle, Apache may not start or the system may become unstable.

Use this directive only if your MaxClients and ThreadsPerChild settings require more than 16 server processes (default). Do not set the value of this directive any higher than the number of server processes required by what you may want for MaxClients and ThreadsPerChild.

StartServers

The StartServers directive sets the number of child server processes created on startup. Default is 3. As the number of processes is dynamically controlled depending on the load, there is usually little reason to adjust this parameter.

ThreadsPerChild and ThreadLimit

ThreadsPerChild directive sets the number of threads created by each child process. The child creates these threads at startup and never creates more. Default in 25. The value of ThreadsPerChild can be modified during restart, however it cannot be set to a value over ThreadLimit. The ThreadLimit directive sets the maximum configured value for ThreadsPerChild for the lifetime of the httpd process. Any attempts to change this directive during a restart will be ignored. The default value is 64.

It is possible to configure ThreadsPerChild to a value higher than ThreadLimit, httpd won't complain at startup but the value will be silently ignored and each child will actually create 'ThreadLimit' threads.

For clarity, it's probably best to explicitly configure ThreadLimit and ThreadsPerChild to the same value.

ThreadLimit Idiosyncrasies

ServerLimit 16
StartServers 16
MaxClients 10
ThreadLimit 100
ThreadsPerChild 100
starting httpd ... WARNING: ThreadsPerChild of 100 exceeds ThreadLimit value of 64
threads, lowering ThreadsPerChild to 64. To increase, please see the ThreadLimit directive.

ListenBacklog

The maximum length of the queue of pending connections. See the backlog parameter to the listen(2) system call. Default 511. This will often be limited to a smaller number by the operating system. This varies from OS to OS. Also note that many OSes do not use exactly what is specified as the backlog, but use a number based on (but normally larger than) what is set.

MaxRequestsPerChild

Limit on the number of requests that an individual child server will handle during its life. After MaxRequestsPerChild requests, the child process will die. If MaxRequestsPerChild is 0, then the process will never expire. Setting MaxRequestsPerChild to a non-zero value limits the amount of memory that process can consume by (accidental) memory leakage.

The default (compiled-in) value of this setting (10000) is used when no MaxRequestsPerChild directive is present in the configuration. Many default configurations provided with the server include "MaxRequestsPerChild 0" as part of the default configuration.

MinSpareThreads, MaxSpareThreads

Timeout