> -----Original Message-----
> From: Michael Puckett [mailto:Michael.Puckett@Sun.COM]
> Sent: Wednesday, November 23, 2005 9:25 AM
> To: squid-users
> Subject: [squid-users] Overflowing filesystems
>
>
> I am running this version of squid:
>
> Squid Cache: Version 2.5.STABLE10
> configure options: --enable-large-cache-files --disable-internal-dns
> --prefix=/opt/squid --enable-async-io --with-pthreads --with-aio
> --enable-icmp --enable-snmp
I imagine you have some reason for disabling the internal DNS resolution. I'm a bit curious as to what it would be...
>
> specifically enabled for large files. My cache_dir is 535GB and the
> cache_dir directive looks like this:
>
> cache_dir aufs /export/vol01/cache 400000 64 64
> cache_swap_low 97
> cache_swap_high 99
>
Aside from the unusually low number of directories for the amount of data, that all seems fine.
> Squid has consumed the entire partition:
>
> /dev/dsk/c1t1d0s7 537G 529G 2.2G 100% /export/vol01
>
> Not the 400GB expected in the cache_dir directive and is now giving
> write failures.
>
> Have I set something up wrong? Why has the cache_dir size
> directive been
> ignored and why isn't old cached content being released?
>
Is Squid the only thing writing to this cache_dir? Is there only one instance of Squid running? Do you see a process like unlinkd running? Are there any errors in the cache_log? What OS are you running? Assuming (judging from your email address) it's Solaris, have you had a gander at the FAQ (http://www.squid-cache.org/Doc/FAQ/FAQ-14.html#ss14.1)?
> -mikep
>
Chris
Received on Wed Nov 23 2005 - 12:12:57 MST
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