On further checking, seems that it's a browswer issue.
I was using IE5.0 and somehow it was damaged somewhere.
I will check carefully again.

M.W.Chang wrote:
> attached is my squid.conf.
> When I access http://www.linuxplanet.com many images and links are
> broken.
> But for most other sites, it's working fine. 
> I searched google.com and read through squid faq, no clue found.
> 
> 
> 
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> # 
> # http://www.linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/Bandwidth-Limiting-HOWTO/install.html#AEN78
> # http://www.uck.uni.torun.pl/~maciek/w3cache/perf.html
> # http://www.zockbar.de/html/eon-proxy.html
> #
> cache_effective_user proxy
> cache_effective_group daemon
> #
> pid_filename          /var/run/squid.pid
> cache_access_log      /var/log/squid.access
> cache_log             /var/log/squid.cache
> cache_store_log               /var/log/squid.store
> # cache_swap_log      /var/log/squid.swap
> #
> cache_mem 16 MB
> maximum_object_size 3000 kb
> store_avg_object_size 50 kb
> #
> log_icp_queries off
> buffered_logs on
> cache_replacement_policy heap GDSF
> redirect_rewrites_host_header off
> cache_dir ufs /var/spool/squid 250 16 256
> #
> # In addition you'll have to replace 'yourlogin' and 'yourpassword' with your own 
>account informations.
> # cache_peer 194.177.32.11 parent 8080 7 no-query no-digest no-netdb-exchange 
>default login=yourlogin:yourpassword
> 
> #
> http_port 3128
> icp_port 0
> #
> httpd_accel_with_proxy on
> httpd_accel_port 80
> httpd_accel_host virtual
> httpd_accel_uses_host_header on
> #
> refresh_pattern         ^ftp:           1440    20%     10080
> refresh_pattern         ^gopher:        1440    0%      1440
> refresh_pattern         .               0       20%     4320
> #
> acl localhost src 127.0.0.1/255.255.255.255
> acl localnet src 192.168.2.0/255.255.255.0
> acl all src 0.0.0.0/0.0.0.0
> acl manager proto cache_object
> # acl SSL_ports port 443 563
> acl Safe_ports port 80 20 21 70 119 1025-65535
> acl CONNECT method CONNECT
> #
> http_access allow localnet
> http_access allow localhost
> http_access deny manager
> #http_access deny !Safe_ports
> #http_access deny CONNECT !SSL_ports
> http_access deny all
> #
> icp_access allow all
> miss_access allow all
> #
> acl QUERY urlpath_regex cgi-bin \?
> no_cache deny QUERY
> #
> # do not cache local hosts
> acl local dst 192.168.2.0/255.255.255.0
> no_cache deny local
> always_direct allow local
> #
> #all our LAN users will be seen by external web servers
> #as if they all used Mozilla on Linux. :)
> # anonymize_headers deny User-Agent
> # fake_user_agent Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:0.9.6+) Gecko/20011122
> #
> #This is useful when we want to use the Cache Manager.
> #Copy cachemgr.cgi to cgi-bin of your www server.
> #You can reach it then via a web browser typing
> #the address http://your-web-server/cgi-bin/cachemgr.cgi
> cachemgr_passwd secret_password all
> cache_mgr [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> #
> # We'll use those files to get better latency times.
> # They tell Squid what kind of data it should retreive directly.
> # If none of the regex matches the requested URL Squid will
> # tell the EON Proxy to transfer the file via Satellite.
> acl mimetype-text urlpath_regex -i "/etc/squid/mime.text"
> acl mimetype-images urlpath_regex -i "/etc/squid/mime.images"
> always_direct allow mimetype-text
> always_direct allow mimetype-images
> never_direct allow all
> #
> #
> #####DELAY POOLS
> #This is the most important part for shaping incoming traffic with Squid
> #For detailed description see squid.conf file or docs at http://www.squid-cache.org
>  
> #We don't want to limit downloads on our local network.
> acl magic_words1 url_regex -i 192.168
>  
> #We want to limit downloads of these type of files
> #Put this all in one line
> acl magic_words2 url_regex -i ftp .exe .mp3 .vqf .tar.gz .gz .rpm .zip .rar .avi 
>.mpeg .mpe .mpg .qt .ram .rm .iso .raw .wav .mov
> #We don't block .html, .gif, .jpg and similar files, because they
> #generally don't consume much bandwidth
> 
> #We want to limit bandwidth during the day, and allow
> #full bandwidth during the night
> #Caution! with the acl below your downloads are likely to break
> #at 23:59. Read the FAQ in this bandwidth if you want to avoid it.
> acl day time 09:00-23:59
>  
> #We have two different delay_pools
> #View Squid documentation to get familiar
> #with delay_pools and delay_class.
> delay_pools 2
>  
> #First delay pool
> #We don't want to delay our local traffic.
> #There are three pool classes; here we will deal only with the second.
> #First delay class (1) of second type (2).
> delay_class 1 2
>  
> #-1/-1 mean that there are no limits.
> delay_parameters 1 -1/-1 -1/-1
>  
> #magic_words1: 192.168 we have set before
> delay_access 1 allow magic_words1
>  
> 
> #Second delay pool.
> #we want to delay downloading files mentioned in magic_words2.
> #Second delay class (2) of second type (2).
> delay_class 2 2
>  
> #The numbers here are values in bytes;
> #we must remember that Squid doesn't consider start/stop bits
> #5000/150000 are values for the whole network
> #5000/120000 are values for the single IP
> #after downloaded files exceed about 150000 bytes,
> #(or even twice or three times as much)
> #they will continue to download at about 5000 bytes/s
>  
> delay_parameters 2 5000/150000 5000/120000
> #We have set day to 09:00-23:59 before.
> delay_access 2 allow day
> delay_access 2 deny !day
> delay_access 2 allow magic_words2

_______________________________________________
Linux-users mailing list - http://linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users
Subscribe/Unsubscribe info, Archives,and Digests are located at the above URL.

Reply via email to