xref: /freebsd/share/man/man7/tuning.7 (revision 49b49cda41feabe3439f7318e8bf40e3896c7bf4)
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24.\" $FreeBSD$
25.\"
26.Dd December 8, 2012
27.Dt TUNING 7
28.Os
29.Sh NAME
30.Nm tuning
31.Nd performance tuning under FreeBSD
32.Sh SYSTEM SETUP - DISKLABEL, NEWFS, TUNEFS, SWAP
33The swap partition should typically be approximately 2x the size of
34main memory
35for systems with less than 4GB of RAM, or approximately equal to
36the size of main memory
37if you have more.
38Keep in mind future memory
39expansion when sizing the swap partition.
40Configuring too little swap can lead
41to inefficiencies in the VM page scanning code as well as create issues
42later on if you add more memory to your machine.
43On larger systems
44with multiple SCSI disks (or multiple IDE disks operating on different
45controllers), configure swap on each drive.
46The swap partitions on the drives should be approximately the same size.
47The kernel can handle arbitrary sizes but
48internal data structures scale to 4 times the largest swap partition.
49Keeping
50the swap partitions near the same size will allow the kernel to optimally
51stripe swap space across the N disks.
52Do not worry about overdoing it a
53little, swap space is the saving grace of
54.Ux
55and even if you do not normally use much swap, it can give you more time to
56recover from a runaway program before being forced to reboot.
57.Pp
58It is not a good idea to make one large partition.
59First,
60each partition has different operational characteristics and separating them
61allows the file system to tune itself to those characteristics.
62For example,
63the root and
64.Pa /usr
65partitions are read-mostly, with very little writing, while
66a lot of reading and writing could occur in
67.Pa /var/tmp .
68By properly
69partitioning your system fragmentation introduced in the smaller more
70heavily write-loaded partitions will not bleed over into the mostly-read
71partitions.
72.Pp
73Properly partitioning your system also allows you to tune
74.Xr newfs 8 ,
75and
76.Xr tunefs 8
77parameters.
78The only
79.Xr tunefs 8
80option worthwhile turning on is
81.Em softupdates
82with
83.Dq Li "tunefs -n enable /filesystem" .
84Softupdates drastically improves meta-data performance, mainly file
85creation and deletion.
86We recommend enabling softupdates on most file systems; however, there
87are two limitations to softupdates that you should be aware of when
88determining whether to use it on a file system.
89First, softupdates guarantees file system consistency in the
90case of a crash but could very easily be several seconds (even a minute!\&)
91behind on pending write to the physical disk.
92If you crash you may lose more work
93than otherwise.
94Secondly, softupdates delays the freeing of file system
95blocks.
96If you have a file system (such as the root file system) which is
97close to full, doing a major update of it, e.g.,\&
98.Dq Li "make installworld" ,
99can run it out of space and cause the update to fail.
100For this reason, softupdates will not be enabled on the root file system
101during a typical install.
102There is no loss of performance since the root
103file system is rarely written to.
104.Pp
105A number of run-time
106.Xr mount 8
107options exist that can help you tune the system.
108The most obvious and most dangerous one is
109.Cm async .
110Only use this option in conjunction with
111.Xr gjournal 8 ,
112as it is far too dangerous on a normal file system.
113A less dangerous and more
114useful
115.Xr mount 8
116option is called
117.Cm noatime .
118.Ux
119file systems normally update the last-accessed time of a file or
120directory whenever it is accessed.
121This operation is handled in
122.Fx
123with a delayed write and normally does not create a burden on the system.
124However, if your system is accessing a huge number of files on a continuing
125basis the buffer cache can wind up getting polluted with atime updates,
126creating a burden on the system.
127For example, if you are running a heavily
128loaded web site, or a news server with lots of readers, you might want to
129consider turning off atime updates on your larger partitions with this
130.Xr mount 8
131option.
132However, you should not gratuitously turn off atime
133updates everywhere.
