HTTP Proxy Caching
Web proxy caching enables you to store copies of frequently-accessed web objects (such as documents, images, and articles) and then serve this information to users on demand. It improves performance and frees up Internet bandwidth for other tasks.
This chapter discusses the following topics:
- Understanding HTTP Web Proxy Caching
- Ensuring Cached Object Freshness
- Scheduling Updates to Local Cache Content
- Pushing Content into the Cache
- Pinning Content in the Cache
- To Cache or Not to Cache?
- Forcing Object Caching
- Caching HTTP Alternates
- Using Congestion Control
Understanding HTTP Web Proxy Caching
Internet users direct their requests to web servers all over the Internet. A caching server must act as a web proxy server so it can serve those requests. After a web proxy server receives requests for web objects, it either serves the requests or forwards them to the origin server (the web server that contains the original copy of the requested information). The Traffic Server proxy supports explicit proxy caching, in which the user’s client software must be configured to send requests directly to the Traffic Server proxy. The following overview illustrates how Traffic Server serves a user request.
Step 1 Traffic Server receives a user request for a web object.
Step 2 Using the object address, Traffic Server tries to locate the requested object in its object database (cache).
Step 3 If the object is in the cache, then Traffic Server checks to see if the object is fresh enough to serve. If it is fresh, then Traffic Server serves it to the user as a cache hit (see the figure below).

A cache hit
Step 4 If the data in the cache is stale, then Traffic Server connects to the origin server and checks if the object is still fresh (a revalidation). If it is, then Traffic Server immediately sends the cached copy to the user.
Step 5 If the object is not in the cache (a cache miss) or if the server indicates the cached copy is no longer valid, then Traffic Server obtains the object from the origin server. The object is then simultaneously streamed to the user and the Traffic Server local cache (see the figure below). Subsequent requests for the object can be served faster because the object is retrieved directly from cache.

A cache miss
Caching is typically more complex than the preceding overview suggests. In particular, the overview does not discuss how Traffic Server ensures freshness, serves correct HTTP alternates, and treats requests for objects that cannot/should not be cached. The following sections discuss these issues in greater detail.
Ensuring Cached Object Freshness
When Traffic Server receives a request for a web object, it first tries to locate the requested object in its cache. If the object is in cache, then Traffic Server checks to see if the object is fresh enough to serve. For HTTP objects, Traffic Server supports optional author-specified expiration dates. Traffic Server adheres to these expiration dates; otherwise, it picks an expiration date based on how frequently the object is changing and on administrator-chosen freshness guidelines. Objects can also be revalidated by checking with the origin server to see if an object is still fresh.
HTTP Object Freshness
Traffic Server determines whether an HTTP object in the cache is fresh by:
- Checking the
Expiresormax-ageheader
Some HTTP objects containExpiresheaders ormax-ageheaders that explicitly define how long the object can be cached. Traffic Server compares the current time with the expiration time to determine if the object is still fresh. - Checking the
Last-Modified / Dateheader
If an HTTP object has noExpiresheader ormax-ageheader, then Traffic Server can calculate a freshness limit using the following formula:
freshness_limit =(date - last_modified) * 0.10
wheredateis the date in the object’s server response header andlast_modifiedis the date in theLast-Modifiedheader. If there is noLast-Modifiedheader, then Traffic Server uses the date the object was written to cache. The value0.10(10 percent) can be increased or reduced to better suit your needs (refer to Modifying the Aging Factor for Freshness Computations).
The computed freshness limit is bound by a minimum and maximum value - refer to Setting an Absolute Freshness Limit for more information. - Checking the absolute freshness limit
For HTTP objects that do not haveExpiresheaders or do not have bothLast-ModifiedandDateheaders, Traffic Server uses a maximum and minimum freshness limit (efer to Setting an Absolute Freshness Limit). - Checking revalidate rules in the
cache.configfile
Revalidate rules apply freshness limits to specific HTTP objects. You can set freshness limits for objects originating from particular domains or IP addresses, objects with URLs that contain specified regular expressions, objects requested by particular clients, and so on (refer to cache.config).
