Thanks a lot, Eliezer and Amos.
Your Views are going to help me lot :)
On Fri, Dec 12, 2014 at 3:44 PM, Amos Jeffries wrote:
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> On 12/12/2014 4:41 a.m., Siva Prakash wrote:
> > Thanks for your valuable input, Eliezer and Amos.
> >
> > I have a
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On 12/12/2014 4:41 a.m., Siva Prakash wrote:
> Thanks for your valuable input, Eliezer and Amos.
>
> I have added the rough hardware and squid configuration, please
> guide me out with how much request squid can handle per second,
>
> CPU Speed - eac
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On 12/11/2014 05:41 PM, Siva Prakash wrote:
> Squid configuration - For authentication, it is integrated with AD
> and lots of ACLs(1000) to block sites.
Hey,
The acls should not be too much of an effect unless they are binded to
an external helper.
Thanks for your valuable input, Eliezer and Amos.
I have added the rough hardware and squid configuration, please guide me
out with how much request squid can handle per second,
CPU Speed - each 3.30GHz( totally 5 processors)
RAM - 4 GB
NIC - one 10 GB Ethernet Adapter
Squid Version - 3.4
Squ
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- From my experience it also depends on if you try to cache or not.
If you have a spinning disk and you try to cache into disk and not
only into ram you will have a bottle neck from the HDD.
If you will use only RAM cache a restart will cause to loss
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On 11/12/2014 11:31 p.m., Siva Prakash wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I have searched lot but i could not get clear statistics regrading
> how much bandwidth a squid can handle.
>
> Consider, I have a server of 4 GB RAM, Multicore processor and
> centos or ubu
Hi All,
I have searched lot but i could not get clear statistics regrading how much
bandwidth a squid can handle.
Consider, I have a server of 4 GB RAM, Multicore processor and centos or
ubuntu operarting system.
Can any one guide me how much amount of bandwidth single squid sever can
handle?
o