squidguardlogfiles contain nothing but the following lines repeated over and over...
2004-06-04 11:33:58 [573] squidGuard 1.2.0 started (1086366836.968) 2004-06-04 11:33:58 [573] squidGuard ready for requests (1086366838.021) 2004-06-04 11:33:58 [583] squidGuard 1.2.0 started (1086366837.425) 2004-06-04 11:33:58 [583] squidGuard ready for requests (1086366838.033) 2004-06-04 11:53:40 [658] squidGuard 1.2.0 started (1086368020.674) 2004-06-04 11:53:40 [658] squidGuard ready for requests (1086368020.755) -----Original Message----- From: Rick Matthews [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 10:51 AM To: Michael Wray; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Redirecting portions of Yahoo.com Michael Wray wrote: > > When I attempt to block (redirect) say: mail.yahoo.com, when I run > the tests from the commandline, squidguard successfully blocks > mail.yahoo.com, but when I run it in my webbrowser, somehow I > succeed in going to mail.yahoo.com. Any other domain I've tried > with a similar scenario, works as expected, the specified section > is blocked, and the rest is allowed...This is just an issue with > Yahoo...anyone know what else I might try to block this? What messages are in your squidGuard.log file? I'd first check file ownership and permissions. You ran your successful tests from the command line logged in as your user or as root. Squid and squidGuard usually run as squid:squid, so they might have been denied access to files that you had access to as root. Do a 'cat domains | grep "yahoo.com"' on the domains file that contains mail.yahoo.com and tell us what it reports. Rick
