Re: Issues with mod_disk_cache and htcacheclean

2009-01-10 Thread Neil Gunton
Plüm, Rüdiger, VF-Group wrote: Can you try with the following additional patch and a clean cache? Afterwards there should only be very very few orphaned header files left.: Index: modules/cache/mod_disk_cache.c === ---

Re: Issues with mod_disk_cache and htcacheclean

2009-01-08 Thread Plüm, Rüdiger, VF-Group
-Ursprüngliche Nachricht- Von: Neil Gunton Gesendet: Montag, 5. Januar 2009 23:17 An: dev@httpd.apache.org Betreff: Re: Issues with mod_disk_cache and htcacheclean Ruediger Pluem wrote: This seems to be a bug. Can you please try if the following patch fixes this? I

Re: Issues with mod_disk_cache and htcacheclean

2009-01-05 Thread Ruediger Pluem
On 01/04/2009 11:09 PM, Neil Gunton wrote: All of this brings up a few questions: 1. Why does mod_disk_cache generate six levels of subdirectory when CacheDirLevels is clearly set to 3? I realize what it's trying to do, This is more of a documentation bug, than a code bug. The

Re: Issues with mod_disk_cache and htcacheclean

2009-01-05 Thread Ruediger Pluem
On 01/05/2009 03:50 PM, Ruediger Pluem wrote: Regarding the performance you should take a look at the following: 1. Use a separate filesystem for the cache. 2. Ensure that it is mounted with noatime option. 3. Check if you are using the right type of filesystem for this job. If the

Re: Issues with mod_disk_cache and htcacheclean

2009-01-05 Thread Neil Gunton
Ruediger Pluem wrote: What information do your cookies contain? Are these session cookies that are individual to each client? In this case the usage of mod_disk_cache with Vary Cookies set would be bad. As these responses would be individual you couldn't reuse the results anyway for other

Issues with mod_disk_cache and htcacheclean

2009-01-04 Thread Neil Gunton
I posted this on the users list, but was advised to post it to dev as well, since it seemed relevant to developers. Hope that's ok... I am using Apache 2.2.9 on Linux AMD64, built from source. There is one server running two builds of Apache - a lightweight front-end caching reverse proxy