Hi,
NO_DEFAULT_CA doesn't help. Still goes in GB. Can anyone tell me area so that i can work on?
Regards, Nil
From: squid-users <squid-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> on behalf of Alex Rousskov <rousskov@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, April 26, 2017 7:37 PM To: squid-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: Huge memory required for squid 3.5 On 04/26/2017 09:35 AM, Yuri Voinov wrote:
> This is openssl issue or squid's? AFAIK, the underlying issue (i.e., bug #4005) is mostly a Squid problem: Squid is caching SSL contexts (instead of certificates) and does a poor job maintaining that cache. Earlier OpenSSL versions (that had to be used when the original code was written) complicated solving this problem. OpenSSL v1.0.1+ added APIs that simplify some aspects of the anticipated fix. Certain OpenSSL aspects will continue to hurt Squid, even with OpenSSL v1.0.1, but if you want to blame a single project (instead of both), blame Squid. > Why sessions can't share CA's data cached in memory? shared_ptr invented > already. OpenSSL knew how to share things well before std::shared_ptr became available. However, it is the responsibility of the application to tell OpenSSL what to create from scratch and what to share. A part of the problem is that Squid tells OpenSSL to create many large things from scratch and then caches those large things while underestimating their size by several(?) orders of magnitude (and probably also missing many cache hits). More details, including the difference between problems associated with from-client and to-server connections, are documented in the "Memory Usage" section of http://wiki.squid-cache.org/Features/SslBump
FWIW, we have spent a lot of resources on triaging this problem and drafting possible solutions (in various overlapping areas), but there is currently no sponsor to finalize and implement any of the fixes. AFAIK, bug #4005 is stuck. I am glad that NO_DEFAULT_CA helps mitigate some of the problems in some environments. HTH, Alex. > 26.04.2017 9:08, Amos Jeffries пишет: >> On 26/04/17 10:53, Yuri Voinov wrote: >>> Ok, but how NO_DEFAULT_CA should help with this? >> >> It prevents OpenSSL copying that 1MB into each incoming client >> connections memory. The CAs are only useful there when you have some >> of the global CAs as root for client certificates - in which case you >> still only want to trust the roots you paid for service and not all of >> them. >> >> Just something to try if there are huge memory issues with TLS/SSL >> proxying. The default behaviour is fixed for Squid-4 with the config >> options changes. But due to being a major surprise for anyone already >> relying on global roots for client certs it remains a problem in 3.5. >> >> Amos >> >> _______________________________________________ >> squid-users mailing list >> squid-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >> http://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users
> > > > _______________________________________________ > squid-users mailing list > squid-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users
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