Modifying the Aging Factor for Freshness Computations
If an object does not contain any expiration information, then Traffic Server can estimate its freshness from the Last-Modified and Date headers. By default, Traffic Server stores an object for 10% of the time that elapsed since it last changed. You can increase or reduce the percentage according to your needs.
To modify the aging factor for freshness computations:
- In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variable:
- Save and close the
records.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory.
- Run the
traffic_line -xcommand to apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.http.cache.heuristic_lm_factor |
Set this variable to specify the aging factor for freshness computations. Traffic Server stores an object for this percentage of the time that elapsed since it last changed. |
Setting an Absolute Freshness Limit
Some objects do not have Expires headers or do not have both Last-Modified and Date headers. To control how long these objects are considered fresh in the cache, specify an absolute freshness limit.
To specify an absolute freshness limit:
- In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variables:
- Save and close the
records.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory.
- Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.http.cache.heuristic_min_lifetime |
Set this variable to specify the minimum amount of time that HTTP objects without an expiration date can remain fresh in the cache before being considered stale. The default value is 3600 seconds (1 hour). |
proxy.config.http.cache.heuristic_max_lifetime |
Set this variable to specify the maximum amount of time that HTTP objects without an expiration date can remain fresh in the cache before being considered stale. The default value is 86400 seconds (1 day). |
Specifying Header Requirements
To further ensure freshness of the objects in the cache, configure Traffic Server to cache only objects with specific headers. By default, Traffic Server caches all objects (including objects with no headers); you should change the default setting only for specialized proxy situations. If you configure Traffic Server to cache only HTTP objects with Expires or max-age headers, then the cache hit rate will be noticeably reduced (since very few objects will have explicit expiration information).
To configure Traffic Server to cache objects with specific headers:
- In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variable:
- Save and close the
records.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory. - Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.http.cache.required_headers | also described in files.htm -->
Set this variable to one of the following values: |
Cache-Control Headers
Even though an object might be fresh in the cache, clients or servers often impose their own constraints that preclude retrieval of the object from the cache. For example, a client might request that a object not be retrieved from a cache, or if it does, then it cannot have been cached for more than 10 minutes. Traffic Server bases the servability of a cached object on Cache-Control headers that appear in both client requests and server responses. The following Cache-Control headers affect whether objects are served from cache:
- The
no-cacheheader, sent by clients, tells Traffic Server that it should not to serve any objects directly from the cache; therefore, Traffic Server will always obtain the object from the origin server. You can configure Traffic Server to ignore clientno-cacheheaders - refer to Configuring Traffic Server to Ignore Client no-cache Headers for more information. - The
max-ageheader, sent by servers, is compared to the object age. If the age is less thanmax-age, then the object is fresh and can be served. - The
min-freshheader, sent by clients, is an acceptable freshness tolerance. This means that the client wants the object to be at least this fresh. If a cached object does not remain fresh at least this long in the future, then it is revalidated. - The
max-staleheader, sent by clients, permits Traffic Server to serve stale objects provided they are not too old. Some browsers might be willing to take slightly stale objects in exchange for improved performance, especially during periods of poor Internet availability.
Traffic Server applies Cache-Control servability criteria after HTTP freshness criteria. For example, an object might be considered fresh but will not be served if its age is greater than its max-age.
Revalidating HTTP Objects
When a client requests an HTTP object that is stale in the cache, Traffic Server revalidates the object. A revalidation is a query to the origin server to check if the object is unchanged. The result of a revalidation is one of the following:
- If the object is still fresh, then Traffic Server resets its freshness limit and serves the object.
- If a new copy of the object is available, then Traffic Server caches the new object (thereby replacing the stale copy) and simultaneously serves the object to the user.
- If the object no longer exists on the origin server, then Traffic Server does not serve the cached copy.
