I not sure what you mean by a newer copy of the same URL? Can you elaborate on that a bit?
As far as I know, the aspx pages displays a list of buttons for each video file. When the user clicks on the button, it references the URL.
I've seen it where the user click the link and gets a TCP_REFRESH_HIT, but if I come back a day later (well within my min/max settings), I get a TCP_REFRESH_MISS.
I also previously posted additional info from the store.log. Which shows the object being cached and then released after a short time.
----- Original Message ----
From: Henrik Nordstrom <henrik@henriknordstrom.net>
To: BUI18 <lbui18@yahoo.com>
Cc: squid-users@squid-cache.org
Sent: Monday, October 20, 2008 4:55:41 PM
Subject: Re: [squid-users] Objects Release from Cache Earlier Than Expected
On mån, 2008-10-20 at 16:02 -0700, BUI18 wrote:
> Hi -
>
> I have been trying to track down an issue with Squid 2.6 STABLE18 and
> why users were getting TCP_REFRESH_MISS instead of TCP_REFRESH_HIT on
> files that were recently cached. We first noticed that users were
> getting misses when we expected them to receive hits.
TCP_REFRESH_MISS is a cache validation which indicated the object has
been updated on the origin server.
> I have set the min and max age to be 5 and 7 days respectively. When
> I look in the store.log file, I do see objects which were known to
> have been cached today (base on time/date stamp in the file name), yet
> they have status code of RELEASE.
And you are sure it wasn't simply replaced with a newer copy of the same
URL?
Regards
Henrik
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
Received on Tue Oct 21 2008 - 00:45:43 MDT
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Tue Oct 21 2008 - 12:00:04 MDT