How large per process address space is your kernel compiled for? When
going about 1GB the kernel needs to be compiler appropriately.
I would not be surprised if your Squid is hitting the upper per process
size your kernel can support. 32 bit hardware theoretically cannot
support more than 4GB of virtual memory space per process, and this
memory space is divided into a number of regions (executable, libraries,
data, stack, reserved, ...) leaving only a smaller portion to data.
Regards
Henrik Nordstr�m
David wrote:
> The system is stable with an 8Gig disk cache and 800Meg cache_mem but if
> I increase either of these values squid will reset. The total ram used
> by squid when it does this is less than 75%. When the total system ram
> was 750Megs the cache was stable with squid using 85-90% of ram.
Received on Wed Nov 28 2001 - 14:49:03 MST
This archive was generated by hypermail pre-2.1.9 : Tue Dec 09 2003 - 17:04:35 MST