tor 2007-04-26 klockan 14:01 +0300 skrev [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
hello
i've updated 2.5 to 2.6 and the http_port options ( tproxy and transparent)
doesn't work but the vport=80 options works alone.
i set it up like this
http_port ip:8080 transparent vport=80 tproxy
can anyone tell me
lör 2007-04-28 klockan 12:25 +0200 skrev Matus UHLAR - fantomas:
do you mean, he can't run forward proxy and vport reverse proxy on the same
port?
Correct.
I think that reverse proxy can be done without vport, with proper acl lists
and redefining of hostnames in hosts file (http server must
Greetings All,
I have a rather odd situation that has cropped up here that I
would like get some help with. For some background information, we
have had a Cisco SE onsite assisting us and we haven't gotten very
far.
Essentially I have two squid routers sitting parallel to our
firewall
lör 2007-04-28 klockan 16:34 -0500 skrev Paul Fiero:
1. Is there a better way to provide the HTTP redirection instead
of policy based routing or WCCP?
Getting proxy (or better yet, PAC file) settings out to the clients.
2. Assuming the policy based routing is best what would be the
After looking at the Squid logs a little closer I think I have a
better idea about where the problem is occurring. Here is the
important part of my access.log:
1177710626.971 4 10.193.66.53 TCP_MISS/401 383 HEAD
Hi
I hope the title explain the problem . this causing squid asking for
authentication for each new page .
the authentication ttl is the default which is two hours i think .
nothing changed just asking for password with new pages.
can i get some help ...
sön 2007-04-29 klockan 03:42 +0300 skrev phpdevster:
I hope the title explain the problem . this causing squid asking for
authentication for each new page .
Not normal. Please explain your setup in more detail.
ttls etc not relevant. Thise are only for controlling how often Squid
verifies the
Ack, that isn't the answer I was looking for. We do a load balancer that we
could use but, unfortunately it means traffic would go from the router, through
the firewall, through the load balancer, to squid, back through the load
balancer, back through the firewall then out to the internet
I know this has already been asked, and I know Hendrik
said no dice. But I still don't understand why, so I'm
going to ask the same dumb question one more time:
I want to block a whole bunch of https: proxies. I
don't need to find them or to understand them - just
block them. I already have a
On Sat, Apr 28, 2007, Chuck Kollars wrote:
I know this has already been asked, and I know Hendrik
said no dice. But I still don't understand why, so I'm
going to ask the same dumb question one more time:
The important thing here is that Squid is an open source project,
and if someone comes up
* Mark Powell ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
On Thu, 26 Apr 2007, Adrian Chadd wrote:
On Thu, Apr 26, 2007, Mark Powell wrote:
BTW I'll still test your patch with the POSIX AIO code built into squid
(which is what you've kinda requested?)
You're using aufs and COSS - so by default it'll use the
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