134For example, the
135.Pa /var
136file system customarily
137holds mailboxes, and atime (in combination with mtime) is used to
138determine whether a mailbox has new mail.
139You might as well leave
140atime turned on for mostly read-only partitions such as
141.Pa /
142and
143.Pa /usr
144as well.
145This is especially useful for
146.Pa /
147since some system utilities
148use the atime field for reporting.
149.Sh STRIPING DISKS
150In larger systems you can stripe partitions from several drives together
151to create a much larger overall partition.
152Striping can also improve
153the performance of a file system by splitting I/O operations across two
154or more disks.
155The
156.Xr gstripe 8 ,
157.Xr gvinum 8 ,
158and
159.Xr ccdconfig 8
160utilities may be used to create simple striped file systems.
161Generally
162speaking, striping smaller partitions such as the root and
163.Pa /var/tmp ,
164or essentially read-only partitions such as
165.Pa /usr
166is a complete waste of time.
167You should only stripe partitions that require serious I/O performance,
168typically
169.Pa /var , /home ,
170or custom partitions used to hold databases and web pages.
171Choosing the proper stripe size is also
172important.
173File systems tend to store meta-data on power-of-2 boundaries
174and you usually want to reduce seeking rather than increase seeking.
175This
176means you want to use a large off-center stripe size such as 1152 sectors
177so sequential I/O does not seek both disks and so meta-data is distributed
178across both disks rather than concentrated on a single disk.
179If
180you really need to get sophisticated, we recommend using a real hardware
181RAID controller from the list of
182.Fx
183supported controllers.
184.Sh SYSCTL TUNING
185.Xr sysctl 8
186variables permit system behavior to be monitored and controlled at
187run-time.
188Some sysctls simply report on the behavior of the system; others allow
189the system behavior to be modified;
190some may be set at boot time using
191.Xr rc.conf 5 ,
192but most will be set via
193.Xr sysctl.conf 5 .
194There are several hundred sysctls in the system, including many that appear
195to be candidates for tuning but actually are not.
196In this document we will only cover the ones that have the greatest effect
197on the system.
198.Pp
199The
200.Va vm.overcommit
201sysctl defines the overcommit behaviour of the vm subsystem.
202The virtual memory system always does accounting of the swap space
203reservation, both total for system and per-user.
204Corresponding values
205are available through sysctl
206.Va vm.swap_total ,
207that gives the total bytes available for swapping, and
208.Va vm.swap_reserved ,
209that gives number of bytes that may be needed to back all currently
210allocated anonymous memory.
211.Pp
212Setting bit 0 of the
213.Va vm.overcommit
214sysctl causes the virtual memory system to return failure
215to the process when allocation of memory causes
216.Va vm.swap_reserved
217to exceed
218.Va vm.swap_total .
219Bit 1 of the sysctl enforces
220.Dv RLIMIT_SWAP
221limit
222(see
223.Xr getrlimit 2 ) .
224Root is exempt from this limit.
225Bit 2 allows to count most of the physical
226memory as allocatable, except wired and free reserved pages
227(accounted by
228.Va vm.stats.vm.v_free_target
229and
230.Va vm.stats.vm.v_wire_count
231sysctls, respectively).
232.Pp
233The
234.Va kern.ipc.maxpipekva
235loader tunable is used to set a hard limit on the
236amount of kernel address space allocated to mapping of pipe buffers.
237Use of the mapping allows the kernel to eliminate a copy of the
238data from writer address space into the kernel, directly copying
239the content of mapped buffer to the reader.
240Increasing this value to a higher setting, such as `25165824' might
241improve performance on systems where space for mapping pipe buffers
242is quickly exhausted.
243This exhaustion is not fatal; however, and it will only cause pipes
244to fall back to using double-copy.
245.Pp
246The
247.Va kern.ipc.shm_use_phys
248sysctl defaults to 0 (off) and may be set to 0 (off) or 1 (on).
