squid will just remove files from the disk if it gets full. as a matter of
practice, i don't give squid the _entire_ hard drive for caching -- just 85%
of it and 15% goes to the log of the objects being stored.
deleting the contents of the cache will just make your months of cacheing
worthless. if you want to add additional cache_dir, just add a new HDD, stop
the squid process, add an entry in squid.conf and re-initialize via
'squid -z', and bring back squid again.
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Horatio B. Bogbindero
Sent: Tuesday, February 13, 2001 10:38 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [plug] Squid Cache
> ive been looking from the squid docs with the query
> "What if the /cache is filled up? What will I do?"
>
> im using GDSF replacement policy for my squid.
>
if it is filled up? delete the contents of the cache directory, modify the
squid.conf and make the store dir smaller and reinitialize the cache.
--------------------------------------
William Emmanuel S. Yu
Ateneo Cervini-Eliazo Networks (ACENT)
email : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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