This was a good suggestion...but its a no-go.  I tried removing the
redirects...from the acl, the destination class, or even from the whole
setup it still passes traffic along but doesn't log the traffic.  Does
anyone have an idea here?

Thanks in advance.  Thanks Mike for the suggestion.

Ryan


> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> All,
>>
>> I am using squidguard 1.2.0 and been using one of the blacklists
>> available
>> to filter inapproriate content.
>>
>> One of my acls looks like this:
>>
>>         family within daytime {
>>                 pass     good whitelist !in-addr !adult !custom
>> !audio-video whitelist any
>>         }
>>
>> Anyway, I'd like to not block sites from some classes completely...but
>> rather just log them.  An example of of a destination class that I'd
>> like
>> to log is found here:
>>
>> dest adult {
>>         domainlist      adult/domains
>>         urllist         adult/urls
>>         expressionlist  adult/expressions
>>         redirect
>> http://192.168.0.254/cgi-bin/squidGuard.cgi?clientaddr=%a&clientname=%n&clientuser=%i&clientgroup=%s&url=%u
>>         logfile         adult
>> }
>>
>> I know that /var/log/squid/access.log will log all requests, but I like
>> the way squidguard identifies and logs specific classes (like adult
>> content for instance).  Does anyone know if it is possible to log but
>> not
>> block traffic that has been flagged?  How would I go about doing that?
>>
>> Thanks in advance,
>>
>> Ryan
>>
>
> Have to admit I haven't tried it but I'd assume that if there was no
> redirect line either in the destination class or the acl where it is
> activated for the group then you'd do what you want.
>
>
> --
> Mike Rambo
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Many today claim to be tolerant. True tolerance, however, can cope
> with others being intolerant.
>      -Nigel Cunningham
>


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