-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On 9/01/2015 8:10 a.m., Doug Sampson wrote: >> Hi, >> >> I have the similar problem on FreeBSD 10.1-STABLE #1 r275861 >> with squid-3.4.10. I also applied MEMPOOLS=1 when starting squid. >> I experience the process slowing down and unacceptable >> performance. >> >> Squid is configured to use kerberos and ntlm authentication and >> lap group authentication. other settings: >> ~14 MB for Squid process memory. >> cache_replacement_policy heap LFUDA cache_mem 4096 MB + 4096 MB for RAM cache + 60 MB for RAM cache index >> maximum_object_size 32 MB cache_dir diskd /usr/local/squid/cache >> 32768 32 256 + 540 MB for disk cache index + (600 * 16 * 0.5) MB for each active client connection state. ==> 4800 MB NP: modern web browsers open up to 8 parallel connections to load a page ("happy eyeballs" makes that 16 TCP sockets) per client ==> ~8 MB per active client. Grand total: => 9.5 GB of RAM just for Squid. .. then there is whatever memory the helper programs, other software on the server and operating system all need. >> >> I have seen the following errors in cache.log: >> >> FATAL: Received Segment Violation...dying. FATAL: Received Bus >> Error...dying. need a backtrace to tell what the "Segment Violation" is about. "Bus Error" is your CPU or RAM futzing up. The OS or hardware is broken. Quite possibly this is the result of runnign out of RAM and swap space. >> >> after this the squid restarts. The system has 10GB of memory and >> is working as internal cache for ~600 users. >> >> Please point me in the right direction. I have no problem >> running squid33-3.3.13 on FreeBSD 9.3-STABLE #0 r270210. >> >> Thank you very much. >> >> Regards, >> >> lk > > Man, I empathize with you. Have you tried running Squid 3.4.x on > FreeBSD 9.3? Sometimes I wonder if it's FreeBSD 10.x that's causing > the issue... > > I tried the shell variable MEMPOOLS=1 and that quickly made the > situation a lot worse. Swap space would get filled up very quickly > and the system would slow down quickly before crashing. > All MEMPOOLS=1 does is make Squid internally recycle the memory that gets free'd. Re-using it for other objects of the same type that are allocated right after its free'd. So new memory only gets allocated once the recycling "pool" for an object type is empty, everything allocated so far actively in use. The main point of using MEMPOOLS=1 is a debugging aid to track down leaks, by a) reduced OS allocator calls making frequent ones obvious, and b) the mgr:mem report more clearly listing what objects are being free'd (chunked pool contains recycled objects) and which are not (pool always empty). Steve Hill has come up with some patches that resolve memory issues with the new 3.4 helper annotations feature when using Negotiate or NTMLM auth helpers. For authenticated clients with long connection times or high traffic volumes the state can accumulate up to quite large amounts of memory. see the "Debugging slow proxy" thread of earlier this week. HTH Amos -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.22 (MingW32) iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJUrysEAAoJELJo5wb/XPRjFFMH/RNhVzPWfFixDDarpHUFQMoE 6QLkaD5wwQfRp3xfBW/QfZ9vvu04zptFOvNr4766jGsh9RSGZdNZwgPc9pCADDrv Xs0HCO1VDMxGoBjFfaS2XJ5DLX2zQdbYlZKb0yghxXSYzg0ZZEhmsKO8r1Exp8j7 KO95yP3z/8agmwXbU2sJ1esqRC7IfW2sF/DtU8cPTzUf0cKEyjGoCbVrNAN1qKUH jLf1iw8sNr3xGwFG/WmQmKpYTsXInSp4GmwXgCSQ0T5DCLVDtWuvnXpobxR8iuSW zIX/CDKTe58lfVP4EXdzJNBgiuEiVZaRccynbk2L8HRvJ8kt9Pk50P5tWXM5FMw= =lv6G -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ squid-users mailing list squid-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users