Thanks for your reply! ...more than a few thousand files I don't think I'll have a problem for a while! Thanks, Keith "der.hans" wrote: Am 19. Nov, 2006 schwätzte keith smith so: > About 18 years ago I was working on the file/server (not client/server) based desktop database that ran in DOS. > > The maker of the product suggested that we put no more than 300 files in each directory because DOS would slow and we would experience a degradation in performance. > > I was thinking of this and wondering if such a limit would exist in Linux in a web server environment. In other words if say I have 500 pages in one directory is that or some other quantity of pages going to cause the web server to slow? Depends on the filesystem and the utillities. I think shells and ext2 still don't do well with more than a few thousand files in a single directory. Haven't tested it in a while. I don't know if ext3 might have the same type of issues. reiser should handle that type of situation just fine. apache should handle it fine as well. If some of those pages are including files from the full directories, there might be an issue. I would think PHP, Perl, Jave, etc. should be able to handle that fine, though. ciao, der.hans -- # https://www.LuftHans.com/ http://www.CiscoLearning.org/ # Join the League of Professional System Administrators https://LOPSA.org/ # "Human kind cannot bear very much reality." # -- T.S. Eliot, "Four Quartets: Burnt Norton"--------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss - - - - - - - Keith Smith - - - - - - - http://travelingcheese.com/search_engine/increase-search-engine-traffic.html - - - - - - - __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com