Hi, I'd be glad to help with your questions but it's not clear to me what you are asking.
> 1. How can a redirection (in this case, a CGI script) > specifically state a 403 error and not simply a redirection > (even though squidGuard acts as a redirection)? Are you asking *how* to go about getting your redirection to do this? Or are you asking *why* is your redirection doing this? Please post your squidGuard.conf so we can see what you are trying to do. > The log > file indicates that the forbidden url was actually reached, > when actually it was simply redirected. Which log is showing that the forbidden url was reached? > 2. Is it possible not to log these attempts? Are we still talking about the attempt you mentioned above that was successful? Do you not want to log the *successful* ones or the *unsuccessful* ones? Is it possible to not log them *where* (which log file)? I'll be watching for your reply with answers to these questions. We'll have you cooking in no time! Rick -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Chris Lundell Sent: Monday, December 03, 2001 1:26 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: help on redirects Hello, I'm just about finished configuring squidGuard and I have a stumbling block: 1. How can a redirection (in this case, a CGI script) specifically state a 403 error and not simply a redirection (even though squidGuard acts as a redirection)? The log file indicates that the forbidden url was actually reached, when actually it was simply redirected. 2. Is it possible not to log these attempts? Thank you, Chris