- If the origin server does not respond to the revalidation query, then Traffic Server serves the stale object along with a
111 Revalidation Failedwarning.
By default, Traffic Server revalidates a requested HTTP object in the cache if it considers the object to be stale. Traffic Server evaluates object freshness as described in HTTP Object Freshness. You can reconfigure how Traffic Server evaluates freshness by selecting one of the following options:
- Traffic Server considers all HTTP objects in the cache to be stale: always revalidate HTTP objects in the cache with the origin server.
- Traffic Server considers all HTTP objects in the cache to be fresh: never revalidate HTTP objects in the cache with the origin server.
- Traffic Server considers all HTTP objects without
ExpiresorCache-controlheaders to be stale: revalidate all HTTP objects withoutExpiresorCache-Controlheaders.
To configure how Traffic Server revalidates objects in the cache, you can set specific revalidation rules in the cache.config file (refer to cache.config).
To configure revalidation options:
- In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variable:
- Save and close the
records.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory.
- Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.http.cache.when_to_revalidate |
Set this variable to one of the following values: |
Scheduling Updates to Local Cache Content
To further increase performance and to ensure that HTTP objects are fresh in the cache, you can use the Scheduled Update option. This configures Traffic Server to load specific objects into the cache at scheduled times. You might find this especially beneficial when using Traffic Server as a reverse proxy so you can preload content you anticipate will be in demand.
To use the Scheduled Update option, you must perform the following tasks.
- Specify the list of URLs that contain the objects you want to schedule for update, the time the update should take place, and the recursion depth for the URL.
- Enable the scheduled update option and configure optional retry settings.
Traffic Server uses the information you specify to determine URLs for which it is responsible. For each URL, Traffic Server derives all recursive URLs (if applicable) and then generates a unique URL list. Using this list, Traffic Server initiates an HTTP GET for each unaccessed URL, ensuring that it remains within the user-defined limits for HTTP concurrency at any given time. The system logs the completion of all HTTP GET operations so you can monitor the performance of this feature.
Traffic Server also provides a Force Immediate Update option that enables you to update URLs immediately without waiting for the specified update time to occur. You can use this option to test your scheduled update configuration (refer to Forcing an Immediate Update).
Configuring the Scheduled Update Option
To configure the scheduled update option, follow the steps below:
- In a text editor, open the
update.config filelocated in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Enter a line in the file for each URL you want to update (refer to update.config).
- Save and close the
update.configfile. - In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variables:
- Save and close the
records.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory.
- Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.update.enabled |
Set this variable to 1 to enable the scheduled update option. |
proxy.config.update.retry_count |
Set this variable to specify the number of times you want to retry the scheduled update of a URL in the event of failure. The default value is 10. |
proxy.config.update.retry_interval |
Set this variable to specify the delay in seconds between each scheduled update retry for a URL in the event of failure. The default value is 2. |
proxy.config.update.concurrent_updates |
Set this variable to specify the maximum simultaneous update requests allowed at any point in time. This option prevents the scheduled update process from overburdening the host. The default value is 100. |
Forcing an Immediate Update
Traffic Server provides a Force Immediate Update option that enables you to immediately verify the URLs listed in the update.config file. The Force Immediate Update option disregards the offset hour and interval set in the update.config file and immediately updates the URLs listed.
To configure the Force Immediate Update option, follow the steps below:
- In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variable:
- Make sure that the variable
proxy.config.update.enabledis set to 1. - Save and close the
records.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory.
- Run the
command traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.update.force |
Set this variable to 1 to enable the Force Immediate Update option. |
IMPORTANT: When you enable the Force Immediate Update option, Traffic Server continually updates the URLs specified in the update.config file until you disable the option. To disable the Force Immediate Update option, set the variable proxy.config.update.force to 0 (zero).
Pushing Content into the Cache
Traffic Server supports the HTTP PUSH method of content delivery. Using HTTP PUSH, you can deliver content directly into the cache without user requests.
