################################
Server Tuning & Performance Tips
################################

There are a number of options to tune the ownCloud installation and enable a 
high level of performance. The database, for example, needs indexes in the most 
active tables. The number of live Apache connections needs to be turned up to 
1000 or more, and the number of allowed MySQL connections also has to be 
increased to the same. Turning on the Alternative PHP Cache (APC) will also 
increase performance on the app servers, and there are likely a number of 
environment and policy specific configurations needed as well in any given 
deployment.

This chapter gives a few hands-on tips on how to achieve this.

***************************
PHP Version and Information
***************************

You will need to know your PHP version and configurations. To do this, create a 
plain-text file named **phpinfo.php** and place it in your Web root, for 
example ``/var/www/html/phpinfo.php``. (Your Web root may be in a different 
location; your Linux distribution documentation will tell you where.) This file 
contains just this line::

 <?php phpinfo(); ?>

Open this file in a Web browser:

.. figure:: ../images/phpinfo.png

Your PHP version is at the top, and the rest of the page contains abundant 
system information such as active modules, active `.ini` files, and much more. 
When you are finished reviewing your information you must delete 
``phpinfo.php``, or move it outside of your Web directory, because it is a 
security risk to expose such sensitive data.

********************
General Linux tuning
********************

System configuration overview
=============================

.. code-block:: console

	# cat /etc/sysctl.conf
        ...
	net.core.somaxconn = 4096
	net.ipv4.tcp_max_syn_backlog = 2048
        ...
	# ulimit -nH 4096

Make sure that your ``/tmp`` is in ramdisk which improves session handling
performance. To do so, add the following to ``/etc/fstab``::

	none /tmp tmpfs,size=6g defaults

Make sure the APC or Opcache bytecode cache is installed. This example is for 
CentOS/Red Hat/Fedora running PHP 5.4:

.. code-block:: console

	$ sudo yum install php-pecl-apc
	
On Ubuntu systems running PHP 5.4 this command installs APC:

.. code-block:: console

        $ sudo apt-get install php-apc
             
PHP 5.5 replaces APC with Opcache. Opcache is bundled with PHP 5.5 so it should 
not be necessary to install it separately.

Tuning System Parameters
========================

Configuration for more concurrent requests.

.. code-block:: bash

	echo "2048 64512" > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range
	echo "1" > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_tw_recycle
	echo "1" > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_tw_reuse
	echo "10" > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_fin_timeout

	echo "65536" > /proc/sys/net/core/somaxconn
	echo "65536" > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_max_syn_backlog
	echo "262144" > /proc/sys/net/netfilter/nf_conntrack_max

Check if the values have been set accordingly:

.. code-block:: console

	# cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range
        2048 64512
	# cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_tw_recycle
        1
	# cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_tw_reuse
        1
	# cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_fin_timeout
        10
	# cat /proc/sys/net/core/somaxconn
        65536
	# cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_max_syn_backlog
        65536
	# cat /proc/sys/net/netfilter/nf_conntrack_max
        262144

Next, persist the settings across reboots by adding them into ``/etc/sysctl.conf``::

	net.ipv4.ip_local_port_range = 2048 64512
	net.ipv4.tcp_tw_recycle = 1
	net.ipv4.tcp_tw_reuse = 1
	net.ipv4.tcp_fin_timeout = 10

	net.core.somaxconn = 65536
	net.ipv4.tcp_max_syn_backlog = 65536
	net.netfilter.nf_conntrack_max = 262144

Tuning Memory
=============

Add RAM disk to fstab::

	- none /var/www/html tmpfs defaults,size=6g

Move PHP Code into RAM Disk:

.. code-block:: console

	# mv /var/www/html /var/www/html_fs

Copy ownCloud installation to RAM Disk and symlink storage to ownCloud ``data``
directory.

.. note:: ram disks are not reboot-safe. You need to establish a way to persist them,
          for instance by using ``cp`` or ``rsync`` to transfer them from a location
          on the hard disk to the ram disk before apache starts.
          
