On 12/07/2017 12:12 PM, Ing. Pedro Pablo Delgado Martell wrote: > I have been reading about the difference between a KB and a KiB, > Kilobyte and Kibibyte respectively. According to several websites, also > Google, 1KB = 1000 bytes and 1KiB = 1024 bytes. However, you guys say > on /etc/squid/squid.conf this: > > "Units accepted by Squid are: > > bytes - byte > > KB - Kilobyte (*1024 bytes*) > " > > This email is not for criticize your work, I'm only looking for some > clearance because right now I'm confused about how Squid is really > measuring files. The statement in squid.conf.documented is accurate: When parsing size-related options that support units, Squid interprets the KB suffix as 1024 bytes. This classic/legacy interpretation predates and violates some of the modern conventions/standards. I do not anticipate changes in this area because it is not trivial to make such changes backwards-compatible, and because we should solve much bigger problems first. Please note that Squid may use a different KB definition in other contexts, especially in various reports and cache.log messages. Alex. _______________________________________________ squid-users mailing list squid-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users