the web and find out the problem is with the remote site and
there's nothing you can do about it.
thanks! -Chuck Kollars
no matter what page they originally desired
See http://contentfilter.futuragts.com/wiki/doku.php?id=network_billboard for
details.
thanks! -Chuck Kollars
without any interruption. And I haven't done anything
special, neither for Yahoo nor for webmail nor for https:.
thanks! -Chuck Kollars
the cache hit rate for stuff that old awfully low? (Or to say it another
way, doesn't if-modified-since almost always cause the item to be re-fetched
from the website anyway?)
thanks! -Chuck Kollars
-hubs (often 5-port) unless you're sure your
model really function as switches despite their name.
thanks! -Chuck Kollars
*not* one-time in the sense of never ever
repeating.
What's wrong with this picture?
thanks! -Chuck Kollars
or both of:
network.automatic-ntlm-auth.allow-proxies true
network.automatic-ntlm-auth.trusted-uris http://proxy-address
-Chuck Kollars
! -Chuck Kollars
__
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
do these two opposing tendencies (better
average transfer rate but no internal cache memory) net out with Squid's cache
access pattern?
For a Squid cache, am I better off buying a small but really fast hard drive,
or one of these flash drive substitutes?
-Chuck Kollars
' them up or down quite a bit
-typically by a factor of two or even more- based on your actual experience.
thanks! -Chuck Kollars
to work reasonably a couple years ago will
give even ballpark results these days...)
thanks!
-Chuck Kollars
speed, and
saturates my LAN. I'd much rather respond smartly to
the 20 other users by making the large file go to the
back of the line. How can I turn down the priority of
large file responses from the cache?
thanks!
-Chuck Kollars
such
computer as a sacrifice machine; plan ahead to not
lose anything valuable even if that machine gets
wiped.)
thanks!
-Chuck Kollars
Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your home page.
http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs
banned
list, you can stop _much_ (but not anywhere near
_all_) of the illicit activity.
good luck!
-Chuck Kollars
Shape Yahoo! in your own image. Join our Network Research Panel today!
http
) or `tcpdump` or...
depending on what came with your distribution or what
you can get your hands on most easily.
good luck!
-Chuck Kollars
Fussy? Opinionated? Impossible to please? Perfect. Join Yahoo!'s user
...
Help me understand.
Help me understand in what context I said this was
not possible.
Oops. I mixed up Squid with DansGuardian. Mea culpa.
-Chuck Kollars
__
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
) and performance suffers so
much this is unworkable?
Help me understand.
tia!
-Chuck Kollars
__
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
, _especially_ in a development environment
which I assume is only at most a couple developers and
a couple testers. What makes you search for a
round-robin-hood's-barn solution rather than just
going with the obvious?
-Chuck Kollars
I naively assumed that when an end station exceeded
its allowed bandwidth (its bucket emptied), all it had
to do was be idle until its bucket filled up again,
then everything would be the same as before.
But my experience is once an end station exceeds its
allowed bandwith, from then on its
With the delay pools feature when a PC is bad it's
slapped down by having its bandwidth throttled. But
for how long? What exactly _resets_ the PC back to its
un-throttled state?
(I'm asking because so far my mis-experience is once a
browser steps over the line, everything that PC does
_remains_
20 matches
Mail list logo