**********************
ownCloud Server Tuning
**********************

Object Caching
==============

ownCloud is written to take advantage of object caching. Object caching can be 
done locally with the APCu extension, or for distributed PHP environments using 
Memcached. Memcached servers must be specified in the ``memcached_servers`` array 
in ownCloud's config file ``config.php``. For examples see 
:doc:`config_sample_php_parameters`

Serving static files via web server
===================================

See the section 
:doc:`../configuration_files/serving_static_files_configuration` for a 
description and the benefits.

Using cron to perform background jobs
=====================================

See the section :doc:`background_jobs_configuration` for a description and the 
benefits.

OPcache Extension
=================

OPcache improves PHP performance by storing precompiled script bytecode in 
shared memory, thereby removing the need for PHP to load and parse scripts on 
each request. This extension is bundled with PHP 5.5.0 and later, and is 
available in PECL for PHP versions 5.2, 5.3, and 5.4.
          
********************          
SSL / Encryption App
********************

SSL (HTTPS) and file encryption/decryption can be offloaded to a processor's 
AES-NI extension. This can both speed up these operations while lowering 
processing overhead. This requires a processor with the `AES-NI instruction set 
<http://wikipedia.org/wiki/AES_instruction_set>`_.

Here are some examples how to check if your CPU / environment supports the 
AES-NI extension:

* For each CPU core present: ``grep flags /proc/cpuinfo`` or as a summary for 
  all cores: ``grep -m 1 ^flags /proc/cpuinfo`` If the result contains any 
  ``aes``, the extension is present.   
  
* On Windows you can run ``coreinfo`` from Sysinternals `Windows Sysinternals 
  Download Coreinfo 
  <https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/cc835722.aspx>`_ which 
  gives you details of the processor and extensions present. Note: you may have 
  to run the command shell as administrator to get an output.
  
* Search eg. on the Intel web if the processor used supports the extension 
  `Intel Processor Feature Filter 
  <http://ark.intel.com/MySearch.aspx?AESTech=true>`_ You may set a filter by 
  ``"AES New Instructions"`` to get a reduced result set.
   
* For versions of openssl >= 1.0.1, AES-NI does not work via an engine and 
  will not show up in the ``openssl engine`` command. It is active by default 
  on the supported hardware. You can check the openssl version via ``openssl 
  version -a``
    
* If your processor supports AES-NI but it does not show up eg via grep or 
  coreinfo, it is maybe disabled in the BIOS.
  
* If your environment runs virtualized, check the virtualization vendor for 
  support.

**************  
Webserver Tips
**************

Enable the SPDY protocol
========================

Your webserver can be configured to use the SPDY protocol which could improve 
the overall performance of ownCloud. Please have a look at the documentation of 
your webservers module for more information:

* `mod-spdy for Apache <https://code.google.com/p/mod-spdy/>`_

* `ngx_http_spdy_module for nginx 
  <http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_spdy_module.html>`_

.. note:: If you want to enable SPDY for Apache please note the `Known Issues 
   <https://code.google.com/p/mod-spdy/wiki/KnownIssues>`_
   of this module to avoid problems after enabling it.

*************
Apache Tuning
*************

Maximum number Apache processes
===============================

An Apache process is using around 12MB of RAM. Apache should be configured that 
the maximum number of HTTPD processes time 12MB is lower than the amount of 
RAM. Otherwise the system begins to swap and the performance goes down. In this 
case the maximum number is set to 6000.

KeepAlive should be configured with sensible defaults
=====================================================

.. code-block:: apache

	KeepAlive On
	KeepAliveTimeout 2
	MaxKeepAliveRequests 10

mod_gzip
========

``mod_gzip`` should be used because it speeds up the transfer of data and 
helps to free server memory, and HTTP connections are closed faster.

.. Commented out because oC does not support mod_deflate
.. mod_deflate
.. -----------
.. mod_deflate should be used because it speeds up the transfer of data and helps
.. to free server memory and http connections are closed faster

PHP safe mode
=============

PHP safe mode has to be turned off. It is deprecated and will be removed in
newer PHP versions.

