RE: [squid-users] 2M performance

From: Zand, Nooshin <nooshin.zand@dont-contact.us>
Date: Wed, 12 Sep 2001 16:59:40 -0700

Hi,
what version of squid are you runing.
Do you mind to mail us your squid.conf.
Currenty, we are running 2.2.STABLE5-hno.20000202.

client_http.requests = 78.616012/sec
client_http.hits = 37.457240/sec
client_http.errors = 0.000000/sec
client_http.kbytes_in = 38.613554/sec
client_http.kbytes_out = 590.221506/sec
client_http.all_median_svc_time = 0.339434 seconds
client_http.miss_median_svc_time = 0.649683 seconds
client_http.nm_median_svc_time = 0.121063 seconds
client_http.nh_median_svc_time = 0.685775 seconds
client_http.hit_median_svc_time = 0.158884 seconds
server.all.requests = 43.900032/sec
server.all.errors = 0.000000/sec

Thanks,
Nooshin

-----Original Message-----
From: Joe Cooper [mailto:joe@swelltech.com]
Sent: Wednesday, September 12, 2001 3:32 PM
To: Lee Norvall
Cc: squid-users@squid-cache.org
Subject: Re: [squid-users] 2M performance

Those are some fast clicking users!

Are you sure that's not 200/minute?

Besides, a 256MB machine with a 'low-endish' CPU should be able to
easily handle 150 clients, even without much tuning. As an aside, there
aren't many Squids on earth that will handle more than 200 reqs/sec. We
just shipped one that is doing ~240 during peak hours, and it requires
truly monster hardware to do it.

You'll probably find that adding more RAM is the best thing you can do
for your clients--request throughput for 150 users will not be very
high, and you won't likely hit any throughput limits in Squid at that
load. But more RAM will lead to lower service times for hits, as more
can come from RAM, which are orders of magnitude faster than disk hits,
which are yet again orders of magnitude faster than misses.

Lee Norvall wrote:

> Hello
>
> I have just installed a 2Mb leased line for a company with 150
workstations
> on the LAN. The squid box that I have set-up for Internet access has
256Mb
> RAM, 12.7Gb HD, and a low end-ish cpu. It currently handles about 200
> requests per sec. This seems a little slow, and I would like to know what
> would be best for this size of network?
>
> Regards
> Lee Norvall

                                   --
                      Joe Cooper <joe@swelltech.com>
                  Affordable Web Caching Proxy Appliances
                         http://www.swelltech.com
Received on Wed Sep 12 2001 - 18:00:34 MDT

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