249Setting
250this parameter to 1 will cause all System V shared memory segments to be
251mapped to unpageable physical RAM.
252This feature only has an effect if you
253are either (A) mapping small amounts of shared memory across many (hundreds)
254of processes, or (B) mapping large amounts of shared memory across any
255number of processes.
256This feature allows the kernel to remove a great deal
257of internal memory management page-tracking overhead at the cost of wiring
258the shared memory into core, making it unswappable.
259.Pp
260The
261.Va vfs.vmiodirenable
262sysctl defaults to 1 (on).
263This parameter controls how directories are cached
264by the system.
265Most directories are small and use but a single fragment
266(typically 2K) in the file system and even less (typically 512 bytes) in
267the buffer cache.
268However, when operating in the default mode the buffer
269cache will only cache a fixed number of directories even if you have a huge
270amount of memory.
271Turning on this sysctl allows the buffer cache to use
272the VM Page Cache to cache the directories.
273The advantage is that all of
274memory is now available for caching directories.
275The disadvantage is that
276the minimum in-core memory used to cache a directory is the physical page
277size (typically 4K) rather than 512 bytes.
278We recommend turning this option off in memory-constrained environments;
279however, when on, it will substantially improve the performance of services
280that manipulate a large number of files.
281Such services can include web caches, large mail systems, and news systems.
282Turning on this option will generally not reduce performance even with the
283wasted memory but you should experiment to find out.
284.Pp
285The
286.Va vfs.write_behind
287sysctl defaults to 1 (on).
288This tells the file system to issue media
289writes as full clusters are collected, which typically occurs when writing
290large sequential files.
291The idea is to avoid saturating the buffer
292cache with dirty buffers when it would not benefit I/O performance.
293However,
294this may stall processes and under certain circumstances you may wish to turn
295it off.
296.Pp
297The
298.Va vfs.hirunningspace
299sysctl determines how much outstanding write I/O may be queued to
300disk controllers system-wide at any given time.
301It is used by the UFS file system.
302The default is self-tuned and
303usually sufficient but on machines with advanced controllers and lots
304of disks this may be tuned up to match what the controllers buffer.
305Configuring this setting to match tagged queuing capabilities of
306controllers or drives with average IO size used in production works
307best (for example: 16 MiB will use 128 tags with IO requests of 128 KiB).
308Note that setting too high a value
309(exceeding the buffer cache's write threshold) can lead to extremely
310bad clustering performance.
311Do not set this value arbitrarily high!
312Higher write queuing values may also add latency to reads occurring at
313the same time.
314.Pp
315The
316.Va vfs.read_max
317sysctl governs VFS read-ahead and is expressed as the number of blocks
318to pre-read if the heuristics algorithm decides that the reads are
319issued sequentially.
320It is used by the UFS, ext2fs and msdosfs file systems.
321With the default UFS block size of 32 KiB, a setting of 64 will allow
322speculatively reading up to 2 MiB.
323This setting may be increased to get around disk I/O latencies, especially
324where these latencies are large such as in virtual machine emulated
325environments.
326It may be tuned down in specific cases where the I/O load is such that
327read-ahead adversely affects performance or where system memory is really
328low.
329.Pp
330The
331.Va vfs.ncsizefactor
332sysctl defines how large VFS namecache may grow.
333The number of currently allocated entries in namecache is provided by
334.Va debug.numcache
335sysctl and the condition
336debug.numcache < kern.maxvnodes * vfs.ncsizefactor
337is adhered to.
338.Pp
339The
340.Va vfs.ncnegfactor
341sysctl defines how many negative entries VFS namecache is allowed to create.
342The number of currently allocated negative entries is provided by
343.Va debug.numneg
344sysctl and the condition
345vfs.ncnegfactor * debug.numneg < debug.numcache
346is adhered to.
347.Pp
348There are various other buffer-cache and VM page cache related sysctls.
