My most recent setup was on an old Compaq desktop server 1100mhz, 1gb
RAM (not sure of speed) with ~30gb cache on 10k rpm SCSI disks.

Squid was auth-ing against Samba using the winbind helper. No AV, but
dansguardian was used for content filtering. Performance was adequate
for ~100 users.


Josh


On Wed, Jul 16, 2008 at 5:49 PM, Richard Hubbell
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> --- On Wed, 7/16/08, Adrian Chadd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> From: Adrian Chadd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> Subject: Re: [squid-users] Squid requirements
>> To: "Chris Robertson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> Cc: "Squid Users" <squid-users@squid-cache.org>
>> Date: Wednesday, July 16, 2008, 9:28 AM
>> What we're really missing is a bunch of "hardware
>> x, config y, testing
>> z, results a, b, c." TMF used to have some stuff up
>> for older hardware
>> but there's just nothing recent to use as a measuring
>> stick..
>>
>
> The problem is that there's so much disparate technology out there.
> multi-core cpus, all kinds of different memory, all kinds of different disk 
> technologies,  different filesystems,  different OS, different kernels, and 
> on and on.  It's hard to get useful measuring sticks.
>
> I still think it's a useful pursuit.  But I think that the reasons above make 
> people less inclined to do it.
>
> spec.org tries to level the field, if someone concocted a level field and 
> made it easy for people to do, then we'd see more results.
>
>
>
>

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