I just wanted to say thanks for the replies on this. I have not forgotten nor
am I putting your help in the trash bin, I have simply become overwhelmed with
other tasks at this point. I will get back to this thread as soon as possible
and as soon as I can start working on it so that I can try
http_access allow accel_hosts
http_access allow manager localhost
http_access deny manager
http_access allow all
The line above permits anyone who can send a packet to your proxy to use
it as a relay for any purpose they like.
The restrictions above it are not
Ah. Gottcha. You are wanting a reverse proxy.
Darn, sorry, I should have thought about that distinction, like I said, this is
yet another project on my plate so don't have it all down yet :).
http://wiki.squid-cache.org/SquidFaq/ReverseProxy
contains a usable config for accelerating a
Any chance someone could give me a working config to get me started?
-The server has 2GB of memory and 1TB of space which is can use. There is
nothing else running on it, this is all it will do, be a reverse proxy.
-1 public IP to a named based web server hosting a dozen sites.
-Squid used as
On ons, 2008-11-12 at 16:18 -0600, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Any chance someone could give me a working config to get me started?
-The server has 2GB of memory and 1TB of space which is can use. There is
nothing else running on it, this is all it will do, be a reverse proxy.
-1 public IP
Ah. Gottcha. You are wanting a reverse proxy.
Darn, sorry, I should have thought about that distinction, like I said,
this is yet another project on my plate so don't have it all down yet :).
http://wiki.squid-cache.org/SquidFaq/ReverseProxy
contains a usable config for accelerating a
New user of squid. Used it many years ago but things have changes. I set up a
proxy recently then forgot about it as I had other jobs to take care of. Seems
I left it running but only had a couple of sites with IPs to the cache for
testing.
Yesterday, I wanted to get back to the cache and saw
New user of squid. Used it many years ago but things have changes. I set
up a proxy recently then forgot about it as I had other jobs to take care
of. Seems I left it running but only had a couple of sites with IPs to the
cache for testing.
Yesterday, I wanted to get back to the cache and
You definitely have a fully open proxy configured for anyone who can send
packets to it. Also the firewall itself intercepts and sends stuff into
the proxy.
Yes, I've not had much time to learn it yet, I just needed to get it running
for a quick satellite demo so simply opened a port 80 hole
Yesterday, I wanted to get back to the cache and saw a great
deal of traffic I/O on the cache but the weird part was that
none of it was for or on my network. It looked like I've been
used as some sort of payment gateway for a short while :).
Anyhow, I do have firewall security in place,
The setup is something like this;
Internet User-Public IP-Firewall-NAT-Squid-Web Server
Assuming the squid box is inside your firewall then your firewall policy is
incorrect. It should not allow connections from the internet to your squid
box. Depending on how your network's setup that's
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You definitely have a fully open proxy configured for anyone who can send
packets to it. Also the firewall itself intercepts and sends stuff into
the proxy.
Yes, I've not had much time to learn it yet, I just needed to get it running
for a quick satellite demo so
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