349We do not recommend modifying these values.
350As of
351.Fx 4.3 ,
352the VM system does an extremely good job tuning itself.
353.Pp
354The
355.Va net.inet.tcp.sendspace
356and
357.Va net.inet.tcp.recvspace
358sysctls are of particular interest if you are running network intensive
359applications.
360They control the amount of send and receive buffer space
361allowed for any given TCP connection.
362The default sending buffer is 32K; the default receiving buffer
363is 64K.
364You can often
365improve bandwidth utilization by increasing the default at the cost of
366eating up more kernel memory for each connection.
367We do not recommend
368increasing the defaults if you are serving hundreds or thousands of
369simultaneous connections because it is possible to quickly run the system
370out of memory due to stalled connections building up.
371But if you need
372high bandwidth over a fewer number of connections, especially if you have
373gigabit Ethernet, increasing these defaults can make a huge difference.
374You can adjust the buffer size for incoming and outgoing data separately.
375For example, if your machine is primarily doing web serving you may want
376to decrease the recvspace in order to be able to increase the
377sendspace without eating too much kernel memory.
378Note that the routing table (see
379.Xr route 8 )
380can be used to introduce route-specific send and receive buffer size
381defaults.
382.Pp
383As an additional management tool you can use pipes in your
384firewall rules (see
385.Xr ipfw 8 )
386to limit the bandwidth going to or from particular IP blocks or ports.
387For example, if you have a T1 you might want to limit your web traffic
388to 70% of the T1's bandwidth in order to leave the remainder available
389for mail and interactive use.
390Normally a heavily loaded web server
391will not introduce significant latencies into other services even if
392the network link is maxed out, but enforcing a limit can smooth things
393out and lead to longer term stability.
394Many people also enforce artificial
395bandwidth limitations in order to ensure that they are not charged for
396using too much bandwidth.
397.Pp
398Setting the send or receive TCP buffer to values larger than 65535 will result
399in a marginal performance improvement unless both hosts support the window
400scaling extension of the TCP protocol, which is controlled by the
401.Va net.inet.tcp.rfc1323
402sysctl.
403These extensions should be enabled and the TCP buffer size should be set
404to a value larger than 65536 in order to obtain good performance from
405certain types of network links; specifically, gigabit WAN links and
406high-latency satellite links.
407RFC1323 support is enabled by default.
408.Pp
409The
410.Va net.inet.tcp.always_keepalive
411sysctl determines whether or not the TCP implementation should attempt
412to detect dead TCP connections by intermittently delivering
413.Dq keepalives
414on the connection.
415By default, this is enabled for all applications; by setting this
416sysctl to 0, only applications that specifically request keepalives
417will use them.
418In most environments, TCP keepalives will improve the management of
419system state by expiring dead TCP connections, particularly for
420systems serving dialup users who may not always terminate individual
421TCP connections before disconnecting from the network.
422However, in some environments, temporary network outages may be
423incorrectly identified as dead sessions, resulting in unexpectedly
424terminated TCP connections.
425In such environments, setting the sysctl to 0 may reduce the occurrence of
426TCP session disconnections.
427.Pp
428The
429.Va net.inet.tcp.delayed_ack
430TCP feature is largely misunderstood.
431Historically speaking, this feature
432was designed to allow the acknowledgement to transmitted data to be returned
433along with the response.
434For example, when you type over a remote shell,
435the acknowledgement to the character you send can be returned along with the
436data representing the echo of the character.
437With delayed acks turned off,
438the acknowledgement may be sent in its own packet, before the remote service
439has a chance to echo the data it just received.
440This same concept also
441applies to any interactive protocol (e.g.,\& SMTP, WWW, POP3), and can cut the
442number of tiny packets flowing across the network in half.
443The
444.Fx
445delayed ACK implementation also follows the TCP protocol rule that
446at least every other packet be acknowledged even if the standard 100ms
447timeout has not yet passed.
