Hi, Al
Yes I did thanks for the suggestion
I am trying to figure out why is Squid refusing to aknowledge the available
size on the system
Unless of course it's a bug on either sides, I mean on Squid's side and
Ubuntu side,
But I have checked some Ubuntu forums and people used the same methods I
used and it seems very strange that when I start Squid I get 1024 instead of
46622 or whatever the number I put
Regards
Adam
----- Original Message -----
From: "Al - Image Hosting Services" <azick@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Adam@Gmail" <adbasque@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: <squid-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, March 22, 2010 6:13 PM
Subject: Re: FileDescriptor Issues
Hi,
Did you try using ulimit?
Best Regards,
Al
On Mon, 22 Mar 2010, Adam@Gmail wrote:
Date: Mon, 22 Mar 2010 17:42:47 -0000
From: "Adam@Gmail" <adbasque@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: squid-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: FileDescriptor Issues
Hi All,
I have tried everything so far I definitely have increased my file
descriptors on my Ubuntu OS
from 1024 to 46622
But when I start Squid 3.0 STABLE25 I doesn't seem to detect the real
descriptor's size
I have checked the sysctl.conf, and I have checked the system to make
sure that the correct size
/etc/sysctl.confWhen I run this I more /proc/sys/fs/file-maxI get
46622But Squid3.0 seem to only detect 1024Is there anything that I am not
doing please?
I don't know what else to do
Thank you
Regards
Adam