Search squid archive

Re: Maximum Bandwidth a squid server can Handle

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

- From my experience it also depends on if you try to cache or not.
If you have a spinning disk and you try to cache into disk and not
only into ram you will have a bottle neck from the HDD.

If you will use only RAM cache a restart will cause to loss the cache.

If you will use squid without access logs it will help the overall speed.

If you will use squid with no access logs and disk cache and only use
it as a simple forward proxy the the server will be only a simple ACL
proxy and will be very fast.

Eliezer

On 12/11/2014 01:12 PM, Amos Jeffries wrote:
> That question is like asking how much bandwidth "a CPU" can
> handle. The answer can only be "it depends".
> 
> It depends very much on: what Squid version you are talking about, 
> what hardware its running on (NIC speed, CPU speed, disk I/O
> speed), what features have been configured for use, what ACL tests
> are being run, and finally ... what the input traffic actually
> contains.
> 

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v1

iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJUiZBxAAoJENxnfXtQ8ZQUVCUIAInvMe07N0ac2HDEkGN6jlma
ib4bBn5S/BFwdyxyAbGvrlP0tbstrZpNCIwa/rKPuik1Mu7OJLqhJ2eNZcteLBDN
n5l1tqpE4yKqCyvxpwVOEVmyAMpXjvIsByQwz2HpSmMsSbHQPIOvZ/6KlotIHadi
AM3qQ1aqFZXfzoYF2Q4YKJNMy9XqVYASGU5L7oA5DGb3KtL9n1DNNqkapfy5MJ0t
KYTII8TqlqMAQ0MdMPKC7fAVrshPSWzHp/jAyc42CzqK6JFq0o1/2hZiieTNKg+7
7q5JLZTbhqC8m5ko+uEg2TjW1841kZNxgO1isCzAa/LwrRRkW3GhJO4Ko8xkW1E=
=WhAq
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
_______________________________________________
squid-users mailing list
squid-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users





[Index of Archives]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Samba]     [Big List of Linux Books]     [Linux USB]     [Yosemite News]

  Powered by Linux