Hi ,
I have a SQUID 3.0 installation on Linux acting as a proxy. Everything
was working fine but when I enabled the ICAP service I am unable to
access web pages.
ICAP server here is a scanning software which is running fine and taking
request (checked manually w/o squid).
My squid.conf file
Hi All,
I am testing Squid as a reverse proxy https checking access with a brand new
OpenCA install.
All is working pretty well except one problem that I cannot get rid of, I'm
not really sure the problem is coming from Squid itself.
Here it is : My certificates generated with the Certificate
Things have changed somewhat since that algorithm was decided upon.
Directory searches were linear and the amount of buffer cache /
directory name cache available wasn't huge.
Having large directories took time to search and took RAM to cache.
Noone's really sat down and done any hard-core
Hi,
I am a squid newbie. I am trying to set up daily download quotas for NCSA
authorized users. I have a daemon running which checks the log files, and
whnever the download limit is reached (for a particular user), it blocks that
user in the config and reconfigures squid (squid -k reconfigure)
Someone may beat me to this, but I'm actually proposing a quote to a
company to implement quota services in Squid to support stuff just
like what you've asked for.
I'll keep the list posted about this. Hopefully I'll get the green
light in a week or so and can begin work on implementing the
Just to see if I got this right, woudln't a timed delay pool as
refill-rate / max-size where refill-rate=0 (or 1 if 0 has problems?) and
max-size which makes both values as -1 at a certain time of the day for 1
min, be enough for this?
It seems it could work, but would like to know if I'm
Hi Shailesh,
Shailesh Mishra wrote:
Hi ,
I have a SQUID 3.0 installation on Linux acting as a proxy. Everything
was working fine but when I enabled the ICAP service I am unable to
access web pages.
ICAP server here is a scanning software which is running fine and taking
request (checked
Thx for the response Adrian. Earlier I was using only AUFS on each drive,
and the system choked on IOWait above 200 req/sec. But, after I added COSS
in the mix, it improved VASTLY.
It is doing more than 16,000 req / min on average (HTTP + ICP, is this the
right way, or should I just count HTTP
Resolved, thanks to Christos via squid-dev.
Bug is in the ICAP server implementation, not in Squid. The ICAP
server cannot *only* respond with 204s as it must echo the messages
when required by the ICAP client, per the RFC.
Lisa
On Thu, Dec 4, 2008 at 1:06 PM, Lisa Fowler [EMAIL PROTECTED]