Configuring Traffic Server to Accept PUSH Requests
Before you can deliver content into your cache using HTTP PUSH, you must configure Traffic Server to accept PUSH requests.
To configure Traffic Server to accept PUSH requests:
- In a text editor, open the
filter.configfile located in the Traffic Server config directory. - Add the following filter rules to the file to ensure that only certain IP addresses can deliver
PUSHrequests to the cache:
domain=. src_ip=ipaddress method=PUSH action=allow
domain=. method=PUSH action=deny
whereipaddressis the IP address of the host or range of IP addresses of the hosts from which Traffic Server accepts PUSH requests. - Save and close the
filter.configfile. - In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variable:
- Save and close the
records.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory. - Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.http.push_method_enabled |
Set this variable to 1 to enable Traffic Server to accept PUSH requests. |
Understanding HTTP PUSH
PUSH uses the HTTP 1.1 message format. The body of a PUSH request contains the response header and response body that you want to place in the cache. The following is an example of a PUSH request:
PUSH http://www.company.com HTTP/1.0
Content-length: 84
HTTP/1.0 200 OK
Content-type: text/html
Content-length: 17
<HTML>
a
</HTML>
IMPORTANT: Your header must include Content-length; Content-length must include both header and body byte count.
Pinning Content in the Cache
The Cache Pinning Option configures Traffic Server to keep certain HTTP objects in the cache for a specified time. You can use this option to ensure that the most popular objects are in cache when needed and to prevent Traffic Server from deleting important objects. Traffic Server observes Cache-Control headers and pins an object in the cache only if it is indeed cacheable.
To set cache pinning rules and enable Cache Pinning:
- In a text editor, open the
cache.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Add a rule in the file for each URL you want Traffic Server to pin in the cache, as shown below.
url_regex=URL pin-in-cache=12h
whereURLis the URL you want Traffic Server to pin in the cache. The time format can bedfor days,hfor hours (as shown),mfor minutes, andsfor seconds. You can also use mixed units: for example,1h15m20s. You can add secondary specifiers (such as prefix and suffix) to the rule (refer to cache.config for more information). - Save and close the
cache.configfile. - In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variable:
- Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory.
- Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.cache.permit.pinning |
Set this variable to 1 to enable the cache pinning option. |
To Cache or Not to Cache?
When Traffic Server receives a request for a web object that is not in the cache, it retrieves the object from the origin server and serves it to the client. At the same time, Traffic Server checks if the object is cacheable before storing it in its cache to serve future requests.
Caching HTTP Objects
Traffic Server responds to caching directives from clients and origin servers, as well as directives you specify through configuration options and files.
Client Directives
By default, Traffic Server does not cache objects with the following request headers:
Cache-Control: no-storeheaderCache-Control: no-cacheheader
To configure Traffic Server to ignore theCache-Control: no-cacheheader, refer to Configuring Traffic Server to Ignore Client no-cache Headers.Cookie: header (for text objects)
By default, Traffic Server caches objects served in response to requests that contain cookies (unless the object is text). You can configure Traffic Server to not cache cookied content of any type, cache all cookied content, or cache cookied content that is of image type only. For more information, refer to Caching Cookied Objects.Authorization: header
Configuring Traffic Server to Ignore Client no-cache Headers
By default, Traffic Server strictly observes client Cache Control:no-cache directives. If a requested object contains a no-cache header, then Traffic Server forwards the request to the origin server even if it has a fresh copy in cache. You can configure Traffic Server to ignore client no-cache directives such that it ignores no-cache headers from client requests and serves the object from its cache.
To configure Traffic Server to ignore client no-cache headers:
- In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variable:
- Save and close the
records.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory.
- Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.http.cache.ignore_client_no_cache |
Set this variable to 1 to ignore client requests to bypass the cache. |
Origin Server Directives
By default, Traffic Server does not cache objects with the following response headers:
Cache-Control: no-storeheaderCache-Control: privateheaderWWW-Authenticate: header
To configure Traffic Server to ignoreWWW-Authenticateheaders, refer to Configuring Traffic Server to Ignore WWW-Authenticate Headers.Set-Cookie: headerCache-Control: no-cacheheaders
To configure Traffic Server to ignoreno-cacheheaders, refer to Configuring Traffic Server to Ignore Server no-cache Headers.Expires: header with value of 0 (zero) or a past date
Configuring Traffic Server to Ignore Server no-cache Headers
By default, Traffic Server strictly observes Cache-Control:no-cache directives. A response from an origin server with a no-cache header is not stored in the cache and any previous copy of the object in the cache is removed. If you configure Traffic Server to ignore no-cache headers, then Traffic Server also ignores no-store headers. The default behavior of observing no-cache directives is appropriate in most cases.
To configure Traffic Server to ignore server no-cache headers:
- In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variable:
- Save and close the
records.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory.
- Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.http.cache.ignore_server_no_cache |
Set this variable to 1 to ignore server directives to bypass the cache. |
Configuring Traffic Server to Ignore WWW-Authenticate Headers
By default, Traffic Server does not cache objects that contain WWW-Authenticate response headers. The WWW-Authenticate header contains authentication parameters the client uses when preparing the authentication challenge response to an origin server.
When you configure Traffic Server to ignore origin server WWW-Authenticate headers, all objects with WWW-Authenticate headers are stored in the cache for future requests. However, the default behavior of not caching objects with WWW-Authenticate headers is appropriate in most cases. Only configure Traffic Server to ignore server WWW-Authenticate headers if you are knowledgeable about HTTP 1.1.
To configure Traffic Server to ignore server WWW-Authenticate headers:
- In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variable:
- Save and close the
records.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory. - Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.http.cache.ignore_authentication |
Set this variable to 1 to cache objects with WWW Authenticate headers. |
Configuration Directives
In addition to client and origin server directives, Traffic Server responds to directives you specify through configuration options and files.
You can configure Traffic Server to do the following:
- Not cache any HTTP objects (refer to Disabling HTTP Object Caching).
- Cache dynamic content - that is, objects with URLs that end in
.aspor contain a question mark (?), semicolon (;), orcgi. For more information, refer to Caching Dynamic Content. - Cache objects served in response to the
Cookie:header (refer to Caching Cookied Objects). - Observe never-cache rules in the
cache.configfile (refer to cache.config).
Disabling HTTP Object Caching
By default, Traffic Server caches all HTTP objects except those for which you have set never-cache rules in the cache.config file. You can disable HTTP object caching so that all HTTP objects are served directly from the origin server and never cached, as detailed below.
To disable HTTP object caching manually:
- In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variable:
- Save and close the
records.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory. - Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.http.cache.http |
Set this variable to 0 (zero) to disable HTTP object caching. |
Caching Dynamic Content
A URL is considered dynamic if it ends in .asp or contains a question mark (?), a semicolon (;), or cgi. By default, Traffic Server does not cache dynamic content. You can configure Traffic Server to cache dynamic content, although it's recommended for specialized proxy situations only.
To configure Traffic Server to cache dynamic content:
- In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variable:
- Save and close the
records.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory. - Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.http.cache_urls_that_look_dynamic |
Set this variable to 1 to cache dynamic content. |
Caching Cookied Objects
By default, Traffic Server caches objects served in response to requests that contain cookies (unless the object is text). Traffic Server does not cache cookied text content because object headers are stored along with the object, and personalized cookie header values could be saved with the object. With non-text objects, it is unlikely that personalized headers are delivered or used.
You can reconfigure Traffic Server to:
- Not cache cookied content of any type.
- Cache cookied content that is of image type only.
- Cache all cookied content regardless of type.
To configure how Traffic Server caches cookied content:
- In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variable:
- Save and close the
records.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory. - Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.http.cache.cache_responses_to_cookies |
Set this variable to specify how Traffic Server caches cookied content: |
Forcing Object Caching
You can force Traffic Server to cache specific URLs (including dynamic URLs) for a specified duration, regardless of Cache-Control response headers.
