|
There's a handy network health checker you can use to see if you have any
networking issues. It quickly identified the DNS configuration issue I had
on a test machine.
Read about it here -
http://ibmsystemsmag.blogs.com/i_can/2013/09/application-runtime-expert-network-health-checker.html
Dawn May
From: Jim Oberholtzer<midrangel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion
<midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>,
Date: 11/04/2013 09:33 AM
Subject: Re: IBM i Access for Web vs IBM Navigator for i
Sent by: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Nevertheless, it's a reasonable question. If there is an attempt to
communicate with IPV6, then significant CPU cycles may be expended to
detect and communicate with the network. It's best to turn off IPV6
unless it is properly configured and in use. Remember the defaults are
on, not off.
Jim Oberholtzer
Chief Technical Architect
Agile Technology Architects
On 11/3/2013 5:45 PM, Jack Callahan wrote:
likeDo all these systems have IPV6 configured properly? This sounds a lot
telnet orthat problem. You don't notice it when all the IP you're doing is
likeFTP, but when you start to use highly interactive web interfaces,
--A bit presumptive of IBM to assume IPv6 is in use, if that's the cause ofWebNav, missing IPV6 DNS server definitions KILL performance.
the performance problem.
Haven't run across anywhere in IBM documentation the states IPv6 is the
preferred networking protocol for Navigator for i.
IPv6 certainly isn't in use on my firm's networks- still running IPv4
everywhere. And yet other web apps seem to run acceptably.
--
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