[EMAIL PROTECTED] said: > Umm... No. > > It's used for ICP, a protocol for intercommunication between squid > caches. For example, at my site we have two different caches. One is > basically transparent. The other provides anonymizing services. But, > through ICP, both caches can make use of each other's cached objects.
no, Kevin's right. squid has its own built-in caching dns resolver, and since it's a client it shows up on a different port every time. It seems the only way to turn it off is to disable squid's internal resolver and use an external one, but that's a whole new can of worms. > Dunno how you turn it off, though. Iptables? <shrug> As I said, icp can be turned off with "icp_port 0", as noted in the squid.conf comments. It uses udp port 3130 by default. Jason