Try to look at the file content with an editor or so:
if you are using the file manager in Openwindows (Sun) or similar,
maybe its lying (needs a refresh);
also check the permissions on the log files (same userid as squid is
running under)
and finally the location of log files in the squid.conf
if you can : use a packet sniffer to view the packets on
udp and ascii ports configured
:-)
----------
From: Ricardo Kleemann[SMTP:ricardo@americasnet.com]
Sent: 06 September 1996 17:40
To: Squid Users List
Subject: How can I tell if it's working?
Hi all,
I've installed and now running squid. I confess that the impression I get
is that is really has improved my http transfer performance.
However, I'm baffled by the fact that if I look at logs/access.log,
logs/store.log, and cache/log, for example, those files are all zero in
size! :( Does that mean squid isn't actually caching/proxying anything?
How do I verify that it's actually doing what it's supposed to?
TIA,
ricardo
Received on Fri Sep 06 1996 - 12:12:18 MDT
This archive was generated by hypermail pre-2.1.9 : Tue Dec 09 2003 - 16:32:56 MST