Hi Haytham KHOUJA,
Haytham KHOUJA (devnull) wrote:
> Hello,
> The purpose of this thread is to join forces to have the best Squid
> configuration for generic affordable Intel machines available by major
> vendors (Dell/HP...) specifically for ISPs and corporations that want a
> basic setup but with optimal response and throughput and maximizing
> bandwidth savings.
> I work for an important ISP and I currently replaced 2 NetApp NetCache
> with 3 Dell 2950 hooked up on a Foundry Switch for Load Balancing.
> I used tproxy to enable IP Spoofing to IP spoofing the outgoing address
> with some configurations on the Cisco core router, I had to compile
> iptables and tproxy on a Debian kernel source (2.6.18)
>
> I've read almost every single thread on Optimizing Squid and Linux and
> want to share my setup with you.
> I do have some questions, clarifications and bugs but overall the
> performance is pretty impressive. (Yes, much better than the NetApps)
Great news to hear that Squid is beating NetCache!
>
> What i want to do is since i have 8 GB of RAMs, i want to store more hot
> objects in the RAMs to maximize Memory hit ratio, but with my setup,
> Squid doesn't
> go above 2GB~3GB of usage. (Remember, that there are no other heavy
> processes on the machine).
>
> If i knew beforehand that Squid doesn't make use of SMP, i wouldn't have
> bought Dual Quad Core and would have invested in Intel CPUs with 8mb of
> Cache, but what's done is done :)
>
> Before i had Squid go down because of File Delimiters and maximum open
> files and ip_conntrac fill up, i fixed both with some iptables and
> sysctl configuration.
> Now i'm hitting a "Oct 14 01:17:06 proxy4 squid[8883]: assertion failed:
> diskd/store_io_diskd.c:384: "!diskdstate->flags.close_request" Error, so
> Squid kills and restarts (which flushes the Memory cache).
I think this problem is related to DISKD. I used to have this DISKD
problem in my FreeBSD Squid boxes too during peak times.
>
> I'm looking forward for some contributions, idea sharing, knowledge
> correcting to make this setup a standard setup for large scale, well
> optimized and high performant Squid for future tweakings. I hope this
> configuration would be then uploaded to the Squid wiki.
>
> Here's my setup:
> Dell 2950
> Dual Quad Core 2.4Ghz / 8 GB Rams / 4x 136 GB 15000 RPM drives
>
> I have 3 cache_dir on separate drives and I formated the 3 disks with
> ReiserFS:
> /dev/sdb1 /CACHE1 reiserfs notail,noatime 0 0
> /dev/sdc1 /CACHE2 reiserfs notail,noatime 0 0
> /dev/sdd1 /CACHE3 reiserfs notail,noatime 0 0
>
> I run Debian GNU/Linux Etch and compiled Squid with the following:
> Squid Cache: Version 2.6.STABLE16
> configure options: '--bindir=/usr/bin' '--sbindir=/usr/sbin/'
> '--sysconfdir=/etc' '--enable-icmp' '--enable-snmp' '--enable-async-io'
> '--enable-linux-netfilter' '--enable-linux-tproxy' '--with-dl'
> '--with-large-files' '--enable-large-cache-files' '--with-maxfd=1000000'
> '--enable-storeio=diskd,ufs' '--with-aio' '--enable-epoll'
> '--disable-ident-lookups' '--enable-removal-policies=heap'
> 'CFLAGS=-DNUMTHREADS=120'
I would also like to extend
'--enable-storeio=diskd,ufs'
to
'--enable-storeio=ufs,coss,diskd,aufs,null'
>
> As you can see i have the following modules enabled: linux-tproxy,
> diskd, epoll, and removal policies.
> /dev/epoll improves network I/O performance, Diskd separates disk I/O to
> separate processes (which reduces process locking from Squid to write on
> disks), and read benchmarks for memory and disk removal policies.
>
> My /etc/squid.conf is composed of the following:
>
> http_port 80 transparent tproxy
> tcp_outgoing_address IP of the Machine
> :: Those are for IP Spooding and Transparency
>
> via off
> forwarded_for off
> :: Those are for total transparency, remote hosts will never guess that
> the request came from a proxy
>
> cache_mem 600 MB
> :: A bit confused about this, When i go higher than 2GB, Squid kills
> with a "out of memory" error. I have 8GB and want to maximize the use of
> it.
