You could simply add those hosts to your /etc/hosts file.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Rolf" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Thursday, April 03, 2003 9:06 AM Subject: [squid-users] bypassing the proxy for local atomic hostnames > hello > > I'm having trouble with configuring squid (2.5stable1) to handle internal, > 'intranet' addresses which are not fully qualified. > > Squid currently is setup to do proxy_auth with active directory group > membership as an additional requirement. This is all working fine. > > When I start the browser it is configured to go to an address of the form > http://info/ or http://intranet/dev or similar. > > Initially it failed with a dns unresolvable error generated bby the > upstream (ISP) proxy. Not at all surprising as that cache has no knowledge > of our internal dns, where 'info' as a hostname is resolvable. > > So I tried adjusting the cache config to not let such urls go upstream. In > fact I'd just like them to go direct. But this didn't work: > > acl info url_regex ^http://info/.* > always_direct allow info > > I then tried cache_peer_domain with a !info parameter but then I got an > error saying 'unable to forward request at this time', so I don't think > that's it. > > What do I have to set such that unqualified hostnames (and urls that are > qualified with our own domain) in urls are sent straight from the proxy to > the host specified (a webserver on the same LAN as the proxy)? > > Is is related that when the browser starts it asks for authentication (a la > proxy_auth as above) and once done, ignores the always_direct directive? > > Many thanks > > rolf.