448Normally the worst a delayed ACK can do is
449slightly delay the teardown of a connection, or slightly delay the ramp-up
450of a slow-start TCP connection.
451While we are not sure we believe that
452the several FAQs related to packages such as SAMBA and SQUID which advise
453turning off delayed acks may be referring to the slow-start issue.
454In
455.Fx ,
456it would be more beneficial to increase the slow-start flightsize via
457the
458.Va net.inet.tcp.slowstart_flightsize
459sysctl rather than disable delayed acks.
460.Pp
461The
462.Va net.inet.ip.portrange.*
463sysctls control the port number ranges automatically bound to TCP and UDP
464sockets.
465There are three ranges: a low range, a default range, and a
466high range, selectable via the
467.Dv IP_PORTRANGE
468.Xr setsockopt 2
469call.
470Most
471network programs use the default range which is controlled by
472.Va net.inet.ip.portrange.first
473and
474.Va net.inet.ip.portrange.last ,
475which default to 49152 and 65535, respectively.
476Bound port ranges are
477used for outgoing connections, and it is possible to run the system out
478of ports under certain circumstances.
479This most commonly occurs when you are
480running a heavily loaded web proxy.
481The port range is not an issue
482when running a server which handles mainly incoming connections, such as a
483normal web server, or has a limited number of outgoing connections, such
484as a mail relay.
485For situations where you may run out of ports,
486we recommend decreasing
487.Va net.inet.ip.portrange.first
488modestly.
489A range of 10000 to 30000 ports may be reasonable.
490You should also consider firewall effects when changing the port range.
491Some firewalls
492may block large ranges of ports (usually low-numbered ports) and expect systems
493to use higher ranges of ports for outgoing connections.
494By default
495.Va net.inet.ip.portrange.last
496is set at the maximum allowable port number.
497.Pp
498The
499.Va kern.ipc.somaxconn
500sysctl limits the size of the listen queue for accepting new TCP connections.
501The default value of 128 is typically too low for robust handling of new
502connections in a heavily loaded web server environment.
503For such environments,
504we recommend increasing this value to 1024 or higher.
505The service daemon
506may itself limit the listen queue size (e.g.,\&
507.Xr sendmail 8 ,
508apache) but will
509often have a directive in its configuration file to adjust the queue size up.
510Larger listen queues also do a better job of fending off denial of service
511attacks.
512.Pp
513The
514.Va kern.maxfiles
515sysctl determines how many open files the system supports.
516The default is
517typically a few thousand but you may need to bump this up to ten or twenty
518thousand if you are running databases or large descriptor-heavy daemons.
519The read-only
520.Va kern.openfiles
521sysctl may be interrogated to determine the current number of open files
522on the system.
523.Pp
524The
525.Va vm.swap_idle_enabled
526sysctl is useful in large multi-user systems where you have lots of users
527entering and leaving the system and lots of idle processes.
528Such systems
529tend to generate a great deal of continuous pressure on free memory reserves.
530Turning this feature on and adjusting the swapout hysteresis (in idle
531seconds) via
532.Va vm.swap_idle_threshold1
533and
534.Va vm.swap_idle_threshold2
535allows you to depress the priority of pages associated with idle processes
536more quickly then the normal pageout algorithm.
537This gives a helping hand
538to the pageout daemon.
539Do not turn this option on unless you need it,
540because the tradeoff you are making is to essentially pre-page memory sooner
541rather than later, eating more swap and disk bandwidth.
542In a small system
543this option will have a detrimental effect but in a large system that is
544already doing moderate paging this option allows the VM system to stage
545whole processes into and out of memory more easily.
546.Sh LOADER TUNABLES
547Some aspects of the system behavior may not be tunable at runtime because
548memory allocations they perform must occur early in the boot process.
549To change loader tunables, you must set their values in
550.Xr loader.conf 5
551and reboot the system.
