Hi,
You should configure your Squid to support SNMP and monitor what you want in
SNMP with a tools like MRTG (nice graph) and the appropriate Squid MIB OID's
(described in the MIB.txt file in the squid etc directory)
MRTG : http://ee-staff.ethz.ch/~oetiker/webtools/mrtg/mrtg.html
Squid and SNMP : squid.conf & http://squid.nlanr.net/Squid/FAQ/FAQ-18.html
Hope this will help
Olivier
-----Original Message-----
From: Julian Richardson <JRichardson@softwright.co.uk>
To: 'ZSquid' <squid-users@ircache.net>
Date: jeudi 3 juin 1999 14:02
Subject: Network throughput
>Hi,
>
>is there a way of finding out how much network traffic a Squid server is
>generating (Squid 2.2.Stable3, Redhat 5.2, Kernel 2.2.9)? I'm trying to
>find out where (if at all) any bottlenecks in performance lie. Getting
>results from /proc/net/dev doesn't make any sense - adding the received
>and sent byte totals together and dividing over the total uptime of the
>machine gives a better throughput than the theoretical max for the
>network card, so that doesn't help me (I guess those byte totals must
>include local machine access via the card itself or something??)
>
>Also, does anyone know of any web sites that have Squid performance info
>on them? I'm not after any specifics as such, just general pointers to
>waht things might be worth tweaking for a given rough hardware
>configuration, number of hits, or whatever...
>
>cheers
>
>Jules
>
Received on Thu Jun 03 1999 - 07:41:17 MDT
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