[I am new to the list, but have been using an LRP
or LEAF box for many years now. Many, many
thanks to everyone involved. I love it.]

From the archive, I see that the solution to the
"/usr/sbin/squid: not found" error is to *not* use
squid-2.lrp with the current (20040117) Bering
uclibc. Gosh.

I, like Tim Massey, only want to use squid to log
web access. Like him, I think that squid is probably
overkill, given the little foot print LEAF aims at
and the big footprint squid has (600kB bin, +logs,
+mem usage)

My options seem to be:
1. use tcpdump to store each passing port 80 GET
packet, then mawk and display the results. Not bad.
2. Fix squid. More work than I am after, in an area
that I am not familiar with. Maybe if the God of
Spare Time shines upon me then I will look at the
"How To Build LEAF Packages" pages.
3. Stop being such a busybody and get A Life. Best
option of all, I suspect.

However, I have a nagging doubt - that I really
want squid to be in place for other reasons. For
instance, traffic control (because of ISP bandwidth
limits) and the possibility of switching ON caching
easily later.

What is the likelyhood that squid-2.lrp for uclibc
will receive the attention of someone with more
skill than me anytime soon? Can I offer money, beer
or moral support to help it along?




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