We recently upgraded our extremely old squid servers (P3-1GHz, 512MB ram) to modern hardware (3GHz P4, 2GB ram) running RedHat 
linux.  The problem I am experiencing is that CPU load will jump to 100% and stay there.  The system shows about 50% iowait cpu 
usage.  We have about 1500 employees using two such machines.  Also, squid seems to dump core and restart several times during all 
this.  My coredump_dir directory has many core files in it, about 10 or 11 per day when the load-spike happens.  Some days, things 
are just fine.
I haven't had much time to validate all of this as I am just back from my holiday and this is what I see on the systems for now.  At 
the moment, the machines are playing nice, likely because the bulk of user-load has been switched back to the old proxies for the 
time being.
Disk-wise, the servers each have two 146GB scsi disks in a hardware mirror with all space (except /boot and swap) allocated to "/". 
  Not ideal, but I am not the one responsible for the hardware config.  The filesystem is ext3.
Here is the output of df -k:
Filesystem           1K-blocks      Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda3            139707024  16431300 116179012  13% /
/dev/sda1               256666     16053    227361   7% /boot
none                   1037388         0   1037388   0% /dev/shm
Here is the output of uname -a:
Linux spco1pxya 2.6.9-34.ELsmp #1 SMP Fri Feb 24 16:54:53 EST 2006 i686 i686 i386 GNU/Linux
Here is how squid-2.6-STABLE6 was built:
./configure                                     \
   --enable-delay-pools                          \
   --enable-useragent-log                        \
   --enable-referer-log                          \
   --disable-wccp                                \
   --enable-err-languages="English French"       \
   --enable-linux-netfilter                      \
   --disable-ident-lookups                       \
   --enable-auth="basic digest ntlm"             \
   --enable-basic-auth-helpers="getpwnam LDAP MSNT multi-domain-NTLM NCSA SASL SMB"      \
   --enable-ntlm-auth-helpers="fakeauth no_check SMB"                                    \
   --enable-digest-auth-helpers="ldap password"                                          \
   --enable-external-acl-helpers="ip_user ldap_group session unix_group wbinfo_group"    \
   --with-large-files
Here is the excerpt from the squid-conf pertaining to cache-size:
cache_dir    ufs /var/squid/cache 2048 16 256
What configurations can I do to my OS and squid in order to get rid of this bottleneck?
Cheers,
/Jason
Received on Fri Jan 12 2007 - 15:00:03 MST
This archive was generated by hypermail pre-2.1.9 : Thu Feb 01 2007 - 12:00:01 MST