RE: Storage LRU Expiration Age -- what does it mean and is it acc urate?

From: Tony Melia <Tony.Melia@dont-contact.us>
Date: Tue, 15 Aug 2000 11:10:00 +1000

Where exactly can I find this within cachemgr??

-----Original Message-----
From: Shawn Barnhart [mailto:swb@cmenoc.campbell-mithun.com]
Sent: Thursday, 10 August 2000 4:39am
To: squid-users@ircache.net
Subject: Storage LRU Expiration Age -- what does it mean and is it
accurate?

What does the value "Storage LRU Expiration Age" represent (from
cachemgr ?

In my mind, it represents the age of the oldest object in the cache
based upon current cache utilization. One thing that confuses me is
that this value bounces a lot for me. I usually see it at .9 days, but
I just checked it and with a five minute average of 11 http
requests/second it just showed me a Storage LRU Expiration Age of 40
days! It's not unusual to see it at .9 days and check it again 10
minutes later and see it at 5 days.

In my mind that means that this counter is either totally inaccurate or
is based on such a short snapshot of cache activity that it might as
well be totally inaccurate. Am I off base here?

My cache size is pretty small -- 750MB -- due to lack of RAM. I'm
planning on upgrading the hardware to much more ram and a seperate,
softupdate-mounted disk for the cache. Would a small disk cache size
have anything to do with this value? If the figure was at all accurate,
I would expect that the LRU time would stay permanently at a low figure
during the day.

(FWIW, I just checked and in the time it took to write this message my
LRU time is down to 1.25 days.)
Received on Mon Aug 14 2000 - 19:14:25 MDT

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