
I can confirm this works well. It’s a bit tricker w/ IPv6 but with IPv4 it works and you can serve a lot of software updates out of the cache. Mac mini w/ large SSD is a common application that people do # AssetCacheManagerUtil status .. CacheDetails = { "Apple TV Software" = 732593844; "Mac Software" = 28762157836; Other = 5047787109; iCloud = 25227716657; "iOS Software" = 15765184801; }; TotalBytesAreSince = "2019-11-04 16:44:33 +0000"; TotalBytesImported = 2198032684; TotalBytesReturnedToClients = 22369111463; TotalBytesStoredFromOrigin = 9485169600; TotalBytesStoredFromPeers = 4171229773;
On Nov 13, 2019, at 4:51 PM, Michael Gehrmann <mgehrmann@atlassian.com> wrote:
Hi Ahmed,
We have been using the Apple specific content caching feature for a while now.
It's something you enable on a mac (we use a mac mini) which then get discovered on your local network via a DNS TXT record or bonjour.
https://support.apple.com/en-au/guide/mac-help/mchl3b6c3720/mac
Hope this helps.
MIKE G
On Thu, 14 Nov 2019 at 06:22, ahmed.dalaali@hrins.net <ahmed.dalaali@hrins.net> wrote: Does anyone know if there is an apple cache? Today we noticed that apple store applications and updates are not caching anymore by HTTPs cache servers, and when we checked through DPI, we found that it's been changed into HTTPS! Does anyone know what is going on?
Ahmed