![]() ![]() You can use Qualys SSL Test, to verify your endpoint against the current set of best practices, and if you want to know more about TLS in general, consider subscribing to Feisty Duck Bulletproof TLS Newsletter.Īll mm/ tunings are usually very workflow specific, there are only a handful of things to recommend: Though I’ll be mentioning TLS libraries and their settings a bunch of times, you and your security team, should evaluate the performance and security implications of each of them. If you want to know more, you should read High Performance Browser Networking by Ilya Grigorik.Īnd, this is also not the TLS best practices compilation. I’ll be touching client-side performance when I cover latency-related optimizations, but only briefly. This is not a browser-performance post either. If you want to learn more about them you may want to read through Brendan Gregg’s blog. This is not a Linux performance post, even though I will make lots of references to bcc tools, eBPF, and perf, this is by no means the comprehensive guide to using performance profiling tools. For the sake of the scientific method, apply them one-by-one, measure their effect, and decide whether they are indeed useful in your environment. ![]() In this post we’ll be discussing lots of ways to tune web servers and proxies.
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