At Thu, 23 May 2002 11:04:44 +1000 (EST), dazza  wrote:
> No1. Squid caching password protected pages.
> 
> I have a site using Squid to cache web pages. However, if a user selects a
> password ptotected page, enters a username and password, then goes away
> and comes back half an hour later, Squid doesn't re-authenticate the user,
> giving them instead the cached page which it got when signed in the first
> time.
> 
> This is a particular problem as the PC's doing this are shared, and the
> password protected pages require specific user authentication.
> 
> Does anyone know ifI can stop Squid doing this? Or have I diagnosed it
> wrongly, and it's something other than Squid which might be causing this?

(i presume) its the browser prompting, then caching the password. thus
password expiry is up to the browser, not squid.

> No2. Scanning inbound mail.
> 
> I _think_ I vaguely remember discussion on this before, but does anyone
> know a product for Linux which will scan inbound mail attachments as
> they're spooled for virus', and delete the offending files if they are
> detected? MTA is sendmail, and whatever local delivery agent comes with RH
> 7.2. A pointer to a thread in the archives will do for those who don;t
> wish to raise the discussion again.

packages.debian.org search engine looks like a good starting point:

a search for "virus":

 
http://packages.debian.org/cgi-bin/search_packages.pl?keywords=virus&searchon=all&subword=1&version=unstable&release=all


you probably want to check the package dependencies (given below the
package description) to get an idea of what's involved.

-- 
 - Gus
-- 
SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group - http://slug.org.au/
More Info: http://lists.slug.org.au/listinfo/slug

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