hi Henrik:
I've tried your suggestion, but the problem still exists. this squid use about
8Mbps bandwidth, some of the statistics:
when squid started for an hour:
client_http.requests = 26.563860/sec
server.all.requests = 14.208499/sec
select_loops = 268.088343/sec
select_fds = 240.931212/sec
cpu_time = 23.120000 seconds
wall_time = 300.031695 seconds
cpu_usage = 7.705853%
after running for one day:
client_http.requests = 42.807063/sec
server.all.requests = 33.702650/sec
select_loops = 236.957915/sec
select_fds = 365.309147/sec
cpu_time = 148.480000 seconds
wall_time = 300.184107 seconds
cpu_usage = 49.462978%
compare to a squid that only cache static html file(this squid has no
hyperthread and output about 15Mbps bandwidth):
client_http.requests = 202.408967/sec
server.all.requests = 44.233108/sec
select_loops = 783.316002/sec
select_fds = 825.322455/sec
cpu_time = 114.030000 seconds
wall_time = 300.001531 seconds
cpu_usage = 38.009806%
any suggestion?
On Tue, 29 Mar 2005 12:51:10 +0200 (CEST), Henrik Nordstrom
<hno@squid-cache.org> wrote:
> On Tue, 29 Mar 2005, netcraft wrote:
>
> > We use squid to accelerate our dynamic pages(resin/jsp), some pages
> > are setting to very short expiry time(2min). and some are one day. It works
> > good at the beginning, But I meet a strange problem: when squid start, it use
> > about 8% of cpu time. the speed is fast. after 2 or 3 days, the cpu usage
> > grows up to 49%, and the speed is slow.
>
> Try the following
>
> half_closed_clients off
> quick_abort_min 0 KB
> quick_abort_max 0 KB
>
> and don't set maximum_object_size_in_memory overly large.
>
> Regards
> Henrik
>
Received on Thu Mar 31 2005 - 01:23:25 MST
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