Re: [squid-users] delaypools burst rate

From: Brian <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, 31 Jul 2001 15:31:03 -0400

Read the config section for this (it's more in-depth than the FAQ
coverage). A class 1 pool limits squid's total download rate, so the
behavior you saw is exactly what you should expect.

> delay_parameters 1 262144/1048576 131072/1048576

This is specifies a global pool of 1MB w/256k refill. That is enough to
give two hosts a full 128k slow stream, but they share a 1MB burst pool.
This isn't what you specified, but keep it in mind, since you may want to
limit the damage a lot of fast streams can do.

: delay_parameters 1 -1/-1 131072/1048576

This is much closer to what you specified. There is no global pool, so
each user is limited only by their own pool. Class 2 pools are assigned
based on the last byte in the IP address, though, so this can only scale
to 256 clients before you wind up with people sharing pools.

: delay_parameters 1 -1/-1 -1/-1 131072/1048576

This is a class 3 pool. That last pool is based on the 3rd and 4th bytes
of the IP, so up to 65536 clients can have their own pool.

        -- Brian

On Tuesday 31 July 2001 10:32 am, Mike Kiernan wrote:
> Basically what I'm trying to achieve is:
> mp3 files > 1MB downloaded are forced to a slower speed.
> mp3 files < 1MB are downloaded without restriction.
>
> So, here's my delay pool stanza:
>
> acl magic_mpeg url_regex -i .mp3 .mpeg .mpa ....etc
> delay_pools 1
> delay_class 1 1
> delay_parameters 1 131072/1045876 # - ie. 128k/1MB
> delay access 1 allow magic_mpeg
> delay access 1 deny all
>
> Download one x 2.5MB mp3 file - works fine - burst rate up to 1MB
> and then downloads at 128k.
>
> Download two x 2.5MB mp3 file (different names!) - first one has burst
> rate up to 1MB, then starts at 128k; 2nd one *does not* download at
> the burst rate, but starts off at a slower rate. This is not what I
> want.
>
> So, I tried with a Class 2 delaypool. With
> delay_parameters 1 262144/1048576 131072/1048576
>
> This works *reasonably* well with up to 3 parallel downloads - ie. each
> session does seem to get a burst rate up to the 1MB size. However, I'm
> wondering
> how scalable this is? ie. say I have 200 parallel downloads from 200
> different IP's
> - will each one get the burst rate for their IP bucket or are they all
> sucking from
> the global bucket too?
>
> thanks,
> Mike
Received on Tue Jul 31 2001 - 13:31:04 MDT

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