Obsolete:Squids

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This page contains historical information. Since 2020, see Kafka HTTP purging instead. 2012

proxies (url-downloader / webproxy)

Even though the rest of this page is historical we are still using Squid as http_proxy in 2 places, Url-downloader and webproxy. If you are wondering what the difference is see an explanation on:

Why do we have 2 sets of squid proxies?

This page contains historical information. It may be outdated or unreliable.

There are 4 clusters of squid servers, one upload and one text at each of our two locations: esams and pmpta. Each server runs two instances of squid: a frontend squid listening on port 80, and a cache squid listening on port 3128. The purpose of the frontend squid is to distribute load to the cache squids based on URL hash, using the CARP algorithm.

LVS is used to balance incoming requests between the frontends that use CARP to distribute the traffic to the backends.

Overview

Why Squid?

Squid is a high-performance proxy server that can also be used as a HTTP accelerator for the webserver. Explained in layman terms, Squid will store a copy of the pages served by webserver and the next time the same page is requested, Squid will serve the copy. This process is called "caching" and it removes the need for the webserver to regenerate that same page again, resulting in a tremendous performance boost for the webserver.

Since MediaWiki websites are generated entirely dynamically, there is a substantial performance gain in running Squid or Varnish as a HTTP accelerator for your webserver. In fact, sites like Wikipedia use several Squid caches to enhance their performance.

Because of this performance gain, MediaWiki has been designed to integrate closely with Squid. For example, MediaWiki will notify Squid when a page should be purged from the cache in order to be regenerated.

The architecture

How to set up a combo of Squid, Apache and MediaWiki on a single server is outlined below. It is possible to use a more complex caching strategy or use different port numbers and IP-addresses, but for this simple example we strive for the following single-server architecture:

Outside world <---> Server
Squid accelerator

w.x.y.z:80

<---> Apache webserver

127.0.0.1:80

To the outside world, Squid will seem to act as the webserver. In reality, it passes on requests to the Apache webserver, but only when necessary. Apache runs on the same server, but it only listens to requests from localhost (127.0.0.1). Rest assured, running both services on port 80 will not cause conflicts, since both services are bound to different IP addresses.

Setting it up like this means Apache cannot be accessed from the outside world directly, only through Squid. Using this configuration, Apache can only be accessed directly from the console of the server it is running on. For testing and troubleshooting purposes to bypass Squid completely, one can use Elinks (http://elinks.or.cz/) and browse to http://127.0.0.1/.

Installation

sudo apt-get install squid3

Configuring Squid 3

Due to its versatility Squid has a very large "squid.conf" configuration file. There are however only a few settings relevant when using Squid in accelerator mode.

http_port 207.142.131.205:80 transparent vhost defaultsite=<sitename>
cache_peer 127.0.0.1 parent 80 3130 originserver 

acl manager proto cache_object
acl localhost src 127.0.0.1/32

# Allow access to the web ports
acl web_ports port 80
http_access allow web_ports
 
# Allow cachemgr access from localhost only for maintenance purposes
http_access allow manager localhost
http_access deny manager
  
# Allow cache purge requests from MediaWiki/localhost only
acl purge method PURGE
http_access allow purge localhost
http_access deny purge
 
# And finally deny all other access to this proxy
http_access deny all

Note: There is a mention in OutputPage::sendCacheControl() function in MediaWiki of more rules that should be added in to replace Cache-Control headers http://wiki.aulinx.de/Cache-Control. If necessary, IPv4 and IPv6 connections can be handled both by Squid 3.1.5. Ignore the remainder of this section if IPv6 is not of concern to you and skip to the common ACL configuration.

http_port  <Your external IPv4>:80  defaultsite=<Your DNS sitename> vhost
http_port [<Your external IPv6>]:80 defaultsite=<Your DNS sitename> vhost
cache_peer 127.0.0.1 parent 80 0 no-query originserver round-robin name=wiki

where multiple outside IP addresses may be listed, one per line, in either IPv4 or IPv6 protocol:

http_port [2001:db8::2]:80 vhost defaultsite=example.org http_port [2001:db8::123:456]:80 vhost defaultsite=example.org

Note that, as Squid handles the task of listening for all outside connections and Apache merely sits behind it on a local loopback address (127.0.0.1:80) it is not necessary to configure Apache to be IPv6-aware in this instance.

