2010/3/8 Herbert Faleiros <herb...@faleiros.eti.br>:
> aqui tenho utilizado HD's *SAS* de 300MB (15k RPM) e 1TB (mais lentos,

ops, 300GB.

> um servidor com quase 5TB de cache na mesma máquina com 8 instâncias
> do Squid, duas por cada núcleo de processador (2x Xeon Quad).

ops outra vez, 1 por cada núcleo.

# netstat -nlp | grep squid | grep tcp
tcp        0      0 x.y.z.k:8081         0.0.0.0:*
LISTEN      14145/(squid)
tcp        0      0 x.y.z.k:8082         0.0.0.0:*
LISTEN      14149/(squid)
tcp        0      0 x.y.z.k:8083         0.0.0.0:*
LISTEN      21603/(squid)
tcp        0      0 x.y.z.k:8084         0.0.0.0:*
LISTEN      14158/(squid)
tcp        0      0 x.y.z.k:8085         0.0.0.0:*
LISTEN      14244/(squid)
tcp        0      0 x.y.z.k:8086         0.0.0.0:*
LISTEN      14251/(squid)
tcp        0      0 x.y.z.k:8087         0.0.0.0:*
LISTEN      14255/(squid)
tcp        0      0 x.y.z.k:8088         0.0.0.0:*
LISTEN      14259/(squid)

# lsscsi
[6:0:0:0]    disk    MAXTOR   ATLAS15K2_73WLS  JNZH  /dev/sda
[6:0:1:0]    disk    SEAGATE  ST3300655LW      0003  /dev/sdb
[6:0:2:0]    disk    SEAGATE  ST3300655LW      0003  /dev/sdc
[7:0:0:0]    disk    SEAGATE  ST31000640SS     0003  /dev/sdd
[7:0:1:0]    disk    SEAGATE  ST31000640SS     0003  /dev/sde
[7:0:2:0]    disk    SEAGATE  ST31000640SS     0003  /dev/sdf
[7:0:3:0]    disk    SEAGATE  ST31000640SS     0003  /dev/sdg

--
Herbert

Responder a