On 08/01/18 11:13, Vieri wrote:

________________________________
From: Amos Jeffries <squ...@treenet.co.nz>

The open sockets to 127.0.0.1:1344 keep increasing steadily even on high 
network usage, but they do not decrease when there's
little or no traffic.>> So, day after day the overall number keeps growing 
until I have to restart squid once or twice a week.

In other words, this value keeps growing:
Largest file desc currently in use:   xxxx
This other value can decrease at times, but in the long run it keeps growing 
too:
Number of file desc currently in use: xxxx

Ah. What does the cachemgr "filedescriptors" report show when there are
a lot starting to accumulate?

And, are you able to get a cache.log trace with "debug_options 93,6" ?


Here's my cache.log:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1I8R5sCsIGhYa69QmGrOoHVITuom4uW0k/view?usp=sharing

squidclient's filedescriptors:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1o6zn-o0atqeqFGSMRhPA9r1AAFJpnpBZ/view?usp=sharing

The info page:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/11iWqjgdt2KK1yWPMsr5o-IyWGyKS7joc/view?usp=sharing

The open fds are at around 7k, but they can easily reach 12k or 13k. That's 
when I start running into trouble.


Thank you.

I have only taken a brief look, but so far it looks like the problematic sockets are not participating in any ICAP activity. That implies they are possibly TCP connections which never complete their opening sequence, or at least the result of connection attempts does not make it back to the ICAP code somehow.

Amos
_______________________________________________
squid-users mailing list
squid-users@lists.squid-cache.org
http://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users

Reply via email to