Hi,
Based on your feedback here alone, it would appear that you machine can't 
handle ther search/sifting through your log file, not knowing how big 
your hdd is and how much cache_swap you have I would suggest feeding you 
machine much more ram, take it to 128MB and see how it goes.
Some more specs on your system and squid config would be great :-)
On Mon, 29 Sep 1997, Nick O'Brien wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> I asked about this problem last week, I just thought I'd let people know 
> what has happened.
>  
> On Wed, 24 Sep 1997 11:39:39 +0100 (British Summer Time) Nick O'Brien 
> <nick@cant.ac.uk> wrote:
> 
> > I am running Squid v1.1.11 on a system running Digital Unix 3.2C with
> > 74M of real memory, and 128M of swap space.
> > 
> > This morning accessing pages through Squid was running very slowly. To
> > give you some idea of how slow a particular page retrieved directly
> > from our web server (which is on a different system) without a proxy
> > or using our old CERN proxy (which is on the same system as Squid)
> > takes 1-2 seconds to load. However with the Squid proxy it takes
> > 6-7 seconds. Even after restarting Squid the problem continues.
> 
> One suggestion was to upgrade to the latest version of Squid, so I ugraded 
> to v1.1.16 - this had no effect on the situtation. As performance appeared 
> to better early in the morning and in the evenings someoner suggested that 
> I might be running out of file descriptors, but Cache Manager claimed that 
> I was only using 90 out of 4096.
> 
> Some suggested that I might be running out of file descriptors, but the 
> Cache Manager Cache Information Report claimed that I was only using about 
> 90 out of 4096 file descriptors.
> 
> I came in on Saturday and Squid was as slow as ever, so I was wrong - it 
> is not related to the number of users accessing Squid. Following on from 
> an idea someone's email had given me I reduced the value of cache_swap by 
> 7/8 (3950 to 500). I then restarted Squid - this had no effect. But 
> when I removed the the Cache swap log file (cache_swap_log) and restarted 
> Squid - performance picked up instantly.
> 
> Therefore what I suspect is happening is that Squid is spending so much 
> time checking to see if items are in the Cache swap log file, that it has 
> little time to do anything else - including retrieving items directly from 
> source. If this is the case I obviously want to find a way of speeding up 
> access to the log file as I don't want to have to destroy my cache every 
> few days to keep performance at a good level (access is reasonable at the 
> moment). I've also reduced the value of reference_age to 1 month to see if 
> this will help.
> 
> Do you have any ideas of what might be wrong?
> 
> Also - I now unable to use cachemgr.cgi as I had to switch off our Unix 
> based web server. Is there an NT Alpha binary of cachemgr.cgi (I don't 
> have any access to any NT based compilation tools so I can't recompile the 
> source), or at the very least a Perl version available?
> 
> 	Rgds.,
> 
> 		Nick.
> 
> # Nick O'Brien, Computer Officer   "It gives me a headache just to     #
> # Canterbury Christ Church College  think down to your level", Marvin  #
> # Phone: +44 1227 782468            the Paranoid Android, HHGTTG       #
> # Email:nick@cant.ac.uk Web:http://www.cant.ac.uk/staff/nick/home.html #
> 
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Received on Mon Sep 29 1997 - 16:27:10 MDT
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