the du helped me finding the cache size, like you told.
but doing the du with exec.php had to be done on a slightly other way,
that's why I wanted ssh access into the firewall (which now al together
works brilliantly)
thanks a lot everyone!
David Meireles schreef:
I do that all the time, and
I do that all the time, and the SSH server is there to be used, so
:) But after all, your problem was the squid cache or not? are there any
other dir's that are taking so much disk space? do the "du" I've told
you before in the / dir
Michel Servaes escreveu:
Okay, sorry for the posting ov
oops, re-sent from subscribed email address
Paul Mansfield wrote:
> Michel Servaes wrote:
>> Okay, sorry for the posting overload here :)
>> I installed the package Secure Shell onto pfsense, generated the key
>> from there, pasted this key into pfSense Authorized key, and now I can
>> putty into
Okay, sorry for the posting overload here :)
I installed the package Secure Shell onto pfsense, generated the key
from there, pasted this key into pfSense Authorized key, and now I can
putty into the firewall... very handy indeed...
Is this the correct way of doing so, or should there be anoth
using "rm -r /var/squid/cache" seems to work, disk is getting freed, as
we speak :) 94% and counting.
this made me stumble upon trying to connect using WinSCP... in which I
failed, and I think because of not adding the key in the setup of
pfSense... how should I generate this key ? That way I