fre 2007-06-15 klockan 14:16 +0800 skrev Snow Wolf:
When Squid was running on transparent mode,it would make lots of DNS queries.
Would Squid cache those DNS query results for some time?
Yes, it caches the DNS queies for as long as allowed by the DNS server,
using the TTL provided in the DNS
fre 2007-06-15 klockan 08:49 -0300 skrev Leonardo Rodrigues Magalhães:
So your clients will do DNS queries to the DNS they are configured
to query. If DNS resolves fine, the HTTP query will be made and this one
will be forwarded to squid in transparent proxy fashion.
And when
Hi,
The options your looking for are:
positive_dns_ttl
negative_dns_ttl
Cheers
Daniel
Snow Wolf wrote:
When Squid was running on transparent mode,it would make lots of DNS
queries.
Would Squid cache those DNS query results for some time?I didn't see
an available directive for this purpose
Snow Wolf escreveu:
When Squid was running on transparent mode,it would make lots of DNS
queries.
Would Squid cache those DNS query results for some time?I didn't see
an available directive for this purpose in squid.conf.
The big problem here is that in transparent proxy, DNS queries
2007/6/15, Leonardo Rodrigues Magalhães [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
So, no matter squid is caching or not DNS queries, you'll still see
lots of DNS queries in your network from your clients AND from squid as
well.
No.I run squid as reverse-proxy.Clients' DNS query is nothing to me.I
just take care
Snow Wolf escreveu:
2007/6/15, Leonardo Rodrigues Magalhães [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
So, no matter squid is caching or not DNS queries, you'll still see
lots of DNS queries in your network from your clients AND from squid as
well.
No.I run squid as reverse-proxy.Clients' DNS query is nothing
On 15.06.07 14:16, Snow Wolf wrote:
When Squid was running on transparent mode,it would make lots of DNS
queries.
Would Squid cache those DNS query results for some time?I didn't see
an available directive for this purpose in squid.conf.
yes, it does, following DNS ttl's. There are also some
2007/6/15, Matus UHLAR - fantomas [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
yes, it does, following DNS ttl's. There are also some options for tuning
maximum ttl's of resolved records.
Got it.Thanks all guys.