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:Speed up Your Internet Access Using Squid's Refresh Patterns
Speed up Your Internet Access Using Squid's Refresh Patterns
Nov 20, 2008, 22 :03 UTC (0 Talkback[s]) (1742 reads)

(Other stories by Solomon Asare)

"Squid can be fine-tuned to satisfy a host of needs. The stable version has at least 249 configurable parameters. The heavily commented configuration file, usually found in /etc/squid.conf, is more than 4,600 lines long. This can be intimidating to even experienced administrators. All settings are to be modified in this file.

"You need a big cache that will not fill up in less than a week, and preferably should take more than a month to fill up. The actual size will be dependent on the volume of traffic on your network. The bigger the size of your storage, the greater the probability that the object someone is requesting for will already be in your cache.

"In addition to the memory required for your operating system and Squid to run, you will need memory of about 1% of your cache size to keep the database of your cache in memory. That is, for a cache of 100GB disk space, you will need about 1GB RAM, in addition to about 100MB for the OS and Squid."

Complete Story

Related Stories:
Ultimate Security Proxy With Tor(Oct 28, 2008)
Anonymous Proxy Servers: Necessary or evil?(Oct 18, 2008)
Building a Squid Proxy to Accelerate and Defend(Jul 28, 2008)
Linux.com: Using squidGuard for Content Filtering(Mar 05, 2007)
EnterpriseNetworkingPlanet: Catch (But Don't Release) with Squid Web Proxying(Apr 26, 2006)



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