Hi, Also sprach Jason Healy <jhealy+squid@xxxxxxxx> (Thu, 12 Jan 2006 21:23:38 -0500 (EST)): > At 1137138557s since epoch (01/12/06 20:49:17 -0500 UTC), Richard > Mittendorfer wrote: > > It's even if I'm the only client and it's one big file that's > > retrieved, so it must be some kind of internal limit. I have to look > > into the source, maybe I can find it hardcoded somewhere. 256kB/s > > looks so artificial ;) > > Not too sure about that. I just downloaded a non-cached file through > our proxy and broke to 270KB/s (this is the busiest time of day for > us, though). I know I've done better than that when it's quiet. > > If I turn around and request the same file again (now that it's > cached), I'm pulling >2.0MB/s without any trouble. Well, can't reach this here. Cached ~260KkB/s. And I'm quite sure the file was still in the linux disk cache. What does your cache_dir looks like? aufs I assume. Since you've got plenty of RAM - maybe this is the reason? Or it's some kind of autotuned by download speeds? Can't think of. > We're on a P3-850MHz with 1.5GB RAM and 30GB SCSI RAID1. I'm hoping > to upgrade by the end of the month. ;-) This box is up 24/7 and it's an allrounder for a few people in our SOHO (here for SOcial HOming) :). The little Celi + Mobo + raid0scsi just draws about 50/60 watts. The IDE HD's that carries the storage are spun down most of the time. With power consumption of a modern processor in mind, I'm quite happy with it. ;) > > Had a look at it. Doesn't look like debian's squid is compiled with > > async-io. ..hmm - <coffee> - sure, debian's is async-io. Must > > be. aufs _is_ compiled in: --enable-storeio=ufs,aufs,diskd,null > > Confirmed that it has it. We're on a stock config of Debian 3.1: > > # squid -v > [...] Jupp. > Jason sl ritch