After reading through the squid archive and the various Citrix support
documents, I have found a combination of settings which will allow my
users to access Citrix through the squid proxy. I am seeking a better
understanding of the ramifications of what I had to do and would
appreciate your collec
build7).
On Fri, 12 Nov 2004 11:01:18 -0700, Adam Pearse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hey all, we have been having the strangest NTLM problems whereby we
> have to reboot our server (restarting squid, samba and winbind doesn't
> help) to re-enble the NTLM authenication.
Hey all, we have been having the strangest NTLM problems whereby we
have to reboot our server (restarting squid, samba and winbind doesn't
help) to re-enble the NTLM authenication. I have removed the
authenication altogether as all I really need is the LAN ID of the
person surfing, not to approve
, Adam Pearse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I know this topic has been asked many many times but I have not found
> a solution that works so I figured I would give it one last kick.
>
> Version 2.5.STABLE5
>
> You will notice I have tried a few things and left some of them
>
I know this topic has been asked many many times but I have not found
a solution that works so I figured I would give it one last kick.
Version 2.5.STABLE5
You will notice I have tried a few things and left some of them
commented in my squid.conf which is:
acl all src 0.0.0.0/0.0.0.0
#acl micros
This message is simply to be used for searching in the future as I
have found many people asking this question and not getting a concise
answer back. This is my contribution to the problem.
Environment:
squid-2.5.STABLE5-4
samba-3.0.7
Squid is configured to use NTLM authenication for all outbound
Hi all, I recently upgraded my three year old build of squid to the
latest release for Fedora Core 2 (squid-2.5.STABLE5-4.fc2). I have the
ntlm pass-thru authenication working great via the combined efforts of
squid, smb, and winbind. My squid.conf has the standard
acl/http_access plus one extra on