Ben Bullock wrote:
>
> I'm new to this list and feel very reluctant to be asking a question
> that I know has been asked before, but I have searched the squid
> archives, read the FAQ, searched dejanews, etc. for an answer and
> cannot find one that works. I've tried many, many things suggested in
> correspondence found in these locations, but without success.
>
> My problem is that even after patching kernel 2.0.36 (RedHat 5.2
> system) with Michael O'Reilly's 'filehandle.patch.linux.v8.04' and
> recompiling the kernel and also recompiling squid, I cannot get
> squid-2.2STABLE3-1 to start with more than 1024 file descriptors.
> During the configure portion of the squid compile I see these two
> lines scroll by:
>
> Default FD_SETSIZE value... 1024
> Maximum number of file descriptors we can open... 8192
>
> After compiling squid, include/autoconf.h shows:
> /* Default FD_SETSIZE value */
> #define DEFAULT_FD_SETSIZE 1024
> /* Maximum number of open filedescriptors */
> #define SQUID_MAXFD 8192
>
> I've tried setting 'max_open_disk_fds 8192' in squid.conf and added
> the line 'ulimit -n 8192' to /usr/sbin/RunCache. I've also done this
> prior to compiling and running squid:
> echo 8192 > /proc/sys/kernel/file-max
> echo 32768 > /proc/sys/kernel/inode-max
>
> Nothing I have tried can force squid to start with more than 1024
> fds. It almost seems that the default FD_SETSIZE value is the
> controlling factor and that all other variables and directives are
> being ignored.
>
> Can anyone who has solved this problem give me some assistance?
> Thanks very much.
>
> -Ben Bullock
Edit /usr/include/gnu/types.h and change the the size of FD sets, then
configure and rebuild squid. Yes, it sucks....but it _does_ work.
D
Received on Thu Jun 03 1999 - 15:31:29 MDT
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