Dnia czwartek, 23 lutego 2006 01:11, napisałeś: > > > * High latency clients > > > > What do you mean "high latecy clients"? > > The majority of my customers have a network path like: > > client->squid->satellite->squid->internet many of my clients: client->[radio line {12,34,54}mbps]->squid->internet > 100 requests/second put my CPU usage in the high 80s (on a 32 bit Intel > Xeon 3.00GHz). So my result isn't so bad. But I must tune squid to maximum possible performance. > > > aragorn squid # squid -v > > Squid Cache: Version 2.5.STABLE12 > > configure options: --prefix=/usr --bindir=/usr/bin > > --exec-prefix=/usr > > --sbindir=/usr/sbin --localstatedir=/var --mandir=/usr/share/man > > --sysconfdir=/etc/squid --libexecdir=/usr/lib/squid > > --enable-auth=basic,digest,ntlm --enable-removal-policies=lru,heap > > --enable-linux-netfilter --enable-truncate --with-pthreads > > --enable-epool > > Hopefully that's just a misspelling. ;o) Why?;) I did some wrong? I'm testing epool patch like you said;> > > --disable-follow-x-forwarded-for --host=x86_64-pc-linux-gnu > > --disable-snmp > > --disable-ssl --enable-underscores > > --enable-storeio='diskd,coss,aufs,null' > > --enable-async-io ah.. async-io, mayby better will be to specify number of async-io threads? > I don't see any other likely problems (not saying there aren't any). Is chance to do something morre with hardware? I can add more memory banks or hard discs (for example +2 wd raptors) Regards, -- Tomasz Kolaj