Quoting Henrik Nordstrom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
>
> On Wed, 20 Oct 2004, oke wrote:
>
> > Can you tell me which pattern to grep to checkout existence of virus
> > or spyware?
>
> A common sign is lots of request for random IP addresses, or very high
> failure ratio (TCP_MISS/5XX or TCP_MISS/404)
>
> > Have I mistaken "local servers" for , say, "intranet servers" ?
>
> No, but you have mistaken the context of the comment.
>
> The context of the comment is what Squid should do with the request once
> th client has sent the request to Squid, not what clients should do with
> the request. This
On Wed, 20 Oct 2004, oke wrote:
Can you tell me which pattern to grep to checkout existence of virus
or spyware?
A common sign is lots of request for random IP addresses, or very high
failure ratio (TCP_MISS/5XX or TCP_MISS/404)
Regards
Henrik
On Wed, 20 Oct 2004, oke wrote:
EM> Checkout the 'no_cache' directive.
done. I will check out my coming access.log if things are solved :)
no_cache does not stop things from being proxied and logged by Squid, it
only stops Squid from caching the reply and reusing the same reply in a
later requ
On Wed, 20 Oct 2004 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
# TAG: always_direct
# Usage: always_direct allow|deny [!]aclname ...
#
# Here you can use ACL elements to specify requests which should
# ALWAYS be forwarded directly to origin servers. For example,
# to always directly forwar
Hello Elsen,
Wednesday, October 20, 2004, 3:24:29 PM, you wrote:
EM> As another user just suggested :
EM> Checkout the 'no_cache' directive.
done. I will check out my coming access.log if things are solved :)
EM> Don't confuse with always_direct and never_direct these are not related
EM>
Hello Werner,
Wednesday, October 20, 2004, 3:39:37 PM, you wrote:
>>
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] etc]# ls -l /var/logs/access.log.1
>> -rw-r--r--1 nobody root 418721213 Oct 19 00:00
>> /var/logs/access.log.1
WRzc> That is very big, indeed. Did you look into the file? Maybe a virus or
WRzc>
>...
>...
>
> Have I mistaken "local servers" for , say, "intranet servers" ?
> What you are telling me, is that : If I don't use cache
> peers, then I don't
> need this directive ?
>
Yes, you don't need it.
M.
> I want all requests from (local) my clients to be directly forwarded
> to the destination, in case of local destination, in order to
> minimize SQUID's load. Can anybody tell me how to configure SQUID
> for such purpose ?
To redirect all local requests to their corresponding domain then,
> >...
> > and
> >
> > always_direct allow intranet
> > no_cache deny intranet
> >
>
> Your contribution is confusing in the sense that these directives
> have no relation whatsoever. 'always_direct' tells SQUID what to do in
> case cache_peers are being used.
>
> It bares no result either for
Hello Elsen,
Wednesday, October 20, 2004, 3:04:13 PM, you wrote:
>> EM> You can't once a request is 'in' SQUID; squid has to
>> EM> deal with it.
>>
>> really ?
>> I have my access.log to become very big!! How at least to overcome
>> this problem ?
EM> Use :
EM> squid -k rotate
I am alr
>
>...
> and
>
> always_direct allow intranet
> no_cache deny intranet
>
Your contribution is confusing in the sense that these directives
have no relation whatsoever. 'always_direct' tells SQUID what to do in
case cache_peers are being used.
It bares no result either for the users or
> EM> You can't once a request is 'in' SQUID; squid has to
> EM> deal with it.
>
> really ?
> I have my access.log to become very big!! How at least to overcome
> this problem ?
>
You could rotate logs more frequently. and maybe use a script to compress older
logs in the same move.
> EM> You h
>
> Hello Elsen,
>
> Wednesday, October 20, 2004, 2:49:47 PM, you wrote:
>
> EM> You can't once a request is 'in' SQUID; squid has to
> EM> deal with it.
>
> really ?
> I have my access.log to become very big!! How at least to overcome
> this problem ?
Use :
squid -k rotate
at reg
Hello Elsen,
Wednesday, October 20, 2004, 2:49:47 PM, you wrote:
EM> You can't once a request is 'in' SQUID; squid has to
EM> deal with it.
really ?
I have my access.log to become very big!! How at least to overcome
this problem ?
EM> You have to solve this at the client side. By proxy conf.
Hello squid-users,
I want all requests from (local) my clients to be directly forwarded
to the destination, in case of local destination, in order to
minimize SQUID's load. Can anybody tell me how to configure SQUID
for such purpose ?
--
Best regards,
oke mailto
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