My squid proxy has been hitting inode-max about once a week. I've doubled
and within a day it's in the state shown below. What I'd like to know is
whats a comfortable state for inode-nr to be in, and if I can control how
many inodes squid will grab, either within squid or as part of user control.
(Redhat 6.1 on ext2fs ans squid2.2STABLE5)
inode-nr
32790   720
file-nr
3824    3481    8192
df
Filesystem           1k-blocks      Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/sdb5              1011928     84904    875620   9% /
/dev/sda1              2016016   1847544     66060  97% /cache1
/dev/sda5              2016016   1843052     70552  96% /cache2
/dev/sdb1              2016016   1854000     59604  97% /cache3
/dev/sdb6              1138428    399740    680856  37% /usr
its a 50 user site and I'm using the LFUDA policy.
______________________________________________________________
David Watson, Network Manager, Team17 Software Ltd.
Phone: +44-1924-267776			Fax: +44-1924-267658
_____________________________________________________________
Received on Tue Apr 04 2000 - 05:06:24 MDT
This archive was generated by hypermail pre-2.1.9 : Tue Dec 09 2003 - 16:52:40 MST