You should be able to see if your squid are actually caching and at what rate.
Look at your line utilization as well.
On Wed, 30 Jun 2004, Duncan wrote:
Thanks , gotta dig in into squid.conf
----- Original Message ----- From: <willem@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: "Duncan" <drack@xxxxxxxxxx> Cc: <Redhat-list@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Wednesday, June 30, 2004 12:18 PM Subject: Re: Increase Cache
Hello, The cache.log file will differ in size depending on when it was rotated. Read squid.conf, usually /etc/squid/squid.conf. If you really need to increase the cache directories, the directives are in there. It sounds like you have another kind of a problem though. Regards, Willem
On Wed, 30 Jun 2004, Duncan wrote:
i have a 64k fibre link with about 100 clients browsing , i use a linuxbox as my proxy server (squid). I am somehow exeperiencing slow browsing , so i checked /var/log/squid and did an ls -lah , my cache.log and it is amazinly 2.4k .Aint that too small or i am seeing things .Is there a way of increasing it so that my browsing can be better.
Duncan Rack -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribemailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subjecthttps://www.redhat.com/mailman/ listinfo/redhat-list
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