>>>>> "Eric" == Eric Stern <estern@packetstorm.on.ca> writes:
Eric> ... I've changed the way Eric> squid stores files. ...
Eric> ----
Eric> Notes for squid-1.2-SQUIDFS
Eric> Instead of storing each object in a seperate file on the
Eric> filesystem, all objects are packed together into one file.
Cool. A feature squid, IMO, needs. INN's CNFS provides an enormous
speedup, by all accounts. Squid should benefit as well.
Eric> Some notes: - in squid.conf you specify the cache_dir(s) with
Eric> this syntax:
Eric> cache_dir <swap file name> <log file name> <size>
Eric> ie cache_dir /squid/cache/swap1.data /squid/cache/swap1.log 100
Eric> would configure a 100 megabyte swap file called
Eric> /squid/cache/swap1.data
'Twould be nice were a <size> of 0 to specify that squid should
stat(2) the file and use the st_size to determine the size of the swap
file. (Or if the swap file is a device, the appropriate IOCTL --
BLKGETSIZE in Linux for a block special -- should be used.)
Eric> space in the swap file is allocated in 1000 byte increments.
Why 1000 rather than, say 1024? :)
Since you're essentially writing a custom filesystem, you might want
to look into making it log-structured. Perhaps a simple fsck as well.
Certainly it is OK to just have to get the data from the src should a
disk crash, but killing the entire cache because of a squid crash is
less appealing.
Although 32-bit systems would be limited to a single file of not more
than 2G, an option to mmap(2) the swap files would be a performance
win. (Hmm, an Alpha or UltraSparc, FC/AL controller, couple of dozen
18G Cheetahs, devfs, a driver to expose each disk (not just partition)
as an mmap(2)able character special file, full HTTP/1.1 compliance....
Now *that* is a cache box!)
I hope all these ideas/comments do not come off as overwhelming. I'd
certainly volunteer to help. (As you might guess, I've been thinking
along these lines as well....)
-JimC
-- James H. Cloos, Jr. <cloos@jhcloos.com>Received on Tue May 19 1998 - 23:53:03 MDT
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