On 13.03.2012 00:44, Student University wrote:
Hi David ,,,,

You achieve 2K with what version of squid ,,,
do you have any special configuration tweaks ,,,

also what if i use SSD [200,000 Random Write 4K IOPS]

Best Regards ,,,
Liley


On Mon, Mar 12, 2012 at 9:59 AM, David B.wrote:
Hi Jenny,

Reverse proxy or not ?
We're using squid as reverse proxy et only that.


The key point of that statement being "reverse proxy".

Squid speeds are highly variable relative to traffic behaviour. Reverse-proxy have their own style of traffic pattern involving a single or limited number of websites being "reversed"/accelerated, which allows for very high speeds and bandwidth efficiency (HIT ratio) to be achieved. Other modes of operation face much more variable traffic patterns and much lower benefits.

Jenny and David face opposite extremes of traffic. David can get high speeds over twice what our lab tests show. Jenny faces traffic types which are not cacheable even in the high-speed short-term RAM cache. Making for speed limits affected by TCP/IP overheads, network overheads, and processing overheads. Even the 1K req/sec lab test speeds are well out of reach on that type of traffic.


"Student University": starting to get the idea of why nobody can simply point you at a how-to?

*why* and *what for* strongly determine the speeds you can achieve. You need to provide us with quite a few details about your setup to get useful help.

The simplest answer to your question is "To get 5K on a Squid being regular proxy involves re-writing every website on the Internet to use HTTP/1.1 correctly and cache-friendly." You up for doing that?

Amos


We can achieve about 2K RPS with our boxes and this server isn't
overloaded...
In fact, it's common hardware, like mono dual core Xéon, some RAM and a
poor RAID 1 disk array without BBU.

I think 5K RPS is possible. :)

David.
Dears ,

how we can achieve 5000 RPS through squid ,,,,

Thanks in advance
Liley


In your dreams.

Jenny


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