MPM
===

Apache prefork has to be used. Don’t use threaded ``mpm`` with ``mod_php`` 
because PHP is currently not thread safe.

Hostname Lookups
================

.. code-block:: bash

	# cat /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
        ...
	HostnameLookups off

Log files
=========

Log files should be switched off for maximum performance.

Comment out the `CustomLog`` directive. Keep ``ErrorLog`` to be able to track down errors.

.. todo: loglevel?

MaxKeepAliveRequests 4096
=========================

.. code-block:: apache

	<IfModule prefork.c>
		StartServers 100
		MinSpareServers 100
		MaxSpareServers 2000
		ServerLimit 6000
		MaxClients 6000
		MaxRequestsPerChild 4000
	</IfModule>

	<Directory "/var/www/html">
		Options Indexes SymLinksIfOwnerMatch AllowOverride All
	</Directory>

**********************
Database Best Practice
**********************

Currently ownCloud supports the following relational database management systems:

- MySQL
- MariaDB
- PostgreSQL
- SQLite
- Oracle
- Mssql

We are using the `doctrine database abstraction layer`_ and schema evolution 
with a `MDB2 Schema`_ based table description in XML.

.. _doctrine database abstraction layer: http://www.doctrine-project.org/projects/dbal.html
.. _MDB2 Schema: https://raw2.github.com/pear/MDB2_Schema/master/docs/xml_schema_documentation.html

The default indexes are chosen to support every day usage. Additional indexes 
might further improve the performance.

Using MariaDB/MySQL instead of SQLite
=====================================

MySQL or MariaDB are preferred because of the `performance limitations of 
SQLite with highly concurrent applications 
<http://www.sqlite.org/whentouse.html>`_, like ownCloud.

On large instances you could consider `running MySQLTuner 
<https://github.com/major/MySQLTuner-perl/>`_ to optimize the database.

See the section :doc:`../configuration_database/linux_database_configuration` 
how to configure ownCloud for MySQL or MariaDB. If your installation is already 
running on
SQLite then it is possible to convert to MySQL or MariaDB using the steps 
provided in :doc:`../configuration_database/db_conversion`.

Improve slow performance with MySQL on Windows
==============================================

On Windows hosts running MySQL on the same system changing the parameter 
``dbhost`` in your ``config/config.php``
from ``localhost`` to ``127.0.0.1`` could improve the page loading time.

See also `this forum thread 
<http://forum.owncloud.org/viewtopic.php?f=17&t=7559>`_.

MySQL / MariaDB
===============

Additional indexes may improve performance.

Index on uid in oc_group_user:

.. code-block:: sql

	create index oc_group_user_uid on oc_group_user(uid);

Index on oc_share:

.. code-block:: sql

	create index oc_share_file_target on oc_share(file_target);

Index on oc_filecache:

.. code-block:: sql

	create index oc_filepath on oc_filecache(storage,size);

Index on oc_files_versions:

.. code-block:: sql

	create index oc_files_versions_user  on oc_files_versions(user);

Index on oc_files_trashsize:

.. code-block:: sql

	create index oc_files_trashsize_user  on oc_files_trashsize(user);

Progress of adding them to the default code is tracked in 
https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/7474.

Other performance improvements
==============================

Mysql: compare https://tools.percona.com/wizard to your current settings
MariaDB: https://mariadb.com/kb/en/optimization-and-tuning/

Postgresql
==========

Alternative to MariaDB/MySQL. Used in production by a few core developers.

Migration
---------

Requires at least Postgresql 9.0

Additional Indexes
------------------

The ones from MySQL should work just fine. Progress of adding them to the 
default code is tracked in https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/7474.

Other performance improvements
------------------------------

See http://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Performance_Optimization

Oracle Database
===============

Usage scenario: Existing enterprise installations. Only core apps are supported 
and tested. Not recommended because it involves compiling the oci8

Additional Indexes
------------------

The ones from mysql should work just fine. Progress of adding them to the 
default code is tracked in https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/7474.