552.Pp
553.Va kern.maxusers
554controls the scaling of a number of static system tables, including defaults
555for the maximum number of open files, sizing of network memory resources, etc.
556As of
557.Fx 4.5 ,
558.Va kern.maxusers
559is automatically sized at boot based on the amount of memory available in
560the system, and may be determined at run-time by inspecting the value of the
561read-only
562.Va kern.maxusers
563sysctl.
564Some sites will require larger or smaller values of
565.Va kern.maxusers
566and may set it as a loader tunable; values of 64, 128, and 256 are not
567uncommon.
568We do not recommend going above 256 unless you need a huge number
569of file descriptors; many of the tunable values set to their defaults by
570.Va kern.maxusers
571may be individually overridden at boot-time or run-time as described
572elsewhere in this document.
573Systems older than
574.Fx 4.4
575must set this value via the kernel
576.Xr config 8
577option
578.Cd maxusers
579instead.
580.Pp
581The
582.Va kern.dfldsiz
583and
584.Va kern.dflssiz
585tunables set the default soft limits for process data and stack size
586respectively.
587Processes may increase these up to the hard limits by calling
588.Xr setrlimit 2 .
589The
590.Va kern.maxdsiz ,
591.Va kern.maxssiz ,
592and
593.Va kern.maxtsiz
594tunables set the hard limits for process data, stack, and text size
595respectively; processes may not exceed these limits.
596The
597.Va kern.sgrowsiz
598tunable controls how much the stack segment will grow when a process
599needs to allocate more stack.
600.Pp
601.Va kern.ipc.nmbclusters
602may be adjusted to increase the number of network mbufs the system is
603willing to allocate.
604Each cluster represents approximately 2K of memory,
605so a value of 1024 represents 2M of kernel memory reserved for network
606buffers.
607You can do a simple calculation to figure out how many you need.
608If you have a web server which maxes out at 1000 simultaneous connections,
609and each connection eats a 16K receive and 16K send buffer, you need
610approximately 32MB worth of network buffers to deal with it.
611A good rule of
612thumb is to multiply by 2, so 32MBx2 = 64MB/2K = 32768.
613So for this case
614you would want to set
615.Va kern.ipc.nmbclusters
616to 32768.
617We recommend values between
6181024 and 4096 for machines with moderates amount of memory, and between 4096
619and 32768 for machines with greater amounts of memory.
620Under no circumstances
621should you specify an arbitrarily high value for this parameter, it could
622lead to a boot-time crash.
623The
624.Fl m
625option to
626.Xr netstat 1
627may be used to observe network cluster use.
628Older versions of
629.Fx
630do not have this tunable and require that the
631kernel
632.Xr config 8
633option
634.Dv NMBCLUSTERS
635be set instead.
636.Pp
637More and more programs are using the
638.Xr sendfile 2
639system call to transmit files over the network.
640The
641.Va kern.ipc.nsfbufs
642sysctl controls the number of file system buffers
643.Xr sendfile 2
644is allowed to use to perform its work.
645This parameter nominally scales
646with
647.Va kern.maxusers
648so you should not need to modify this parameter except under extreme
649circumstances.
650See the
651.Sx TUNING
652section in the
653.Xr sendfile 2
654manual page for details.
655.Sh KERNEL CONFIG TUNING
656There are a number of kernel options that you may have to fiddle with in
657a large-scale system.
658In order to change these options you need to be
659able to compile a new kernel from source.
660The
661.Xr config 8
662manual page and the handbook are good starting points for learning how to
663do this.
664Generally the first thing you do when creating your own custom
665kernel is to strip out all the drivers and services you do not use.
666Removing things like
667.Dv INET6
668and drivers you do not have will reduce the size of your kernel, sometimes
669by a megabyte or more, leaving more memory available for applications.
670.Pp
671.Dv SCSI_DELAY
672may be used to reduce system boot times.
673The defaults are fairly high and
674can be responsible for 5+ seconds of delay in the boot process.
