Cleber P. de Souza wrote:
The access to your server should not be a problem, only the latency
should be.
There are some ways for tuning Linux for this kind of link, some links
that could help you:
http://dsd.lbl.gov/TCP-tuning/linux.html
This said about using hybla as the congestion control algorithm. Has
someone used this?
It isn't clear to me, but it seems like this is a problem from the other
end, not my end? I don't see where the htaccess login attempt is making
to my system. So are these for systems which are on satellite?
I really didn't say in my original post, but we are on fiber here with
plenty of bandwidth for our needs and server loads on the system in
question are completely acceptable. Most of the time under 1. We are a
hosting company and simply trying to provide additional services for our
clients and in this case htaccess is by far the best solution for login
to a protected directory.
Thanks,
John Hinton
On 8/7/06, Jim Perrin <jperrin@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 8/7/06, John Hinton <webmaster@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Yeah, maybe this is a bit on the edge....
>
> I am discovering several issues with users on satellite internet
> connections not being able to authenticate via a htaccess/htpasswd
> system. Some users cannot connect at all, some can connect reliably..
> and some are hit and miss.. works one day and not the next. Yet those
> same users can log in fine if they switch back to their dialup system.
htaccess/htpasswd should have nothing to do with satellite internet.
Either they can get there or not. They may be having timeout issues
which sould be due to the latency of satellite internet, but not an
issue with authentication itself.
--
During times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a
revolutionary act.
George Orwell
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