On Sat, 2006-01-28 at 17:24 +0000, Mark Sansome wrote:
> I recently posted to thank everyone for their help in getting me up and
> running with squid/squidGuard. Unfortunately my celebrations were
> premature....
> 
> Everything certainly looks as if it is working. Starting squid generates
> 5 instances of squidGuard which are listed as active processes.
> 
> I started by creating an elaborate squidguard.conf file with all the
> rules I wanted to include. It didn't seem to work so I gradually
> stripped it back until - in frustration - I created the following
> squidguard.conf:
> 
> logdir /var/log/squidguard
> dbhome /var/lib/squidguard/db
> 
> acl {
>     default {
>         pass none
>     }
> }
> 
> and restarted squid. The logfile /var/log/squidguard/squidGuard.log
> shows that it is happy with the .conf file
> 2006-01-28 17:14:03 [6861] squidGuard 1.2.0 started (1138468443.845)
> 2006-01-28 17:14:03 [6861] squidGuard ready for requests (1138468443.847)
> (times 5)
> 
> But nothing is blocked...
> 
> Have I missed something obvious?

Run squid with this configuration for a while, then run the following
command from the command line and post the output:

squidclient mgr:redirector

You should get a table listing all your redirector PIDs and the number
of requests each has handled. If the first redirector in the list has
handled at least one request then we know that at least part of your
configuration is working. If not, then I suspect your squid
configuration is not handing requests to the redirector.



-- 
David P.C. Wollmann
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