Henrik Nordstrom writes:
>> ftp://ftp.dartmouth.edu/(null)
>>
>> What is the meaning of (null) at the end?
>
>Most likely that something in the Squid FTP listing module was broken.
>If I am not mistaken I sent a broken FTP patch to Duane somewhere around
>this time (August) that could cause this effect..
Why do you assume the request came from Squid?
>> 2. Suppose there is a web object that is bigger than the maximum cache
>> size. What does Squid do?
>
>No idea what Squid 2 does. Duane?
Squid doesn't cache objects larger than 'maximum_object_size'.
If your maximum_object_size is larger than your cache size,
you might have problems.
>
>> 3. For uncachable objects like URLs containing '?', Squid would
>> not save them on the disk and always give users TCP_MISS/200. Is
>> that true?
>
>I think Squid 2 always stores them on disk.. Duane?
it depends on the number of clients reading from the object.
If its an uncachable object, it should have a private cache key,
and then there should only be one client. If there is just
one client, and the object is not cachable, the disk is never used.
Duane W.
Received on Tue Jul 29 2003 - 13:15:54 MDT
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