Other performance improvements
------------------------------

http://de.slideshare.net/cjorcl/best-practices-php-and-the-oracle-database and ask your DBA.

Problems
--------

When ORA-56600 occurs (Oracle Bug 8467564) set this php.ini setting:
`oci8.statement_cache_size=1000`, see `oracle forum discussion`_

.. _oracle forum discussion: https://community.oracle.com/message/3468020#3468020

Microsoft SQL Server
====================

Usage scenario: Only core apps are supported. **Not** even tested by Jenkins.

Additional Indexes
------------------

The ones from mysql should work just fine. Progress of adding them to the default code is tracked in https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/7474.

Other performance improvements
------------------------------

http://www.mssqltips.com/sql-server-tip-category/9/performance-tuning/

*******************************************************************
Nginx: caching ownCloud gallery thumbnails with fastcgi_cache_purge
*******************************************************************

One of the optimisations for ownCloud when using Nginx as webserver is to 
combine FastCGI caching with "Cache Purge", a `3rdparty Nginx module 
<http://wiki.nginx.org/3rdPartyModules>`_  that adds the ability to purge 
content from `FastCGI`, `proxy`, `SCGI` and `uWSGI` caches. This mechanism 
speeds up thumbnail presentation as it shifts requests to Nginx and minimizes 
php invocations which else would take place for every thumbnail presented every 
time.
 
The following procedure is based on an Ubuntu 14.04 system. You may need to 
adapt it according your OS type and release.

.. note::
   Unlike Apache, Nginx does not dynamically load modules. All modules needed, 
   must be compiled into Nginx. This is one of the reasons for Nginx´s 
   performance. It is expected to have an already running Nginx installation 
   with a working configuration set up like described in the ownCloud 
   documentation.

Nginx module check
==================

As a first step, it is necessary to check if your Nginx installation has the 
``nginx cache purge`` module compiled in::
 
 nginx -V 2>&1 | grep ngx_cache_purge -o
 
If your output contains ``ngx_cache_purge``, you can continue with the 
configuration, else you need to manually compile Nginx with the module needed.

Compile Nginx with the ``nginx-cache-purge`` module
===================================================

1. **Preparation:**

.. code-block:: bash

    cd /opt
    wget http://nginx.org/keys/nginx_signing.key
    sudo apt-key add nginx_signing.key
    sudo vi /etc/apt/sources.list.d/nginx.list
    
Add following lines (in case, replace ``{trusty}`` by your distribution  
name)::

   deb http://nginx.org/packages/mainline/ubuntu/ trusty nginx
   deb -src http://nginx.org/packages/mainline/ubuntu/ trusty nginx    

Then run ``sudo apt-get update``

.. note:: If you're not overly cautious and wish to install the latest and 
   greatest Nginx packages and features, you may have to install Nginx from its 
   mainline repository. From the Nginx homepage: "In general, you should 
   deploy Nginx from its mainline branch at all times." If you would like to 
   use standard Nginx from the latest mainline branch but without compiling in 
   any additional modules, just run ``sudo apt-get install nginx``.   

2. **Download the Nginx source from the ppa repository**

.. code-block:: bash

   cd /opt
   sudo apt-get build-dep nginx
   sudo apt-get source nginx

3. **Download module(s) to be compiled in and configure compiler arguments**
    
.. code-block:: bash 
   
   ls -la
    
Please replace ``{release}`` with the release downloaded::

   cd /opt/nginx-{release}/debian
    
If folder "modules" is not present, do:

.. code-block:: bash

   sudo mkdir modules
   cd modules
   sudo git clone https://github.com/FRiCKLE/ngx_cache_purge.git
   sudo vi /opt/nginx-{release}/debian/rules
    
If not present, add the following line at the top under::

   #export DH_VERBOSE=1:
   MODULESDIR = $(CURDIR)/debian/modules
   
And the end of every ``configure`` command add::

