-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On 28/10/2014 5:37 a.m., Leonardo Rodrigues wrote: > On 27/10/14 11:47, Antony Stone wrote: >> On Monday 27 October 2014 at 14:32:39 (EU time), Frantisek >> Hanzlik wrote: >> >>> Please, what is best way for determining who squid clients >>> (their PC IP addresses) have which downloads active? I want it >>> to determine which clients burden our slow internet line. >>> Examining 'access.log' does not help much in this case, because >>> users can download large files and it may take a few minutes or >>> hours (e.g. in case of consuming some audio/video streams). >> I would use the tool 'iptraf', either running on your squid >> server, or on a machine which can sniff your internal network >> traffic (possibly with the use of a spanning port on the >> switch). >> >> That can give you real-time bandwidth measurements per IP >> address. >> > > I use this script: > > http://samm.kiev.ua/sqstat/ > > Set it to auto-update on 15/15 seconds, for example, and you'll > have a great and easy way to evaluate active connections and high > bandwidth use connections. > There is also the cachemgr interface for Squid. The "active_requests" report lists the currently underway transactions. Amos -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.22 (MingW32) iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJUTtNmAAoJELJo5wb/XPRjgRMH/iBjkuYP/8Ri3sULxNMtQfNz bEoOVL45ts2PwS3tLpo5p6zXeQRBy+wMpH6urjRIbObw0NP2aGQzlG4dowk/WSeE 4TA4+4f+u5f2roY4Lx+Jt0e5ndDvCb/XP7afcyO3kMhCN26Ns+OmKCj3CndHzUHT H4OLhOzsSOXqv2rLzje0+NttgjveLG+7AsxOVzBsRUQWUduq4Z09igqn/UolfkPn lK/6E6a3J5/4n9/mAamxep6vc2SIihBQ2NP4jnzsSLuoblqRnGBgaGRr+7/q0+uB Mx8BY4g/lPSNa5arTRoyniGe/Q3LmlXk/fv1tWGnsSQdgh2WK5kVNVyPZI3ZV1E= =iy8M -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ squid-users mailing list squid-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users