-application to be changed?
Regard
Joachim
-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: joachim.r...@jrwebsites.de [mailto:joachim.r...@jrwebsites.de]
Gesendet: Freitag, 16. Mai 2014 13:34
An: Amos Jeffries
Cc: squid-users@squid-cache.org
Betreff: Re: [squid-users] SQUID 3.3.8 doesn't cache files greater than
Hi,
thanks for the responses.
I looked into the strange behavior a little bit more in detail and noticed,
that only pdf-files are concerned.
All other files, also greater than 50k, are cached, only pdfs are not cached.
In the squid.conf I have:
refresh_pattern ^ftp: 43200 0%
On 16/05/2014 11:34 p.m., joachim.r...@jrwebsites.de wrote:
Hi,
thanks for the responses.
I looked into the strange behavior a little bit more in detail and noticed,
that only pdf-files are concerned.
All other files, also greater than 50k, are cached, only pdfs are not cached.
In the
:34
An: Amos Jeffries
Cc: squid-users@squid-cache.org
Betreff: Re: [squid-users] SQUID 3.3.8 doesn't cache files greater than 50KB
Hi,
thanks for the responses.
I looked into the strange behavior a little bit more in detail and noticed,
that only pdf-files are concerned.
All other files, also greater
Hi,
I installed a squid on an ubuntu 14 server.
In the access.log I get for files greater than about 50KB the error code
TCP_MISS_ABORTED and the files are not cached.
My cache parameters in squid.conf are:
cache_mem 1024 MB
maximum_object_size_in_memory 128 KB
cache_replacement_policy heap
I think there was a bug fixed very recently to do with the fact that
`maximum_object_size` is ignored if it comes after `cache_dir` in the
conf.
If you switch the order or move use `cache_dir max-size=n` then it
should be alright.
On 15 May 2014 04:18, Joachim Rahm joachim.r...@jrwebsites.de
On 15/05/2014 11:17 a.m., Dan Charlesworth wrote:
I think there was a bug fixed very recently to do with the fact that
`maximum_object_size` is ignored if it comes after `cache_dir` in the
conf.
If you switch the order or move use `cache_dir max-size=n` then it
should be alright.
On 15
Evidently I need to step up my Reading Comprehension game.
Sounds like Amos is on the ball tho
On 15 May 2014, at 3:05 pm, Amos Jeffries squ...@treenet.co.nz wrote:
MISS is server being contacted for data.
ABRTED is the client giving up before the response happens.
Given that responses