Only your cache server (Squid in this instance), your domain name server (IN AAAA records) and your network (ipconfig, route) need to be modified to contain IPv6-specific information if you intend your wiki to be IPv6-compatible and are using Squid.

Configuring Apache

The Apache webserver now needs to be configured to listen only to the localhost port 80. The file httpd.conf(or possibly ports.conf) should contain the following line:

Listen 127.0.0.1:80

and if you are using virtual hosts also lines like:

NameVirtualHost 127.0.0.1:80

<VirtualHost 127.0.0.1:80>
    ServerName meta.wikimedia.org
    ...
</VirtualHost>

Please see http://wiki.apache.org/httpd/CouldNotBindToAddressfor more on troubleshooting this step.

If Apache is issuing the header

Vary: cookie

Then the caching will not be effective. You can stop this behaviour by adding the following to httpd.conf

SetEnv force-no-vary

Configuring MediaWiki

When configuring MediaWiki act as if there is no Squid. Meaning, use the servername the outside world would use instead of the internal IP-address. E.g., use "meta.wikimedia.org" for servername instead of "127.0.0.1".

Since Squid is doing the requests from localhost, Apache will receive "127.0.0.1" as the direct remote address. However, as Squid forwards the requests to Apache, it adds the "X-Forwarded-For" header containing the direct remote address as received by Squid. This way the remote address from the outside world is preserved.

By default MediaWiki will use the direct remote address for changes etcetera, so it must be configured to use the "X-Forwarded-For" header instead in order to function correctly. Make sure the LocalSettings.php file contains the following lines:

$wgUseSquid = true;
$wgSquidServers = [ '<your IPv4 address>' ];
$wgSquidServersNoPurge = [ '127.0.0.1' ];

This ensures both that addresses internal to your network (such as the Squid server or the 127.0.0.1 loopback) do not appear in MediaWiki Recent changes, and that notification to discard changed pages will be sent to Squid (not Apache).

Statistics

In this setup, Squid will shield off most of the traffic to Apache. Therefore, if you need reliable web statistics from a statistics package like e.g. AWStats, you will need to set it up to analyze Squid's access_log instead of Apache's.

Squid 2.6 Configuration Settings

Squid 2.6 has simplified the http accelerator configuration, and these settings should work:

http_port 10.10.10.1:80 defaultsite=<Your DNS sitename> vhost
cache_peer 127.0.0.1 parent 80 0 no-query originserver round-robin name=wiki
acl mySites dstdomain <Your DNS sitename> <any other vhosts>
cache_peer_access wiki allow mySites
cache_peer_access wiki deny all
http_access allow mySites

Also, a URL rewriter isn't necessary for redirecting from *.com and *.net domains to your *.org domain if you have $wgServer set in your LocalSettings.php since Mediawiki will take care of this for you.

Apache 2.x-Logfile Settings

The Apache Webserver is only seeing "127.0.0.1:80" Within Apache you can use the Parameter "X-Forwarded-for" which is provided by Squid e.g. within a custom logfile format. The sample below is similar to the "combined" one.

Settings

mod_log_config.conf

LogFormat "%{X-Forwarded-for}i %l %u %t \"%r\" %>s %b \"%{Referer}i\" \"%{User-Agent}i\"" cached

squid.conf

forwarded_for on

See also

  • Instructions on using Apache's mod_disk_cache with MediaWiki
  • Additional information about installing squid3

RE-Installation

Please note that NEW squid servers need to be setup by someone who understands the full setup. There are a number of various setttings that have to be configured. Thus the instructions are only for reinstallation.

