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== History ==
The term was coined in 1999 by Dan Kegel, citing the [[Simtel]] FTP host, [[cdrom.com]], serving 10,000 clients at once over 1 [[gigabit per second]] [[Ethernet]] in that year.<ref name="C10K" /> The term has since been used for the general issue of large number of clients, with similar numeronyms for larger number of connections, most recently
By the early 2010s millions of connections on a single commodity 1U server became possible: over 2 million connections ([[WhatsApp]], 24 cores, using [[Erlang (programming language)|Erlang]] on [[FreeBSD]]),<ref>[http://blog.whatsapp.com/196/1-million-is-so-2011 1 million is so 2011]</ref><ref>[http://www.erlang-factory.com/upload/presentations/558/efsf2012-whatsapp-scaling.pdf Scaling to Millions of Simultaneous Connections], Rick Reed, ''WhatsApp''</ref> 10–12 million connections (MigratoryData, 12 cores, using [[Java (Programming language)|Java]] on [[Linux]])<ref name=":0">[https://mrotaru.wordpress.com/2015/05/20/how-migratorydata-solved-the-c10m-problem-10-million-concurrent-connections-on-a-single-commodity-server/ How MigratoryData solved the C10M problem: 10 Million Concurrent Connections on a Single Commodity Server]</ref><ref>[https://mrotaru.wordpress.com/2013/10/10/scaling-to-12-million-concurrent-connections-how-migratorydata-did-it/ Scaling to 12 Million Concurrent Connections: How MigratoryData Did It]</ref>
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