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HomeHomeOur CommunityOur CommunityGeneral Discuss...General Discuss...Maximum Number of Active UsersMaximum Number of Active Users
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10/16/2006 2:01 PM
 

I have been using DNN for quite some time, and have never asked this question, but I am currently writing a functional requirements document that poses the question of how many users can DNN support at one time. I have searched the documentation, and the forums but cannot find the answer.

Can anyone answer this question for me?

TIA,

HisKid


Cheers!
John Valentine
http://www.webinnovationsystems.com
 
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10/16/2006 2:28 PM
 

this depends on the configuration and hardware you use, as well as the modules installed. Large sites use server farms and separate datebase servers (or server clusters).

Large sites like dotnetnuke.com can handle thousands of users simultaneously, but it depends, how much caching can be used.


Cheers from Germany,
Sebastian Leupold

dnnWerk - The DotNetNuke Experts   German Spoken DotNetNuke User Group

Speed up your DNN Websites with TurboDNN
 
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10/16/2006 3:22 PM
 
leupold wrote

this depends on the configuration and hardware you use, as well as the modules installed. Large sites use server farms and separate datebase servers (or server clusters).

Large sites like dotnetnuke.com can handle thousands of users simultaneously, but it depends, how much caching can be used.

Yeah, I should have been more specific. The system in question will have a clusered web server as well as a clustered database server. The entire system will be dedicated to the installation of DNN. I am not talking about a shared hosting provider. The clustered environment (seperate web and database server clusters) will be completely dedicated with redundant network/internet connections.

Thanks again,

HisKid


Cheers!
John Valentine
http://www.webinnovationsystems.com
 
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10/16/2006 4:38 PM
 

This question comes up so often, and has so many variables.  I know there have been many falmes about adding any sort of "Call Home" functionality to DNN....but how about a voluntary submission of non-identifying statistics--kind of like some companies "An error has occured, please click here to submit details to the vendor so we can improve our product?"

What if the Core Team added a "statistics submission facility?"  Each installation already logs enough data to estimate load from.  Pare the logs down to non-identifiying info--maybe even just statistical summary...  Then add to that simple header like DNN version, hardware (CPU count and type, RAM, etc...), whether IIS and DB are on the same box, any discernment to webgarden, etc), total number of portals, total number of users, total number of modules...

There are a LOT of DNN installations out there!  If only 1% volunteered to click the "Submit Statistics" button, then we'd have a LOT of observations!  We could give some interpolated charts to guide planning & expectations!  Isn't that better than vague guidance and "guesstimates?"

 
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10/16/2006 5:16 PM
 
RLyda wrote

This question comes up so often, and has so many variables.  I know there have been many falmes about adding any sort of "Call Home" functionality to DNN....but how about a voluntary submission of non-identifying statistics--kind of like some companies "An error has occured, please click here to submit details to the vendor so we can improve our product?"

What if the Core Team added a "statistics submission facility?"  Each installation already logs enough data to estimate load from.  Pare the logs down to non-identifiying info--maybe even just statistical summary...  Then add to that simple header like DNN version, hardware (CPU count and type, RAM, etc...), whether IIS and DB are on the same box, any discernment to webgarden, etc), total number of portals, total number of users, total number of modules...

There are a LOT of DNN installations out there!  If only 1% volunteered to click the "Submit Statistics" button, then we'd have a LOT of observations!  We could give some interpolated charts to guide planning & expectations!  Isn't that better than vague guidance and "guesstimates?"

Im sorry, and maybe I am reading the wrong, but what does this have to do with the maximum number of users DNN can concurrently support?

Thanks!

HisKid


Cheers!
John Valentine
http://www.webinnovationsystems.com
 
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