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Re: Are downloads realy faster by using squid?

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Hey Dirk,(Is this the first name?)

The basic question about a *fast* cache is if you need it or not.
If you have two computers which are connected using a direct cable from one to the other, would you need a cache?
The issue is what will this cache do..
Let say for example you have a 1Gb line from local network to the wide area network and you need access to the service to a machine that in the other side of the 1Gb cable switch..
In most cases it will be enough for HTTP requests in sizes of 32kb.
There are cases which there are thousands of requests and the 1Gb line is not enough to satisfy 9k requests per sec.

Squid will sure not satisfy all clients requests but it will help some and maybe most of them. If all these requests for example are to a dynamic source then there is not a chance that it will be cached but it will help the clients to not kill the 1Gb line.

Squid can help to determine if a cache proxy is needed at all and if so what and how it will help the clients and line owner.

If for example you have 1Gb line and DISK with speed of only 100Mbps it will be slower then 1Gb. If you have one side of the connection with 1Gb while the other is 10Gb and disks that can reach up to speed of 10Gb almost everybody will be happy for sometime.

Since there is no DISK yet that can work in a speed of 10Gbps as far as I can tell, it will be hard to satisfy all clients.. Also note that there are many memory sticks that can utilize bandwidth of about 2Gbps which is far less then the CPU that can process about 30Gbps(PC)..

So now: What disks are you using on the cache server and what line speed are we talking about?

The more information we will have we can then find the source of the slowdowns and maybe find a solution.

All The Bests,
Eliezer

On 19/12/13 20:11, Dirk Lehmann wrote:
Hello everybody,

the second download of a file ist not faster than the first download of
the same file.

My Squid 3.4 is running on localhost. My browser is configured to use
localhost http-proxy port 3128 and ftp-proxy port 3128.

Why are downloads not faster even squid is running between client and
server?

I was wondering if you could let me know.

Regards,

Dirk Lehmann





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