Ummm, i'm also seeing lots of stale connections to: 208.228.229.XXX 8(((
Running Squid2.1PATCH2+AdditionalPatch.
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Pedro Ribeiro
Online: http://www.isel.pt/~pribeiro/
IRC(PTnet) Nick: PAntMaR
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-----Original Message-----
From: Henrik Nordstrom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Rob Poudrette <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Segunda-feira, 14 de Dezembro de 1998 21:47
Subject: Re: Funnies with 208.228.228.235 (Henrik Nordstrom )
>Rob Poudrette wrote:
>>
>> I had this problem more than one. I have some netxray dumps. All
>> I really got is binary dumps. Let me know if you would like to see
>> some of the dump files.
>> http://www.cineca.it/proxy/search/html/9812/7.html
>
>Was this with or without quickabort enabled (quick_abort 0 enables quick
>abort). Without quick abort enabled there is a number of different kinds
>of requests that may cause Squid to eat a lot of bandwidth without any
>gain.
>
>If if was with quick_abort enabled then we need to know what the request
>looks like, and preferably the response headers as well. The object data
>is not interesting. If you wonder what I am talking about then do a
>trace on a normal HTTP request and you'll know.
>
>---
>Henrik Nordstrom
>Spare time Squid hacker