Re: 2.4.20-aa and LARGE Squid process -> SIGSEGV

From: Ralf Hildebrandt (Ralf.Hildebrandt@charite.de)
Date: Sat Dec 21 2002 - 04:06:42 EST


* Reuben Farrelly <reuben-linux@reub.net>:

> No, squid is not br0ken in this fashion. If squid cannot be allocated
> enough memory by the system, it logs a message and _dies_. Relevant files
> to look at in your squid source are squid/lib/util.c for xcalloc() and
> xmalloc().

Why can't squid allocate more than 1GB on a system with 2GB RAM?
 
> Aside from this, if squid ever does get to the point of swapping, it is
> misconfigured and your performance has just gone to hell anyway... (see
> the FAQ at www.squid-cache.org)

It's not swapping. That's the whole point. We have 2GB and can use at
most 1GB for Squid.

-- 
Ralf Hildebrandt (Im Auftrag des Referat V a)   Ralf.Hildebrandt@charite.de
Charite Campus Mitte                            Tel.  +49 (0)30-450 570-155
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Microsoft: "Where do you want to go today?"
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