675Reducing
676.Dv SCSI_DELAY
677to something below 5 seconds could work (especially with modern drives).
678.Pp
679There are a number of
680.Dv *_CPU
681options that can be commented out.
682If you only want the kernel to run
683on a Pentium class CPU, you can easily remove
684.Dv I486_CPU ,
685but only remove
686.Dv I586_CPU
687if you are sure your CPU is being recognized as a Pentium II or better.
688Some clones may be recognized as a Pentium or even a 486 and not be able
689to boot without those options.
690If it works, great!
691The operating system
692will be able to better use higher-end CPU features for MMU, task switching,
693timebase, and even device operations.
694Additionally, higher-end CPUs support
6954MB MMU pages, which the kernel uses to map the kernel itself into memory,
696increasing its efficiency under heavy syscall loads.
697.Sh CPU, MEMORY, DISK, NETWORK
698The type of tuning you do depends heavily on where your system begins to
699bottleneck as load increases.
700If your system runs out of CPU (idle times
701are perpetually 0%) then you need to consider upgrading the CPU
702or perhaps you need to revisit the
703programs that are causing the load and try to optimize them.
704If your system
705is paging to swap a lot you need to consider adding more memory.
706If your
707system is saturating the disk you typically see high CPU idle times and
708total disk saturation.
709.Xr systat 1
710can be used to monitor this.
711There are many solutions to saturated disks:
712increasing memory for caching, mirroring disks, distributing operations across
713several machines, and so forth.
714If disk performance is an issue and you
715are using IDE drives, switching to SCSI can help a great deal.
716While modern
717IDE drives compare with SCSI in raw sequential bandwidth, the moment you
718start seeking around the disk SCSI drives usually win.
719.Pp
720Finally, you might run out of network suds.
721Optimize the network path
722as much as possible.
723For example, in
724.Xr firewall 7
725we describe a firewall protecting internal hosts with a topology where
726the externally visible hosts are not routed through it.
727Use 1000BaseT rather
728than 100BaseT, depending on your needs.
729Most bottlenecks occur at the WAN link (e.g.,\&
730modem, T1, DSL, whatever).
731If expanding the link is not an option it may be possible to use the
732.Xr dummynet 4
733feature to implement peak shaving or other forms of traffic shaping to
734prevent the overloaded service (such as web services) from affecting other
735services (such as email), or vice versa.
736In home installations this could
737be used to give interactive traffic (your browser,
738.Xr ssh 1
739logins) priority
740over services you export from your box (web services, email).
741.Sh SEE ALSO
742.Xr netstat 1 ,
743.Xr systat 1 ,
744.Xr sendfile 2 ,
745.Xr ata 4 ,
746.Xr dummynet 4 ,
747.Xr login.conf 5 ,
748.Xr rc.conf 5 ,
749.Xr sysctl.conf 5 ,
750.Xr eventtimers 7 ,
751.Xr firewall 7 ,
752.Xr hier 7 ,
753.Xr ports 7 ,
754.Xr boot 8 ,
755.Xr bsdinstall 8 ,
756.Xr ccdconfig 8 ,
757.Xr config 8 ,
758.Xr fsck 8 ,
759.Xr gjournal 8 ,
760.Xr gpart 8 ,
761.Xr gstripe 8 ,
762.Xr gvinum 8 ,
763.Xr ifconfig 8 ,
764.Xr ipfw 8 ,
765.Xr loader 8 ,
766.Xr mount 8 ,
767.Xr newfs 8 ,
768.Xr route 8 ,
769.Xr sysctl 8 ,
770.Xr tunefs 8
771.Sh HISTORY
772The
773.Nm
774manual page was originally written by
775.An Matthew Dillon
776and first appeared
777in
778.Fx 4.3 ,
779May 2001.
780The manual page was greatly modified by
781.An Eitan Adler Aq Mt eadler@FreeBSD.org .
782