To reinstall a previously existing squid server:

  • Reinstall the server OS.
  • After boot, copy the old SSH hostkey back using scp -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no files hostname:/etc/ssh/
  • These should all be saved on tridge in the /data/hostkeys/
  • Will have to run puppet a couple of times, get dependency error due to not having deployed below step yet:
  • Deploy the Squid configuration files on fenari:
# cd /home/w/conf/squid
# ./deploy servername
  • If the system has been offline for over 2 hours, its cache will need to be cleaned with:
/etc/init.d/squid clean
  • Manually run puppet update and ensure system is still online.
  • Check the LVS server to ensure the system is fully online.
  • Check the CacheManager interface for open connections, ensure they normalize on reinstalled squid BEFORE taking any more offline.


Deploying more Squids

17:53:02  * mark extends the squid configuration (text-settings.php) with config for the new squids
17:57:38  * mark deploys the squid configs to the new squid hosts only, so puppet can do its task. old config remains on the rest of the squids, 
so they're still unaffected
17:57:52 <mark> (I promised Rob to show every step of squid deployment in case anyone's wondering ;)
17:58:23  * mark checks whether MediaWiki is setup to recognize the new squids as proxies (CommonSettings.php)
17:58:55 <mark> yes it is
18:01:42  * mark checks whether puppet has initialized the squids; i.e. both squid instances are running, and the correct LVS ip is bound
18:03:11 <mark> where puppet hasn't run yet since the squid config deploy, I trigger it with "puppetd --test"
18:04:10 <mark> they've all nicely joined ganglia as well
18:08:56 <mark> alright, both squid instances are running on the new text squids
18:09:06 <mark> time to setup statistics so we can see what's happening and we're not missing any requests in our graphs
18:09:15 <mark> both torrus and cricket
18:11:29 <mark> cricket done...
18:14:58 <mark> torrus done as well
18:15:03  * mark watches the graphs to see if they're working
18:15:22 <mark> if not, probably something went wrong earlier with puppet setup or anything
18:17:45 <mark> in the mean time, backend squids are still starting up and reading their COSS partitions (which are empty), which takes a while
18:17:48 <mark> nicely visible in ganglia
18:21:32 <mark> alright, all squids have finished reading their COSS partition, and torrus is showing reasonable values in graphs
18:21:43 <mark> so all squids are correctly configured and ready for service
18:21:50 <mark> but they have EMPTY CACHES
18:22:11 <mark> giving them the full load now, would mean that they would start off with forwarding every request they get onto the backend 
                apaches
18:22:51 <mark> I am going to seed the caches of the backend squids first
18:22:55 <mark> we have a couple of ways of doing that
18:23:19 <mark> first, I'll deploy the *new* squid config (which has all the new backend squids in it) to *one* of the frontend squids on the 
                previously existing servers
18:23:33 <mark> that way that frontend squid will start using the new servers, and filling their caches with the most common requests
18:23:44 <mark> let's use the frontend squid on sq66
18:24:38  * mark runs "./deploy sq66"
18:24:52 <mark> so only sq66 is sending traffic to sq71-78 backend squids now
18:25:02 <mark> which is why they're all using approximately 1% cpu
18:25:31 <mark> now we wait a while and watch the hit rate rise on the new backend squids
18:25:51 <mark> e.g. http://torrus.wikimedia.org/torrus/CDN?path=%2FSquids%2Fsq77.wikimedia.org%2Fbackend%2FPerformance%2FHit_ratios
18:29:26 <mark> no problems visible in the squid logs either
18:32:23 <mark> each of the new squids is serving about 1 Mbps of backend traffic
18:37:10 <mark> the majority of all requests are being forwarded to the backend... let's wait until the hit ratio is a bit higher
18:38:04 <mark> I'll deploy the config to a few more frontend squids so it goes a bit faster
18:54:02 <mark> sq77 is weird in torrus
18:54:10 <mark> it reports 100% request hit ratio and byte hit ratio
18:54:29 <mark> and is still empty in terms of swap..
18:54:33  * mark investigates
18:54:51 <mark> it's not getting traffic
18:58:27 <mark> I think that's just the awful CARP hashing algorithm :(
18:58:31 <mark> it has an extremely low CARP weight
19:04:21  * mark deploys the new squid conf to a few more frontend squids
19:05:29 <mark> they're getting some serious traffic now
19:29:03 <mark> ok
19:29:07 <mark> hit rate is up to roughly 45% now
19:29:30 <mark> swap around 800M per server, and around 60k objects
19:29:40 <mark> I'm confident enough to pool all the new backend squids
19:29:46 <mark> but with a lower CARP weight (10 instead of 30)
19:32:31 <mark> in a few days, when all the newe servers have filled their caches, we can decommision sq40 and lower
19:33:02  * mark watches backend requests graphs and hit ratios
19:40:05 <mark> looks like the site is not bothered at all by the extra load - the seeding worked well
19:40:08 <mark> nice time to get some dinner
19:40:19 <mark> afterwards I'll increase the CARP weight, and pool the frontends
19:40:38 <mark> ...and then repeat that for upload squids
20:19:18 <mark> ok.. the hit ratio is not high enough to my liking, but I can go on with the frontends
20:19:26 <mark> the frontend squids are pretty much independent from the backends
20:19:35 <mark> we need to seed their caches as well, but it's quick
20:20:05 <mark> they don't like to get an instant 2000 requests/s from nothing when we pool them in LVS, so pretty much the only way we can 
                mitigate that is to pool them with low load (1)
20:29:47 <mark> ok, frontend text squids now fully deployed

