[squid-users] Warning your cache is running out of file descriptors

2010-03-17 Thread Gmail

Hello All,

This is the first time I am using this mailing ;list, and I do apologise if 
I sent a copy of this email to another address by mistake


I am desperately seeking some help, I have googled in a hope to find an 
answer, but all I could find was about the previous versions, which don't 
apply to the version I am using and to my OS:



I am running Squid3.0 Stable
OS Ubuntu Hardy

I am currently getting this warning:

Warning your cache is running out of file descriptor, but I couldn't find 
where to increase the size from 1024 to any number.


On the previous versions and other OS systems, it's apparently located here 
/etc/default/squid but on my system it doesn't exist.


Can anyone please point me to where I can change that?

I have checked Ubuntu forums, I have checked several other forums, but the 
only links I seem to get on google are related to the previous versions of 
squid or other operating systems.


Can you help please, since I started using Squid I had problem after 
problem, lot of other applications are not working, I still can't access my 
backend HTTP servers, but that's another problem for another day.


Any help would be very much appreciated
Thank you all 



Re: [squid-users] Warning your cache is running out of file descriptors

2010-03-17 Thread Mariel Sebedio
Hello, the file descriptors you must be incress in 
/etc/security/limits.conf and re-build the cache  For RHEL you must change


*  - nofiles 1024
for
*  - nofiles 2048 


Sorry my english!!

Bye, Mariel

Gmail wrote:

Hello All,

This is the first time I am using this mailing ;list, and I do 
apologise if I sent a copy of this email to another address by mistake


I am desperately seeking some help, I have googled in a hope to find 
an answer, but all I could find was about the previous versions, which 
don't apply to the version I am using and to my OS:



I am running Squid3.0 Stable
OS Ubuntu Hardy

I am currently getting this warning:

Warning your cache is running out of file descriptor, but I couldn't 
find where to increase the size from 1024 to any number.


On the previous versions and other OS systems, it's apparently located 
here /etc/default/squid but on my system it doesn't exist.


Can anyone please point me to where I can change that?

I have checked Ubuntu forums, I have checked several other forums, but 
the only links I seem to get on google are related to the previous 
versions of squid or other operating systems.


Can you help please, since I started using Squid I had problem after 
problem, lot of other applications are not working, I still can't 
access my backend HTTP servers, but that's another problem for another 
day.


Any help would be very much appreciated
Thank you all




--
Lic. Mariel Sebedio
Division Computos y Sistemas
Tel (02944)-445400 int 2307
INVAP S.E. - www.invap.com.ar



Re: [squid-users] Warning your cache is running out of file descriptors

2010-03-17 Thread william

See this thread:
http://www.mail-archive.com/squid-users@squid-cache.org/msg70230.html


please search the archives


with kind regards

William van de Velde


On 03/17/2010 07:20 PM, Mariel Sebedio wrote:
Hello, the file descriptors you must be incress in 
/etc/security/limits.conf and re-build the cache  For RHEL you must 
change


*  - nofiles 1024
for
*  - nofiles 2048
Sorry my english!!

Bye, Mariel

Gmail wrote:

Hello All,

This is the first time I am using this mailing ;list, and I do 
apologise if I sent a copy of this email to another address by mistake


I am desperately seeking some help, I have googled in a hope to find 
an answer, but all I could find was about the previous versions, 
which don't apply to the version I am using and to my OS:



I am running Squid3.0 Stable
OS Ubuntu Hardy

I am currently getting this warning:

Warning your cache is running out of file descriptor, but I couldn't 
find where to increase the size from 1024 to any number.


On the previous versions and other OS systems, it's apparently 
located here /etc/default/squid but on my system it doesn't exist.


Can anyone please point me to where I can change that?

I have checked Ubuntu forums, I have checked several other forums, 
but the only links I seem to get on google are related to the 
previous versions of squid or other operating systems.


Can you help please, since I started using Squid I had problem after 
problem, lot of other applications are not working, I still can't 
access my backend HTTP servers, but that's another problem for 
another day.


Any help would be very much appreciated
Thank you all








Re: [squid-users] Warning your cache is running out of file descriptors

2010-03-17 Thread Ivan .
I used this

http://paulgoscicki.com/archives/2007/01/squid-warning-your-cache-is-running-out-of-filedescriptors/

On Thu, Mar 18, 2010 at 6:21 AM, william  wrote:
> See this thread:
> http://www.mail-archive.com/squid-users@squid-cache.org/msg70230.html
>
>
> please search the archives
>
>
> with kind regards
>
> William van de Velde
>
>
> On 03/17/2010 07:20 PM, Mariel Sebedio wrote:
>>
>> Hello, the file descriptors you must be incress in
>> /etc/security/limits.conf and re-build the cache  For RHEL you must change
>>
>> *  - nofiles 1024
>> for
>> *  - nofiles 2048
>> Sorry my english!!
>>
>> Bye, Mariel
>>
>> Gmail wrote:
>>>
>>> Hello All,
>>>
>>> This is the first time I am using this mailing ;list, and I do apologise
>>> if I sent a copy of this email to another address by mistake
>>>
>>> I am desperately seeking some help, I have googled in a hope to find an
>>> answer, but all I could find was about the previous versions, which don't
>>> apply to the version I am using and to my OS:
>>>
>>>
>>> I am running Squid3.0 Stable
>>> OS Ubuntu Hardy
>>>
>>> I am currently getting this warning:
>>>
>>> Warning your cache is running out of file descriptor, but I couldn't find
>>> where to increase the size from 1024 to any number.
>>>
>>> On the previous versions and other OS systems, it's apparently located
>>> here /etc/default/squid but on my system it doesn't exist.
>>>
>>> Can anyone please point me to where I can change that?
>>>
>>> I have checked Ubuntu forums, I have checked several other forums, but
>>> the only links I seem to get on google are related to the previous versions
>>> of squid or other operating systems.
>>>
>>> Can you help please, since I started using Squid I had problem after
>>> problem, lot of other applications are not working, I still can't access my
>>> backend HTTP servers, but that's another problem for another day.
>>>
>>> Any help would be very much appreciated
>>> Thank you all
>>>
>>
>>
>
>


Re: [squid-users] Warning your cache is running out of file descriptors

2010-03-17 Thread Amos Jeffries
On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 19:06:39 -, Gmail  wrote:
> Hello All,
> 
> This is the first time I am using this mailing ;list, and I do apologise
> if 
> I sent a copy of this email to another address by mistake
> 
> I am desperately seeking some help, I have googled in a hope to find an 
> answer, but all I could find was about the previous versions, which
don't 
> apply to the version I am using and to my OS:
> 
> 
> I am running Squid3.0 Stable
> OS Ubuntu Hardy
> 
> I am currently getting this warning:
> 
> Warning your cache is running out of file descriptor, but I couldn't
find 
> where to increase the size from 1024 to any number.
> 
> On the previous versions and other OS systems, it's apparently located
> here 
> /etc/default/squid but on my system it doesn't exist.
> 
> Can anyone please point me to where I can change that?

Create the said /etc/default/squid file and add the needed setting.


The packaged version may not support more even with that extra config. If
not your Squid will need to be rebuilt to support more or upgrade to a
newer release.

> Can you help please, since I started using Squid I had problem after 
> problem, lot of other applications are not working, I still can't access
> my 
> backend HTTP servers, but that's another problem for another day.

Might be related. If squid can't connect and is being flooded with client
requests that is one sure way to burn through FD.

Amos