Hi all,
Also concerned about my performance I think you could
consider bandwidth limits, I found a good bandwidth
monitorin utility for linux I use on Fedora Club 3.
bwm-ng
cheers, Daniel Navarro
        Maracay, Venezuela
        www.csaragua.com/ecodiver
 --- Martin Marji Cermak <mc1@trimedia.cz> escribió: 
> Hello Ow at Neuromancer :-) and all Squid guys,
> I promised to post here my Squid results.
> 
> I am trying to find out what a single Squid box can
> do - I have 3200 
> unique IPs and 240 HTTP requests per second during
> peek time.
> I hande this load with one box, using WCCP to get
> the traffic to Squid 
> (so it is a transparet proxy - the evil thing :-).
> 
> My goal is to achive maximum BYTE hit ratio.
> 
> USED HARDWARE:
> server:        IBM x305
> Processor:     P4 2.8GHz
> Memory:        4 GB (you can switch the swap off)
> Hardisk:       2 x 36GB 10 RPM, 2 x 73 15 RPM scsi
> disks
> Controler:     IBM 71P8594 Kendall Card Option
>                 <Adaptec 29320LP Ultra320 SCSI
> adapter>
> Hardisk for logs: IDE 7200, DMA
> Ethernet card: Broadcom TG3
> 
> OS: Linux Debian/woody, kernel 2.4.25, tproxy, wccp
> 
> Unfortunately, I do not have enough clients to reach
> the box limits.
> But I can see that my median HIT time triples during
> peak time, which 
> probably means a disk bottleneck. But it will be the
> log disk, because I 
> use an IDE disk for log (with log_mime_header on, so
> I get an 500 MB 
> acccess.log per hour). And also the DNS server (see
> below) - DNS 
> responses are longer during peak time.
> 
> I know it is not good to combine different disk (15
> rpm and 10 rpm), but 
> I had no choice.
> 
> Maximum performance I have achived (MRTG stats gaind
> by SNMP from squid):
> 
> Client HTTP Requests per second: 220
> Server Requests per second: 210
> Server In  	1600 kBytes/s
>    (amount of traffic read from origin WWW servers)
> System load: 3, occasionally rises to 10 and I don't
> know why
> HTTP Out: 2000 kBytes/s
>    (amount of traffic written to clients)
> HTTP Hits per second: 110
> Squid generated Error Pages: 2 errors per second
> Total accounted memory in GRI: 830 MB
> Storage disk size: 164 GB
> Storage Mem Size: 200 MB
> HTTP I/O Number of Reads: 300 reads/sec
> Number of Clients Accessing Cache: 3200
>    (unique IPs since Squid started)
> HTTP all service time: 150 ms
> HTTP miss service time: 490 ms
> HTTP Near Miss Service Time: 8 ms
> HTTP hit service time: 30 ms (average is 10 ms)
> Byte Hit Ratio: 20% (heap LFUDA)
> Request Hit Ratio: 64% (49% average)
> Disks: 800 writes per second
> Log disk (IDE - the bottleneck): 500 writes per sec
> DNS service time: 70 ms (bottleneck)
> 
> Configuration (squid.conf)
> maximum_object_size 200 MB
> cache_mem 200 MB
> cache_replacement_policy heap LFUDA
> log_mime_hdrs on
> store_avg_object_size 22 KB
> store_dir_select_algorithm round-robin
>    (if least-load, it does not distribute the load
> properly)
> cache_dir aufs /squidcache/cache1 28000 60 256
> cache_dir aufs /squidcache/cache2 56000 60 256
> cache_dir aufs /squidcache/cache3 28000 60 256
> cache_dir aufs /squidcache/cache4 56000 60 256
> 
> 
> Please notice that I encoutered a DNS issue.
> Squid generated more requests per second (500?) than
> the DNS server was 
> able to accept (200?). My coleague administrator had
> to recompile it and 
> icrease the number. From this point, the squid
> performance has been 
> better in peak time. The HIT service time does not
> tripple, but double 
> only during peak time.
