. :(
Ideally, running in windows would be better for me, as it's my comfort zone. As
i said.. I'm a linux n00b.
Thanks all!
David
--- On Wed, 4/1/09, Chris Robertson crobert...@gci.net wrote:
From: Chris Robertson crobert...@gci.net
Subject: Re: [squid-users] Large-scale Reverse Proxy
Proxy for serving images FAST
To: squid-users@squid-cache.org
Received: Tuesday, March 17, 2009, 1:21 PM
David Tosoff wrote:
OK. Thanks Amos.
Changing up the icp_port to a unique for each instance
worked. I should have thought about that as all instances
were on the same host (localhost
David Tosoff wrote:
Thanks Chris Amos for your comments thus far.
I've finally located a machine I can place this Memory-only squid on. I've
got a 32GB, AMD 64-bit, blah blah.
Anyway, since I'm a bit of a linux n00b, I was asking the OS question even
after having read the wiki and postings
OK. Thanks Chris. I'll give your suggestions a go! I guess I'll go for CentOS
or Ubuntu and try the compilations on them.
Cheers,
DT
--- On Wed, 4/1/09, Chris Robertson crobert...@gci.net wrote:
From: Chris Robertson crobert...@gci.net
Subject: Re: [squid-users] Large-scale Reverse Proxy
David Tosoff wrote:
All,
I'm new to Squid and I have been given the task of optimizing the delivery of
photos from our website. We have 1 main active image server which serves up the
images to the end user via 2 chained CDNs. We want to drop the middle CDN as
it's not performing well and is
policy??
- Any other options to watch for, for optimizing memory cache usage?
Thanks again!
David
--- On Tue, 3/17/09, Amos Jeffries squ...@treenet.co.nz wrote:
From: Amos Jeffries squ...@treenet.co.nz
Subject: Re: [squid-users] Large-scale Reverse Proxy for serving images FAST
To: dtos
David Tosoff wrote:
OK. Thanks Amos.
Changing up the icp_port to a unique for each instance worked. I should have
thought about that as all instances were on the same host (localhost/127.0.0.1)
w/ the same port... duhh.
So, I have a few other questions then: We're going to scale this up to a
All,
I'm new to Squid and I have been given the task of optimizing the delivery of
photos from our website. We have 1 main active image server which serves up the
images to the end user via 2 chained CDNs. We want to drop the middle CDN as
it's not performing well and is a waste of money; in