> Henrik Nordstrom <hno@hem.passagen.se> replied: 
> > Peter Jenny wrote:
> 
> > I thought by eliminating hard disks Squid would perform much faster, but
> > I'm only seeing ~110 responses/second from my lab test configuration:
> 
> If you want a baseline of what the CPU is capable of, try
> 
> no_cache deny all
100 responses/sec with Squid Version 2.2.STABLE5, "no_cache deny all," 270 MHz 
Sun Ultra 5, Solaris 2.7 and Polygraph "datacomm-1" workload.   100 13 KB 
objects/sec is about 10 Mbps on the wire.
(neck sticking out:)
It seems that Squid is "CPU intensive" or as some say a "CPU hog" -- no 
offense intended.  Hard disk and the file system aren't it's only 
performance-limiting factors.
I should have a loaner Sun Ultra 10 440 MHz this week and will try that.  
Per SPECint95 benchmarks the 270 MHz UltraSPARC is about a   9.  
Per SPECint95 benchmarks the 440 MHz UltraSPARC is about an 18.  
Per SPECint95 benchmarks the Intel 650 MHz "coppermine" (full speed 256 KB L2 
cache is about a 31 (I don't have one of those to try).
So if CPU speed is the limiting factor (via use of some RAM-based file system, 
or many hard disk spindles), and it's more "integer intensive" than "floating 
point intensive," Squid 2.2stable5 should be able to go to ~200 responses/sec 
on the 440 MHz Ultra or ~300 responses/sec on a 650 MHz Pentium.
And consider rewriting section 3.1 of the FAQ (from "Your processor does not 
need to be ultra-fast" to perhaps "For Squid 2.x, 300 MHz of CPU and 5 SCSI 
disks are fairly well balanced.  A 600 MHz CPU should have about 10 SCSI disks 
for caching).
Peter
Squid newbie.  
                   Peter Jenny
            Internet Engineering Services 
         GTE Internetworking - powered by BBN
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Received on Mon Dec 13 1999 - 16:07:12 MST
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