Configuration

Configuration is done by editing the master files in /home/wikipedia/conf/squid, then running make to rebuild the configuration files, and ./deploy to deploy them to the remote servers. The configuration files are:

squid.conf.php
Template file for the cache (backend) instances
frontend.conf.php
Template file for the frontend instances
text-settings.php
A settings array which applies to text squids. All elements in this array will become available as variables during execution of squid.conf.php and frontend.conf.php. The settings array can be used to give server-specific configuration.
upload-settings.php
Same as text-settings.php but for upload squids
common-acls.conf
ACL directives used by both text and upload frontends. Use this to block clients from all access.
upload-acls.conf
ACL directives used by upload frontends. Use this for e.g. image referrer regex blocks.
text-acls.conf
ACL directives used by text frontends. Use this for e.g. remote loader IP blocks.
Configuration.php
Contains most of the generator code
generate.php
the script that the makefile runs

The configs are under version control using git.

The deployment script has lots of options. Run it with no arguments to get a summary.

Changing configuration

Note: remember to ssh to fenari with key forwarding ( -A )

# cd /home/w/conf/squid

Edit *-settings.php or *-acls.php

# make

To see the changes in the generated configuration vs what should be already deployed, run:

$ diff -ru deployed/ generated/

If these changes are ok, you can deploy them to all servers, either all at once or a subset of servers, either fast or slowly. See ./deploy -h for all possible options.

# ./deploy all

Using this invocation, the script will copy the newly generated config files into the deployed/ directory, rsync it to the puppetmaster, and then scp them to each server and reload the squid process(es).

# git commit -m "A meaningful commit message"

You should always commit your changes to git to allow for history tracking and rollback.

Current problems

None? :-)

Monitoring

You can get some nice stats about the squids by going to http://noc.wikimedia.org/cgi-bin/cachemgr.cgi (user name root, password is in the squid configuration file). The squids are each listed twice in the drop-down, once for front end and once for back-end. Peer Cache stats for the backend is especially handy.

Debugging

To see HTTP requests sent from Squids to their backend, install ngrep and run e.g.:

# ngrep -W byline port 80 and dst host ms4.wikimedia.org

HowTo

Edit ACLs

in /home/w/conf/squid edit text-acls.conf, then run make, then run ./deploy all

Purge a url

on terbium, run: echo 'https://example.org/foo?x=y' | mwscript purgeList.php

See also