>
> cache_effective_user nobody
> cache_effective_group nogroup
> :: Security and bla bla
>
> cache_replacement_policy heap LFUDA
> memory_replacement_policy heap GDSF
> :: Very objective, you can google about them
>
> cache_dir diskd /CACHE1 61440 16 256 Q1=144 Q2=128
> cache_dir diskd /CACHE2 61440 16 256 Q1=144 Q2=128
> cache_dir diskd /CACHE3 61440 16 256 Q1=144 Q2=128
> :: DISKD configuration, i'm only using 60GB of each disk
Why don't you give the COSS storage a try and see the difference. I am
currently using COSS storage scheme in some of my FreeBSD proxy servers.
Others might however say that COSS is not ready for production use, etc
which might be true.
But what's the harm in trying if your DISKD seems to be crashing?
But as a matter of fact, I chose COSS over DISKD because DISKD kept
crashing under high load (100 - 250 req/sec).
What is your likely customer base? How much requests per second does
your Proxies handle currently? If your squid boxes are handling more
than 500 requests per second, then I am not sure if COSS will be able to
handle them. That's because I have not experimented with requests above
300 req/sec.
I am currently running COSS with Squid serving 200 req/sec and I can
confirm that it is quite stable and fast. Squid has been running over 50
days without a problem since switching from DISKD to COSS. And I hope
that it will continue to run without a problem for a further 365 days!!
>
> cache_access_log /var/log/squid/access.log
> cache_log /var/log/squid/cache.log
> cache_store_log none
> :: No need to log cache_store, so minimizing the Disk I/O
>
> fqdncache_size 51200
> ipcache_size 51200
> :: Caching IPs/Domain Name and whatnot
>
> pipeline_prefetch on
> :: Performance enhancement
>
> shutdown_lifetime 1 second
> :: Tired to wait whenever i restart my Squids (Only on testing)
>
> read_ahead_gap 60 KB
> maximum_object_size 2 GB
> minimum_object_size 0 KB
> maximum_object_size_in_memory 128 KB
> cache_swap_high 80%
> cache_swap_low 70%
> half_closed_clients off
> memory_pools on
> positive_dns_ttl 24 hours
> negative_dns_ttl 30 seconds
> request_timeout 60 seconds
> connect_timeout 30 seconds
> pconn_timeout 30 seconds
> ie_refresh on
> dns_nameservers DNS1 DNS2
> emulate_httpd_log off
> log_ip_on_direct on
> debug_options ALL, 9
> pid_filename /var/run/squid.pid
>
> My IPtables/sysctl and startup file:
> #!/bin/sh
> iptables -t tproxy -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp -m tcp --dport 80 -j
> TPROXY --on-port 80
> :: I run Squids on port 80 so that i can forward all incoming requests
> on port 80 to the Squids on the Cisco router level
Are you using WCCP or route-map for this?
>
> echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
> echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_nonlocal_bind
> echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/all/rp_filter
> echo 1024 65535 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range
> echo 102400 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_max_syn_backlog
> echo 1000000 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_conntrack_max
> echo 1000000 > /proc/sys/fs/file-max
> echo 60 > /proc/sys/kernel/msgmni
> echo 32768 > /proc/sys/kernel/msgmax
> echo 65536 > /proc/sys/kernel/msgmnb
> :: Maximizing Kernel configuration
>
> ulimit -HSn 1000000
1 million file descriptors? Will your squid boxes be serving 1 million
customers? If that's so, wow, that's great! The maximum file descriptors
I am using is 32768.
> /etc/init.d/squid stop
> /etc/init.d/squid start
> :: Re-enforcing ulimit parameters for the Squid process.
>
> Thank you
>
>
>
Thanking you...
-- With best regards and good wishes, Yours sincerely, Tek Bahadur Limbu System Administrator (TAG/TDG Group) Jwl Systems Department Worldlink Communications Pvt. Ltd. Jawalakhel, Nepal http://www.wlink.com.np http://teklimbu.wordpress.comReceived on Mon Oct 15 2007 - 03:13:34 MDT
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