  --add-module=$(MODULESDIR)/ngx_cache_purge
    
Don't forget to escape preceeding lines with a backslash ``\``.
The parameters may now look::
      
   $(WITH_SPDY) \
   --with-cc-opt="$(CFLAGS)" \
   --with-ld-opt="$(LDFLAGS)" \
   --with-ipv6 \
   --add-module=$(MODULESDIR)/ngx_cache_purge

4. **Compile and install Nginx**

.. code-block:: bash

   cd /opt/nginx-{release}
   sudo dpkg-buildpackage -uc -b
   ls -la /opt
   sudo dpkg --install /opt/nginx_{release}~{distribution}_amd64.deb

5. **Check if the compilation and installation of the ngx_cache_purge module 
   was successful**
   
.. code-block:: bash  

   nginx -V 2>&1 | grep ngx_cache_purge -o
    
It should show now: ``ngx_cache_purge``
    
Show Nginx version including all features compiled and installed::

   nginx -V 2>&1 | sed s/" --"/"\n\t--"/g

6. **Mark Nginx to be blocked from further updates via apt-get**

.. code-block:: bash

   sudo dpkg --get-selections | grep nginx
    
For every nginx component listed run ``sudo apt-mark hold <component>``   

7. **Regular checks for nginx updates**

Do a regular visit on the `Nginx news page <http://nginx.org>`_ and proceed 
in case of updates with item 2 to 5.

Configure Nginx with the ``nginx-cache-purge`` module
=====================================================

1. **Preparation**
   Create a directory where Nginx will save the cached thumbnails. Use any 
   path that fits to your environment. Replace ``{path}`` in this example with 
   your file path:
   
.. code-block:: bash   
   
   sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/tmp/cache   

2. **Configuration**

.. code-block:: bash

   sudo vi /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/{your-ownCloud-nginx-config-file}
    
Add at the *beginning*, but *outside* the ``server{}`` block::

   fastcgi_cache_path {path} levels=1:2 keys_zone=OWNCLOUD:100m inactive=60m;
   
Add *inside* the ``server{}`` block, as an example of a configuration::
   
   set $skip_cache 1;
       
   # POST requests and urls with a query string should always go to PHP
    
   if ($request_uri ~* "thumbnail.php") 
   { set $skip_cache 0;
   }
       
   fastcgi_cache_key "$scheme$request_method$host$request_uri";
   fastcgi_cache_use_stale error timeout invalid_header http_500;
   fastcgi_ignore_headers Cache-Control Expires Set-Cookie;
       
   location ~ \.php(?:$/) {
         fastcgi_split_path_info ^(.+\.php)(/.+)$;
       
         include fastcgi_params;
         fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME $document_root$fastcgi_script_name;
         fastcgi_param PATH_INFO $fastcgi_path_info;
         fastcgi_param HTTPS on;
         fastcgi_pass php-handler;
       
         fastcgi_cache_bypass $skip_cache;
         fastcgi_no_cache $skip_cache;
         fastcgi_cache OWNCLOUD;
         fastcgi_cache_valid  60m;
         }
   
.. note: Note regarding the ``fastcgi_pass`` parameter:
   Use whatever fits your configuration. In the example above, a ``upstream`` 
   was defined in an Nginx global configuration file.
   This then can look like::
       
     upstream php-handler {
         server 127.0.0.1:9000;
         # or
         #server unix:/var/run/php5-fpm.sock;
       } 
   
3. **Test the configuration**

.. code-block:: bash

   sudo service nginx restart
   
*  Open your browser and clear your cache.   
*  Logon to your ownCloud instance, open the gallery app, move thru your       
   folders and watch while the thumbnails are generated for the first time.
*  You may also watch with eg. ``htop`` your system load while the 
   thumbnails are processed.
*  Go to another app or logout and relogon.
*  Open the gallery app again and browse to the folders you accessed before.
   Your thumbnails should appear more or less immediately.
*  ``htop`` will not show up additional load while processing, compared to 
   the high load before.