I am trying to find a way to stop some people on our network from
accessing certain websites. We have been using Squid with SquidGuard
on an older FreeBSD system.
The Squid that was installed from ports doesn't seem to see https:
connections. From what I can find, this appears to be norma
Bart Silverstrim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> We are currently running Squid and SquidGuard on FreeBSD for
> monitoring/proxying web browsing activity at our workplace. The
> problem is that some users figured out how to use a specific type of
> proxy to bypass protections...specifically, t
We are currently running Squid and SquidGuard on FreeBSD for
monitoring/proxying web browsing activity at our workplace. The
problem is that some users figured out how to use a specific type of
proxy to bypass protections...specifically, they're going through an
https site.
Is it possibl
On Wed, Feb 11, 2004 at 11:21:36AM +0200, Markus Kovero wrote:
> I would like to do transparent www proxy for nat-network which is
> 172.16.0.0/24 and wwwproxy being $ispcache
> I told ipnat to do:
> rdr xl0 from 172.16.0.0/24 to any port = 80 -> $ispcache port 8080 tcp
>
> but all www connections
I would like to do transparent www proxy for nat-network which is
172.16.0.0/24 and wwwproxy being $ispcache
I told ipnat to do:
rdr xl0 from 172.16.0.0/24 to any port = 80 -> $ispcache port 8080 tcp
but all www connections go straight through, not through cache.
xl0 is LAN interface.
Any clue?
Hey everyone.
Here's a question that may have been answered in the past, but I'm not
real satisfied with what I've found on Google.
I have been tasked with setting up a reverse proxy (open source,
probably squid) that is capable of handling 5000 requests per second
or more. Yes, 5000/sec. It's
"Remington L." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I am interested in installing an FTP proxy server on my default gateway. I
> understand caching and all that, my question goes along the lines of
> security. Lets say I leave ports 21, 20 open on the server(default gateway)
> and I have another machine
I am interested in installing an FTP proxy server on my default gateway. I
understand caching and all that, my question goes along the lines of
security. Lets say I leave ports 21, 20 open on the server(default gateway)
and I have another machine which is the actually FTP server. I read
somewhere a
At 2003-02-26T13:36:25Z, Alvaro Gil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I read through the squid manuals and it requires a ton of disk space and
> ram and a moderately fast computer.
It does if you're using it as a transparent cache for a large ISP. For your
purposes, your P166 will be plenty sufficie
On Wednesday 26 February 2003 15:36, someone, possibly Alvaro Gil, typed:
> I read through the squid manuals and it requires a ton of disk space
> and ram and a moderately fast computer. My server is a wimpy little
> Pentium 166 with 48 megs of ram and a 6 gig hard drive. Is there a
> simpler way
On Wed, Feb 26, 2003 at 08:36:25AM -0500, Alvaro Gil wrote:
> I read through the squid manuals and it requires a ton of disk space
> and ram and a moderately fast computer. My server is a wimpy little
> Pentium 166 with 48 megs of ram and a 6 gig hard drive. Is there a
> simpler way to set up a
I read through the squid manuals and it requires a ton of disk space
and ram and a moderately fast computer. My server is a wimpy little
Pentium 166 with 48 megs of ram and a 6 gig hard drive. Is there a
simpler way to set up a method of using AIM behind a firewall? I don't
need an industrial
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