What you have proved is that if your server isn't used, it does not
crash.
If the server crashes and needs to be rebooted to recover, it is a
kernel problem (or in some cases a hardware problem). The problem may be
triggered by Squid or your users of Squid exercising the faulty
component in your system.
Regards
Henrik
Flavio Fonseca wrote:
> 1. disabled squid yesterday around 3 pm til today 1 pm (22 hours
> disabled)...
> the server didnt crash
>
> 2. today at 1 pm I started squid BUT no one using it. took the REDIRECT
> option off in the firewall...
> let squid running for 2 hours with no one using it.
> the server didnt crash.
>
> 3. configured proxy in the browser of 10 computer with high access in
> the web (squid on port 8080)
> the server crash in less than 30 minutes.
>
> do you still think it might be the kernel???
>
> Flávio Fonseca
>
> UFU - Universidade Federal de Uberlândia
> DIRPD - Diretoria de Processamento de Dados
> 55-34-3239-4303
Received on Fri May 03 2002 - 16:33:53 MDT
This archive was generated by hypermail pre-2.1.9 : Tue Dec 09 2003 - 17:07:54 MST