> 
> 
> Another important think:
> I had to renice all standard linux maintenance
> programs, e.g. in 
> /etc/crontab:
>    /usr/bin/nice -n 19 run-parts --report
> /etc/cron.daily
> 
> these tasks had negative impact to Squid.
> Especially: /etc/cron.daily/standard
>          and /etc/cron.daily/find
> (see /etc/checksecurity.conf
>   and /etc/updatedb.conf
> - don't let find crawl through cache dirs)
> 
> 
> Some stats from my cachemgr page follow.
> I did not take them in the real peak time,
> unfortunately, but it was 
> close to :-)
> 
> 
> I am happy to post more details if someone is
> interested in.
> 
> Best regards,
> have a nice weekend,
> 
> Marji
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Connection information for squid:
> 	Number of clients accessing cache:	2925
> 	Number of HTTP requests received:	13830996
> 	Number of ICP messages received:	0
> 	Number of ICP messages sent:	0
> 	Number of queued ICP replies:	0
> 	Request failure ratio:	 0.00
> 	Average HTTP requests per minute since start:
> 5128.4
> 	Average ICP messages per minute since start:	0.0
> 	Select loop called: 38791775 times, 4.171 ms avg
> Cache information for squid:
> 	Request Hit Ratios:	5min: 54.0%, 60min: 52.2%
> 	Byte Hit Ratios:	5min: 23.5%, 60min: 24.7%
> 	Request Memory Hit Ratios:	5min: 4.9%, 60min: 6.5%
> 	Request Disk Hit Ratios:	5min: 25.2%, 60min: 26.2%
> 	Storage Swap size:	161338652 KB
> 	Storage Mem size:	204820 KB
> 	Mean Object Size:	22.54 KB
> 	Requests given to unlinkd:	0
> Median Service Times (seconds)  5 min    60 min:
> 	HTTP Requests (All):   0.08265  0.10281
> 	Cache Misses:          0.46965  0.46965
> 	Cache Hits:            0.01309  0.01164
> 	Near Hits:             0.42149  0.42149
> 	Not-Modified Replies:  0.00678  0.00562
> 	DNS Lookups:           0.01609  0.01464
> 	ICP Queries:           0.00000  0.00000
> Resource usage for squid:
> 	UP Time:	161816.436 seconds
> 	CPU Time:	121702.940 seconds
> 	CPU Usage:	75.21%
> 	CPU Usage, 5 minute avg:	94.01%
> 	CPU Usage, 60 minute avg:	93.22%
> 	Process Data Segment Size via sbrk(): 915378 KB
> 	Maximum Resident Size: 0 KB
> 	Page faults with physical i/o: 935
> Memory usage for squid via mallinfo():
> 	Total space in arena:  185544 KB
> 	Ordinary blocks:       183916 KB   9731 blks
> 	Small blocks:               0 KB      0 blks
> 	Holding blocks:          6012 KB     10 blks
> 	Free Small blocks:          0 KB
> 	Free Ordinary blocks:    1627 KB
> 	Total in use:          189928 KB 99%
> 	Total free:              1627 KB 1%
> 	Total size:            191556 KB
> Memory accounted for:
> 	Total accounted:       789021 KB
> 	memPoolAlloc calls: 1795219551
> 	memPoolFree calls: 1772798798
> File descriptor usage for squid:
> 	Maximum number of file descriptors:   8192
> 	Largest file desc currently in use:   3489
> 	Number of file desc currently in use: 3222
> 	Files queued for open:                   1
> 	Available number of file descriptors: 4969
> 	Reserved number of file descriptors:   100
> 	Store Disk files open:                  21
> Internal Data Structures:
> 	7160517 StoreEntries
> 	 35656 StoreEntries with MemObjects
> 	 35457 Hot Object Cache Items
> 	7158519 on-disk objects
>  
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Received on Sat Jan 15 2005 - 16:36:03 MST
This archive was generated by hypermail pre-2.1.9 : Mon Mar 07 2005 - 12:59:35 MST