Cool. Thanks! I have about 1/100th of your connection, so I can’t do a lot of testing. So are you seeing any timeouts? Or is it just queuing you?
I imagine a lot of tweaking could still be done to Apache. I adjusted down the number of waiting threads and worker threads, and I reduce the number of max concurrent users. Seems to be saving the system. I’m surprised that it’s still keeping more than 100MB of free RAM despite all this.
So far, only a very small fraction of the requested pages have actually timed out - the vast majority (99.2% at this moment) have been queued, but processed eventually. Looks really good, to be honest.
But they are linked from the server correct. They seem to load twice as fast as any other time I have looked. It’s like I just received a free ISP speed upgrade.
Basically, the HTML file contains the link to the image, hosted elsewhere on the internet. You download that small HTML page from BLF, and then your browser obeys the link and initiates a connection with the remove server and downloads the image. What you probably perceive as a speed increase is the reduction in the amount of time that it is taking for the new BLF test server to respond to your request. This production site is taking forever to respond to requests.
Normally we have more anonymous users than logged-in users, and anonymous users usually get a cached version of the page that takes very little resources to serve up. So this is pretty impressive considering that the static HTML cache is disabled.