On Fri, May 25, 2001 at 11:33:29PM +0800, Jacq wrote:
<snip>
> >In any case, the most likely reason is that you did not tell squid >about
> your LAN and to permit its IP's. By default, squid only permits
> >connections from localhost, and that may have been the case when >Netscape
> connected to itself.
(geez, this quoting is worse than yahoo webmail! find a better MUA
pls. ;)
> I have defined the address of the local network in
> the squid.conf file.
> i defined it as follows:
> acl localnet 192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0
> http_access allow localnet
> i ran the following aftre restarting squid:
> client http://www.yahoo.com
>
> the log in the access.log file is:
> 127.0.0.1 TCP_MISS .....
This simply means that the requested URL is not yet cached.
> when i use netscape, which uses proxy, the log in the
> access.log file is:
> 192.168.1.1 .....
>
> Netscape on the proxy server is able to browse, but the client PC is not
> able to.
What do you mean by "not able to"? Are there any error messages from
your browser? From squid? Are you absolutely sure that this is a squid
issue? If you're running an http daemon on your linux box, is it
accessible to the client PC both directly and via squid? What happens
if you http://aa.bb.cc.dd/ (where aa.bb.cc.dd is the IP of known host
accessible to the inet)? Can you even ping aa.bb.cc.dd? What else have
you tried aside from client ... and browse thru your PC client?
> The OS, btw, is RedHat 7.1
There's no such this as a Redhat 7.1 OS. Redhat is simply a distributor
of GNU Linux.
> Can anyone interpret this for me. If you need more info on what is going
> on, e-mail me, pls.
It would be much easier for everyone concerned if just posted all
relevant info and not wait to be asked for it.
--
Another good night not to sleep in a eucalyptus tree.
_
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