Hey,
Using Squid for some time now (reverse) to speed up my web page for my clients.
While I simply purge my HTML files to make Squid come back and take
'em, can't I just rsync them over to a local apache, instead of Squid?
That way I will even save the first request (all the files will simply
be
2010/5/16 Reverse Squid reversesq...@gmail.com:
Hey,
Using Squid for some time now (reverse) to speed up my web page for my
clients.
While I simply purge my HTML files to make Squid come back and take
'em, can't I just rsync them over to a local apache, instead of Squid?
That way I will
2010/5/16 Reverse Squid reversesq...@gmail.com:
Perhaps I will get better caching results simply with an apache. That
way there is no IMS, no overhead. That's it.
What do you think?
Hi,
A simple case, each squid box I maintained the concurrent connections
could be around 3.
But for
Reverse Squid wrote:
Thanks Jeff.
With that many Squid server it will become more of a headache than
anything else.
But what about with 4 servers? in different locations around the
globe, so cache_peer is not an option (high latency).
Latency is much the same, whether sync'ing four global web
jyothi wrote:
Hi,
I am using squid 2.7, I want to redirect my url www.google.com to
www.m.google.com. To
do this I have tried adding this line in squid.conf url rewrite_program
/etc/squid/redirect.pl and the redirect.pl file is as follows.
#!/usr/bin/perl
$|=1;
while () {
@X = split;
On Mon, 17 May 2010 01:20:12 +1200, Amos Jeffries wrote
jyothi wrote:
Hi,
I am using squid 2.7, I want to redirect my url www.google.com to
www.m.google.com. To
do this I have tried adding this line in squid.conf url rewrite_program
/etc/squid/redirect.pl and the redirect.pl file
On Sat, May 15, 2010 at 9:50 AM, jondavidf jon.freri...@gmail.com wrote:
I need some help if at all possible. This may be a re-post for some.
This is what I'm trying to accomplish:
Trying to get fast Internet to 50 Soldiers stationed in Afghanistan.
I am completely new to linux and
Hi!
On Sat, May 15, 2010 at 1:54 AM, Amos Jeffries squ...@treenet.co.nz wrote:
Joe wrote:
Am 14.05.2010 14:31, schrieb Peng, Jeff:
Does the src ACL have any help to you?
http://www.squid-cache.org/Doc/config/acl/
Not really as it does not explain. Maybe my explanation was not so good. I
Hi!
On Fri, May 14, 2010 at 10:27 AM, a...@gmail adbas...@googlemail.com wrote:
Hello all
I was wondering if anyone knows how to remove a proxy from a linux system
I haven't added the proy to any files, but everytime I try for instance to
connect it keeps searching for the proxy
I initially
On Sun, 16 May 2010 14:06:55 -0430, Jose Ildefonso Camargo Tolosa
ildefonso.cama...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi!
On Fri, May 14, 2010 at 10:27 AM, a...@gmail adbas...@googlemail.com
wrote:
Hello all
I was wondering if anyone knows how to remove a proxy from a linux
system
I haven't added the proy
Hi!
I have been trying to find out some info on kerberos auth and squid, but most
of my searching points to setting up kerberos for single signon with windows
AD. Are other directory services supported? If so, which? Also does anyone know
of some good beginner style resources for setting up
On Mon, 17 May 2010 11:15:06 +1000, Matthew Smith m...@utas.edu.au wrote:
Hi!
I have been trying to find out some info on kerberos auth and squid, but
most of my searching points to setting up kerberos for single signon
with
windows AD. Are other directory services supported? If so, which?
Hi Amos,
Thanks for the reply, you have left me very confused, though. We are talking
about MIT's kerberos, right?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerberos_(protocol)
My understanding is that kerberos is a protocol for authentication, and other
directory services (like Mac OS X's OpenDirectory)
Hi Matthew,
I think you are a bit confused. AD offers a Kerberos and ldap service.
OpenDirecttory or eDirectory is just ldap and has nothing to do with
Kerberos (as far as I know). You can use AD, MIT Kerberos, Heimdal Kerberos
or any other Implementation (e.g. Solaris based) for
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