Have you tried checking the number and status of open TCP connections within squid? You can check it by running netstat (as root) on either box, or by checking with cache manager, if it's enabled and responding
On Tue, Mar 5, 2024 at 4:53 PM <nuit...@earthlink.net> wrote: > Squid 4.17 compiled on Debian 11 > > Squid works, but, after 12 to 17 browser tabs are opened to any web site, > subsequent tabs fail to load web site content. At the same time, telnet:80 > through Squid also fails. Yet, network traffic that bypasses Squid > successfully communicates with the target web site. > > Ultimately, after about two minutes, unresponsive browser tabs usually > finish loading web site content. > > Adjusting cache_mem makes no difference. > > This is remarked: > #cache_dir ufs /var/spool/squid 100 16 256 > Tried to enable it, but squid -z fails with permission issues, so keeping > cache_dir enabled breaks squid entirely. > > Any thoughts, please? > > With apologies if this violates etiquette (hey, I did > --enable-http-violations!), this Squid server is taking on greater > importance, and while it's infinitely fascinating, I recognize my limits, > so > I'm open to experienced help managing and maintaining it, and probably > building a newer version. :-) > > Thanks! > > > _______________________________________________ > squid-users mailing list > squid-users@lists.squid-cache.org > https://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users > -- Francesco
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