Re: [squid-users] Squid getting too big?

From: Mike Diggins <diggins@dont-contact.us>
Date: Fri, 3 Aug 2001 09:18:57 -0400 (EDT)

Are you saying you have to restart squid daily? That scares me. What
happens if you don't?

-Mike

On Fri, 3 Aug 2001, Bellenberg, Martin wrote:

> Yup, same behaviour at our site, Solaris 2.6, SUN Ultra 1, 386 Mbyte RAM, 4 GB Cache Dir, same Squid version 2.4stable1.
> I have cronjobs running like this:
>
> # Rotate log-files of squid and restart process
> 0 4 * * * /opt/squid/bin/squid -k rotate > /dev/null 2>&1
> 10 4 * * * /etc/init.d/proxy.server stop > /dev/null 2>&1
> 20 4 * * * /etc/init.d/proxy.server start > /dev/null 2>&1
>
> ...works fine.
>
> > -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
> > Von: Mike Diggins [mailto:diggins@mcmail.cis.mcmaster.ca]
> > Gesendet: Freitag, 3. August 2001 14:56
> > An: squid-users@squid-cache.org
> > Betreff: [squid-users] Squid getting too big?
> >
> >
> > I'm concerned about how quickly Squid is growing in size. The cache has
> > been up for only a few weeks. Up until yesterday it was growing slowly and
> > was up to 230 MB, last night it was at 440 MB and this morning it's at 514
> > MB according to TOP.
> >
> > The platform is Solaris 8 running on a Sun Ultra 10 with 1 GB RAM and two
> > 16 GB cache dirs (separate disks). The cache is still only 40% full.
> > Should I be concerned?
> >
> > CPU states: 89.6% idle, 4.4% user, 5.2% kernel, 0.8% iowait, 0.0% swap
> > Memory: 1024M real, 259M free, 583M swap in use, 2167M swap free
> >
> > PID USERNAME THR PRI NICE SIZE RES STATE TIME CPU COMMAND
> > 22469 root 1 53 0 515M 514M sleep 450:39 3.72% squid
> >
> > -Mike
>
Received on Fri Aug 03 2001 - 07:19:06 MDT

This archive was generated by hypermail pre-2.1.9 : Tue Dec 09 2003 - 17:01:27 MST