Abidoon Nadeem wrote:
Hi,
I installed squid on the front of our webserver in accelerator mode so
that all static content is served by squid and the dynamic content
passed to the webserver at the back. I am using lighttpd at the backend
and have password protected one of the folders using htpa
Hi,
I installed squid on the front of our webserver in accelerator mode so that
all static content is served by squid and the dynamic content passed to the
webserver at the back. I am using lighttpd at the backend and have password
protected one of the folders using htpasswd utility. After ins
l Message-
> From: Henrik Nordstrom [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, May 29, 2003 8:55 AM
> To: Allen Miller
> Cc: Squid Users
> Subject: Re: [squid-users] htpasswd+ncsa_auth
>
> On Thursday 29 May 2003 15.08, Allen Miller wrote:
> > For grins, I used the -
On Thursday 29 May 2003 15.08, Allen Miller wrote:
> For grins, I used the -m option (force MD5 encryption) with
> htpasswd, but I could never get authenticated using IE6.
-m uses MD5 hashes which the ncsa_auth shipped with Squid-2.5 and
earlier does not understand. For this to work you must use
On Wednesday 28 May 2003 21.42, Allen Miller wrote:
> I am running Squid-2.5.stable2 on a RedHat 7.2 system with
> Apache-1.3.20-16. Everything works, but my passwords are limited to
> 8-characters.
>
> Is this an imposed limit or do I have something else going on?
It is a the limit of NCSA style
I am running Squid-2.5.stable2 on a RedHat 7.2 system with Apache-1.3.20-16.
Everything works, but my passwords are limited to 8-characters. In other
words, if my password is password99, all I need enter from my browser login
screen is password and I'm in. Shorter passwords are treated normally.