I read somewhere once, that using IPChains (or IPTables), you could redirect all IP traffic through Squid for security/proxy.
Sorry, can't give anymore details, but thought I'd mention it. Stephan On Wed, 2002-02-20 at 18:43, Matthew Palmer wrote: > On Wed, 20 Feb 2002, Richard Hayes wrote: > > > A organisation has public access terminals connected to a Telstra cable > > connection. They use a Netgear router that allocates a 192.168.0.x DHCP > > address on every client login. > > > > There is no filtering on the services. > > > > Using Squidguard (or similar) how can you enforce using the proxy? > > You can't. Unless you can stop connections to port 80 to addresses outside > the local network, people can just connect to wherever they please. > > Get rid of the Netgear router, and put a Linux firewall/router/DHCP server > in there instead. If you're really squeezed for machines (can't afford a > 486?) then put the Squidguard machine in as the router. > > > -- > ----------------------------------------------------------------------- > #include <disclaimer.h> > Matthew Palmer > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- > SLUG - Sydney Linux User Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ > More Info: http://lists.slug.org.au/listinfo/slug -- ��S -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ More Info: http://lists.slug.org.au/listinfo/slug
