Well, the way to start looking at that is getting to know your system
profiling tools.
I do this for a living on Solaris, FreeBSD and Linux - each has
different system profiling tools, all of which can tell you where the
problem may lie.
Considering people have deployed Squid forward and reverse proxies
that achieve much more than 150mbit/sec, even considering the
shortcomings of the codebases, I can't help but think there's
something else going on that isn't specifically Squids' fault. :)
Adrian
2008/11/28 Ken DBA <mysqld_at_yahoo.cn>:
>
>
>
> --- On Thu, 11/27/08, Adrian Chadd <adrian_at_squid-cache.org> wrote:
>
>> From: Adrian Chadd <adrian_at_squid-cache.org>
>> Subject: Re: [squid-users] improve flow capacity for Squid
>> To: mysqld_at_yahoo.cn
>> Cc: squid-users_at_squid-cache.org
>> Date: Thursday, November 27, 2008, 11:09 PM
>> Is that per-flow, or in total?
>>
>
> I mean in total, thanks.
>
>
>
>
>
Received on Fri Nov 28 2008 - 17:47:02 MST
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