Re: some linux tuning

From: <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, 26 Jun 1999 12:50:20 -0400 (EDT)

On Sat, 26 Jun 1999, Brian wrote:

> PII450
> 512MB SDRAM
> DPT3334UW RAID controller doing RAID0 with 64MB disk cache
> Linux 2.2.7ac4

I don't know how the 3334 performs for RAID0, but I played with one for
RAID5, and it was pretty slow. Isn't Linux software RAID0 (especially on
a PII450) likely to give much better performance than the DPT card?

> echo "768 1280 2048" >/proc/sys/vm/freepages
> echo "2 10 90" >/proc/sys/vm/buffermem
>
> file-max and inode-max just make sense. I still don't know how I feel
> about the buffermem and freepages. Anyone else doing some proc hacking
> feel that is sane? Is their anything else you would do as far as proc
> tuning?

I've never messed with buffermem, but I do similar things with freepages.
You want to make sure there's enough free memory for atomic allocations to
not fail.

> 2. File descriptors increased to 8192 (2.2.7ac4)

How many do you actually see used? I run some smaller squid boxes on
Linux 2.2.10, and rarely see many more than 300 fds in use.

> 3. Hardware RAID0 with 64MB disk cache (dpt3334uw controller)

Before going live, did you run any disk benchmarks to see what the max
throughput to the filesystem was and what the max seeks/second was?
It would be interesting to compare bonnie, with a 1.9gb file size, to the
same setup using a regular UW SCSI card and software RAID0.

> 4. 512MB memory.........cache_mem 160 MB (is that a good value? 1/3?)
> 5. dns_children 10

You can turn cache_mem down considerably. It'll grow to accomodate your
system's needs. I suspect you need more dns_children too. Look at a ps
aux listing. The dnsserver processes seem to grow when used, so if
they're all the same size, you know they're all getting used and you might
add a few more. i.e.

squid 6938 0.0 0.2 1024 584 ? S 00:22 0:20 (dnsserver)
squid 6939 0.0 0.2 1012 540 ? S 00:22 0:00 (dnsserver)
squid 6940 0.0 0.2 1012 536 ? S 00:22 0:00 (dnsserver)
squid 6941 0.0 0.2 1012 536 ? S 00:22 0:00 (dnsserver)
squid 6942 0.0 0.2 1012 536 ? S 00:22 0:00 (dnsserver)
squid 6943 0.0 0.2 1012 536 ? S 00:22 0:00 (dnsserver)
squid 6944 0.0 0.2 1012 536 ? S 00:22 0:00 (dnsserver)
squid 6945 0.0 0.2 1012 536 ? S 00:22 0:00 (dnsserver)
squid 6946 0.0 0.2 1012 536 ? S 00:22 0:00 (dnsserver)
squid 6947 0.0 0.2 1012 536 ? S 00:22 0:00 (dnsserver)
squid 6948 0.0 0.2 1012 536 ? S 00:22 0:00 (dnsserver)
squid 6949 0.0 0.1 908 404 ? S 00:22 0:00 (dnsserver)
squid 6950 0.0 0.1 908 404 ? S 00:22 0:00 (dnsserver)
squid 6951 0.0 0.1 908 404 ? S 00:22 0:00 (dnsserver)

> 6. squid 2.2STABLE3

How long can you keep it running? On two different systems, I'm seeing
leaks with 2.2.Stable[1-3]. The bigger one (about 10gb of RAID0 space for
squid) leaks very quickly and can't run for more than a day or two without
eating all the system's memory. The smaller one (about 2.5gb on a
single disk for squid) seems to be leaking only a few MB per day.

> 7. ./configure --prefix=/usr/local/squid --enable-async-io
> --disable-ident-lookups --enable-gnuregex

I haven't used any options other than --prefix. The smaller one though is
stock Red Hat 6.0, and I'm not sure how they built Squid.

> 8. Foundry ServerIron redirecting requests to squid
> 9. cache_dir /usr/local/squid/cache 13500 16 256
> Is that a little small? Do you think more space is needed?

For your size, that's probably too small. What do you see for Storage LRU
Expiration Age? Also, this may be a minimal optimization, but wouldn't
filesystem access be slightly faster if you just mount the cache on
/squid? I remember reading about news server optimizations, and mounting
the spool on /news rather than /var/spool/news.

> 10. Satellite cache prepopulation feed (www.skycache.com)

It saves lots of bandwidth for your news feed if you run a news
server...but I'm not convinced it helps much with web caching.

> 11. Caching only nameserver ran on squid host

I'd definitely set that up if you haven't.

Also, make sure you have your cache setup to restrict access. When I took
over squid at work, I noticed we had people in Russia porn surfing through
our squid cache. My guess is they're filtered from these sites and so
they bounce through open squid servers to get to them.

----don't waste your cpu, crack rc5...www.distributed.net team enzo---
 Jon Lewis *jlewis@lewis.org*| Spammers will be winnuked or
 System Administrator | nestea'd...whatever it takes
 Atlantic Net | to get the job done.
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Received on Sat Jun 26 1999 - 10:35:09 MDT

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