To force document caching:
- In a text editor, open the
cache.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Add a rule in the file for each URL you want Traffic Server to force cache, as shown below.
url_regex=URL ttl-in-cache=6h
whereURLis the URL you want Traffic Server to force cache. The time format can bedfor days,hfor hours (as shown),mfor minutes, andsfor seconds. You can also use mixed units: for example,1h15m20s. In addition, you can add secondary specifiers (for example, prefix and suffix) to the rule (refer to cache.config). - Save and close the
cache.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory. - Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
Caching HTTP Alternates
Some origin servers answer requests to the same URL with a variety of objects. The content of these objects can vary widely, according to whether a server delivers content for different languages, targets different browsers with different presentation styles, or provides different document formats (HTML, PDF). Different versions of the same object are termed alternates and are cached by Traffic Server based on Vary response headers. You can specify additional request and response headers for specific content types that Traffic Server will identify as alternates for caching. You can also limit the number of alternate versions of an object allowed in the cache.
Configuring How Traffic Server Caches Alternates
To configure how Traffic Server caches alternates, follow the steps below:
- In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variables:
- Save and close the
records.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory. - Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.http.cache.enable_default_vary_headers |
Set this variable to 1 to cache alternate versions of HTTP objects that do not contain the Vary header. |
proxy.config.http.cache.vary_default_text |
Set this variable to specify the HTTP header field on which you want to vary if the request is for text: for example, an HTML document. |
proxy.config.http.cache.vary_default_images |
Set this variable to specify the HTTP header field on which you want to vary if the request is for images: for example, a .gif file. |
proxy.config.http.cache.vary_default_other |
Set this variable to specify the HTTP header field on which you want to vary if the request is for anything other than text or image. |
Note: If you specify Cookie as the header field on which to vary in the above variables, then make sure that the variable proxy.config.http.cache.cache_responses_to_cookies is set appropriately.
For example, if you set proxy.config.http.cache.cache_responses_to_cookies to 2 (cache responses to cookies of image type only) and set the proxy.config.http.cache.vary_default_text variable to specify cookie, then alternates by cookie will not apply to text.
Limiting the Number of Alternates for an Object
You can limit the number of alternates Traffic Server can cache per object (the default is 3).
IMPORTANT: Large numbers of alternates can affect Traffic Server cache performance because all alternates have the same URL. Although Traffic Server can look up the URL in the index very quickly, it must scan sequentially through available alternates in the object store.
To limit the number of alternates:
- In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variable:
- Save and close the
records.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory. - Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.cache.limits.http.max_alts |
Set this variable to specify the maximum number of alternate versions of an object you want Traffic Server to cache. The default value is three. |
Using Congestion Control
The Congestion Control option enables you to configure Traffic Server to stop forwarding HTTP requests to origin servers when they become congested. Traffic Server then sends the client a message to retry the congested origin server later.
To use the Congestion Control option, you must perform the following tasks:
- Enable the Congestion Control option.
- Create rules in the
congestion.configfile to specify: - which origin servers Traffic Server tracks for congestion
- the timeouts Traffic Server uses, depending on whether a server is congested
- the page Traffic Server sends to the client when a server becomes congested
- if Traffic Server tracks the origin servers per IP address or per hostname
To enable and configure the Congestion Control option :
- In a text editor, open the
records.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Edit the following variable:
- Save and close the
records.configfile. - In a text editor, open the
congestion.configfile located in the Traffic Serverconfigdirectory. - Enter rules to specify which origin servers are tracked for congestion and the timeout values Traffic Server uses to determine congestion. Refer to congestion.config for the rule format.
- Save and close the
congestion.configfile. - Navigate to the Traffic Server
bindirectory. - Run the command
traffic_line -xto apply the configuration changes.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
proxy.config.http.congestion_control.enabled |
Set this variable to 1 to enable the congestion control option. |
