Re: [squid-users] cache dir files
I understand that but wondered what the difference between a MEM_HIT and a HIT was, if there was a difference. When does squid write cache to disk? HIT means that the object is already in the cache and or on the disk as you write. So in that case the object has to be read, nothing has to be written. and what is the difference between TCP_MEM_HIT and TCP_HIT:NONE http://www.squid-cache.org/Doc/FAQ/FAQ-6.html#ss6.7 M.
RE: [squid-users] cache dir files
TCP_HIT: A valid copy of the requested object was in the cache, but not in memory. TCP_MEM_HIT: A valid copy of the requested object was in the cache and it was in memory, thus avoiding disk accesses (read). The copy of the site will be cached during a TCP_MISS. Chris -Original Message- From: Kvetch [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, December 02, 2004 11:04 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: [squid-users] cache dir files I understand that but wondered what the difference between a MEM_HIT and a HIT was, if there was a difference. When does squid write cache to disk? HIT means that the object is already in the cache and or on the disk as you write. So in that case the object has to be read, nothing has to be written. and what is the difference between TCP_MEM_HIT and TCP_HIT:NONE http://www.squid-cache.org/Doc/FAQ/FAQ-6.html#ss6.7 M.
RE: [squid-users] cache dir files
Hello - I am having some difficulties using some cache purging utilities and noticed a couple things. I have squid setup as a reverse proxy and when I view one of my cached sites I see TCP_HIT:NONE in my access log but I cannot find any files being written to my cache dirs that would contain this HIT. From what I can tell the purge scripts I have found, scan your cache dirs and use squidclient to purge every instance in cache containing the variable you gave the purge script. But without files being written to the cache_dir I don't think it can do anything. Does anybody have any ideas on why my cached HITS wouldn't be written to disk? HIT means that the object is already in the cache and or on the disk as you write. So in that case the object has to be read, nothing has to be written. and what is the difference between TCP_MEM_HIT and TCP_HIT:NONE http://www.squid-cache.org/Doc/FAQ/FAQ-6.html#ss6.7 M.