RE: [squid-users] problem

From: Tom Broome <tom@dont-contact.us>
Date: Mon, 20 Aug 2001 14:16:03 -0400

Here is what I did to fix.
Cache.log said out of space. But that part is 76% full.
I # out the line in the conf file for that cache and it worked.
Now can I just delete the /cache part and do squid -z??
No I have not upgraded squid still running 2.3stable4

Thanks for the help.

Tom

-----Original Message-----
From: Joe Cooper [mailto:joe@swelltech.com]
Sent: Monday, August 20, 2001 2:27 PM
To: Tom Broome
Cc: squid-users@squid-cache.org
Subject: Re: [squid-users] problem

Bet you a dollar the answer is in your cache.log.

(And it looks to me like you've updated your Squid without updating your
initscript to match it. This looks like a 2.2 initscript trying to
understand a 2.4 Squid configuration file. The Red Hat initscript will
initialize your cache partitions for you, by reading the configuration
file...however, the configuration file has changed to include a
directory type [aufs|ufs|coss|diskd] in the place where the old file
specified the directory. Edit your initscript and change the 2 in 'cut
-d ' ' -f 2`' to 3. I think that will do it.)

Tom Broome wrote:

> I have had squid running for close to a year w/o any problems.
> Today, It will not load
> I get
> [root@proxy /usr]# /etc/rc.d/init.d/squid start
> Starting squid: init_cache_dir ufs... init_cache_dir ufs... squid
> [root@proxy /usr]# /etc/rc.d/init.d/squid status
> squid (pid 1415) is running...
> squid: ERROR: No running copy
>
> What could be the problem?
>
> Thanks
> Tom

                                   --
                      Joe Cooper <joe@swelltech.com>
                  Affordable Web Caching Proxy Appliances
                         http://www.swelltech.com
Received on Mon Aug 20 2001 - 12:30:35 MDT

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