Hi guys Is there anybody to help me for how to increase the speed of loading web-pages?! any answers is appreciated On Thu, Dec 26, 2013 at 9:45 AM, zeagus zpt <zeagus.zpt@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi Antony > thanks for your answer > I tested squid with a number of different static sites. > When I don't use squid, it takes nearly 2 sec and when I use, it takes > nearly 30 sec! > > I set refresh_pattern like this: > refresh_pattern . 1440 40% 40320 override-expire ignore-no-cache > ignore-no-store ignore-private store-stale > None of them cache with squid and I saw cache_miss for all requests! > > Cheers & Merry Christmas > > > > On Tue, Dec 24, 2013 at 2:07 PM, Antony Stone > <Antony.Stone@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On Tuesday 24 December 2013 at 10:55:57, zeagus zpt wrote: >> >>> Hello squid-users, >>> I think my clients wait for a long time to view web pages. >>> Would you mind suggesting a way to solve this problem? >>> All the Best ... >> >> 1. What speed interconnect do you have between clients and Squid? >> >> 2. What speed connection do you have between Squid and the Internet? >> >> 3. Access a cacheable* web page (via Squid), note the time taken. >> >> 4. Request the same page again from the same browser on the same machine >> (still via Squid), note the time taken. >> >> 5. Request the same page again from the same browser on a different machine >> (also going via Squid), note the time taken. >> >> 6. Request the same page again from either of the above machines, this time >> direct (not via Squid), note the time taken. >> >> 7. Repeat for at least three different websites which show the problem. >> >> 8. Repeat when your network traffic is low, for example after employees have >> gone home (if this is a commercial network). >> >> * "Cacheable" means a web page which Squid is allowed to cache - check Squid's >> access log and/or the page headers if you're not sure. >> >> >> Tests 3, 4 and 5 should tell you whether Squid is caching (times for tests 4 >> and 5 should be notably less than test 3). >> >> Tests 4, 5 and 6 should tell you whether Squid is causing a problem (test 6 >> should not be noticeably faster than tests 4 and 5). >> >> >> In short - if test 6 (for all the sites you check) shows long response times, >> then you either have a saturated connection to the Internet, or the sites you >> are testing are simply slow. >> >> If test 8 also shows long response times, the sites are just slow. >> >> If the site is slow, and the pages you're accessing are cacheable, then Squid >> should improve the access times for tests 5 and 6 - if not, start (at the very >> least) with the Squid access log, to see what response times it's reporting. >> >> >> >> Happy Christmas, >> >> >> Antony. >> >> -- >> "How I managed so long without this book baffles the mind." >> >> - Richard Stoakley, Group Program Manager, Microsoft Corporation, >> referring to "The Art of Project Management", O'Reilly press >> >> Please reply to the list; >> please don't CC me.