check out your access log seeing what it says. Sounds like you are
looking for an AFW from squid. The ports themselves are defined. You
need to make sure the other ports are opened.
Your rule tells squid to block the non-allowed sites to the non-allowed
ports. Still sounds like FW function, bu
On 10/12/2014 05:18 AM, Timothy Spear wrote:
Hello,
Here is the issue:
I can proxy through Squid just fine to HTTP and HTTPS. I can also run
SSH via Corkscrew to a SSH server running on port 443 and it works fine.
What I cannot do, is access HTTPS or SSH on any other port except 443.
Look a
Hello,
Here is the issue:
I can proxy through Squid just fine to HTTP and HTTPS. I can also run SSH via
Corkscrew to a SSH server running on port 443 and it works fine.
What I cannot do, is access HTTPS or SSH on any other port except 443. I have
lost track of the number of things I have tried s
Hi Amos,
I know that the first request is always a miss.
I'm reproducing the same vídeo from the same PC, and same browser erasing the
cache between tests.
Are there any doc that explain the meaning of all responses like ORIGINAL_DST ?
And are there any way to know the reason of a MISS or a HIT
Also you can overwrite it with the -s option if you really need to.
Markus
"Victor Sudakov" wrote in message
news:20141011131747.ga56...@admin.sibptus.tomsk.ru...
Markus Moeller wrote:
Hi Viktor,
These sections of code do the selection in squid:
char *service_name = (char *) "HTTP", *
HTTP is the standard service for HTTP authentication (web and proxy)
Markus
"Victor Sudakov" wrote in message
news:20141011131747.ga56...@admin.sibptus.tomsk.ru...
Markus Moeller wrote:
Hi Viktor,
These sections of code do the selection in squid:
char *service_name = (char *) "HTTP",
This email message and any attachments are for the sole use of the intended
recipient(s). Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure, copying or distribution
is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender
by reply email and destroy all copies of the original mess
Markus Moeller wrote:
> Hi Viktor,
>
>These sections of code do the selection in squid:
>
>
> char *service_name = (char *) "HTTP", *host_name = NULL;
Thanks for posting this. BTW does it mean that the service name "HTTP"
is hardcoded, and if I wanted to use a principal with a different
ser
Hi Viktor,
These sections of code do the selection in squid:
char *service_name = (char *) "HTTP", *host_name = NULL;
if (service_principal && strcasecmp(service_principal, "GSS_C_NO_NAME")) {
service.value = service_principal;
service.length = strlen((char *) service.value);
} else {
Good to see it works now. As far as I recall the MIT message is clearer in
this case.
Regards
Markus
"Victor Sudakov" wrote in message
news:20141011044626.gb49...@admin.sibptus.tomsk.ru...
Markus Moeller wrote:
> What if the service principal's name in squid's keytab does not
> coincide w
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 11/10/2014 9:14 p.m., 李志-iie wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I’m trying to set up Squid on a ARM platform. After compiling, I
> run Squid with command “/opt/squid/sbin/squid -N -d1” , and then
> configure the iptables. Unfortunately, when I browse a url, Squid
>
Hi,
I’m trying to set up Squid on a ARM platform. After compiling, I run Squid with
command “/opt/squid/sbin/squid -N -d1” , and then configure the iptables.
Unfortunately, when I browse a url, Squid reports an error:
Attempt to open socket for EUI retrieval failed: (13) Permission denie
12 matches
Mail list logo