Interestingly, the DNS server being used is the internal Windows DNS
server, which is listed third in the resolv.conf after the two entries
for OpenDNS's server, so I'm not sure what's going on there...
I can ping the OpenDNS servers by their IP addresses and that works fine...
I think I'm
OK, well I am pretty much out of ideas. You could try plugging it into a
hub (not a switch, just a cheap nasty hub) and using another computer on
the hub running wireshark to figure out at the packet level what sort of
DNS queries it is doing.
It may come to that yet... but in the mean
LeeGroups wrote:
Alan,
I'm actually using OpenDNS's servers (after using the ISP's), what I
really don't understand is how Apt is working perfectly, but Squid and
Wget don't...
I saw that post before, it's what I used to supposedly turn off IPv6.
I can't run FF on the server, no gui
Chaps...
Over the last couple of days I've been trying to build a proxy box for a
load of Windows PCs, using Squid on Ubuntu server 8.04.
I've had a few problems with it due to the wild/wacky filtered internet
connection we have there, but now I've hit a massive brick wall...
Using an upstream
I think from the description the squid thing is actually a red herring.
(to mix a fishy metaphore). It sounds like your proxy server is not
reliably resolving DNS when using IPV6. You will probably see this
problem if you run firefox on the server.
Alan,
I'm actually using OpenDNS's servers (after using the ISP's), what I
really don't understand is how Apt is working perfectly, but Squid and
Wget don't...
I saw that post before, it's what I used to supposedly turn off IPv6.
I can't run FF on the server, no gui installed...
Lee
I
So if squid is running on a server which is connected to the internet
and all the computers connect to squid proxy on (for example)port 8000,
is squid sharing the internet connection or not?
Kris Marsh wrote:
On Nov 26, 2007 7:30 PM, Michael Rimicans [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Greetings,
So if squid is running on a server which is connected to the internet and
all the computers connect to squid proxy on (for example)port 8000, is squid
sharing the internet connection or not?
Lets assume for the moment, that you have an office with a 12 port
router which is in turn connected
I mean.
, I guess you could say that your SERVER is now 'sharing your
internet connection'.
Also, I'm assuming that the router is cheapy bog standard SOHO router
and not a nice uber Cisco switch with it's own settings/routes etc
etc...
Chris
--
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
Its funny when you read one item and all of a sudden every thing drops
into place.
Cheers for the info, it'll proper ding dang do and yep, it is a cheap
SOHO router ;)
People who I work for would never spend for Cisco switch at my level :(
Chris Rowson wrote:
I mean.
, I guess you
On Tue, 2007-11-27 at 19:19 +, Michael Rimicans wrote:
So if squid is running on a server which is connected to the internet
and all the computers connect to squid proxy on (for example)port
8000, is squid sharing the internet connection or not?
Kris Marsh wrote:
On Nov 26, 2007
Greetings,
Quick question:
Can squid proxy server also be used to share an internet connection over
a small office network?
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On Nov 26, 2007 7:30 PM, Michael Rimicans [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Greetings,
Quick question:
Can squid proxy server also be used to share an internet connection over
a small office network?
--
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
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