On 6/14/07, Mgr. Peter Tuharsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi, Mark

I'd like to, however it is production server I'm using SquidGuard on.
I'm afraid of the alpha..

I understand.  However, would you consider building the alpha
and run a commandline test for me?  Then we'll know if there is
an issue to fix.  You can run squidGuard from the command line
without putting it online.  I do this all the time on my server.  The
way to do it is like this:
echo 
"ftp://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/thunderbird/releases/latest-2.0/win32/sk/Thunderbird
Setup 2.0.0.4.exe 127.0.0.1/ - - GET" | squidGuard -dc
$confdir/squidGuard.conf
All on one line.  You may need to play with escape characters in
front of the spaces to get it to pass your shell.  I would really
appreciate it.

However I'm glad the SquidGuard is picking up again. I think it's
probably the best redirector ever. I felt curious when I saw the
development stalling.

I miss some really good redirector chaining. Zapchain is far from
perfect and dosen't work in some cases. I'd like to implement squidguard
+ dansguardian + clamav.. I must wait long enough for the solution
probably ;-)


The 1.3 release should come out soon.  The 2.0 release will be
awhile.  I have know idea if or when debian will pick up a new
release.  Soon, I hope.


Have a nice day
Peter


Thanks and you too,
Mark



John Mark Clayton  wrote / napĂ­sal(a):
> Hi Peter,
> There is a development version of squidGuard at:
> http://squidguard.org/Downloads/Devel/squidGuard-1.3-alpha.tar.gz
> It has a more complete regex implementation.  Would you be
> willing to build and test this alpha release?  squidGuard development
> is picking up again and the support maillist is fairly prompt so you
> may be able to get additional help there.
> Regards,
> Mark
>
> On 6/13/07, Mgr. Peter Tuharsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I discovered that ordinary files are blocked, however if the file has
>> spaces in the name, it isn't catched.
>>
>>
>>
>
>






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