(Mark sent me his squid.conf to review) (Mark sent me his squid.conf to look at)
Looking at the following lines in your squid.conf half_closed_clients on request_timeout 10 minutes persistent_request_timeout 30 minutes I'd have to say eveything looks good - I don't know why it would work yesterday and not today. Has anything else changed? Some other ideas: I noticed you're using NTLM auth, so your clients are almost certainly using IE. Under Internet Options, Advanced, are they set to use HTTP/1.1 through proxy connections? If so, try turning it off. Also, by default Squid times out persistent server connections. You could try adjusting this default setting: pconn_timeout 120 seconds Try adjusting it to the same as persistent_request_timeout. In response to your questions about cache manager: > I never have been able to get the sign-in to work. I have > "http_access allow manager all" for t-shooting and receive: > "ERROR Cache Access Denied." All you should have to do is drop the cachemgr.cgi into your Apache's cgi-bin directory and reference that URL in a browser. > If the permissions on the cache directory belongs to "nobody" > then can user "apache" be able to access it? Cachemgr.cgi just uses a special URL on Squid's http_port. Just make sure the Apache box can access that port on the Squid box, and make sure in cachemgr.cgi you specify the correct hostname and port. > I understand you do not to provide a username and password > to access the cachemgr.cgi page? For most uses, no, you don't. Certain operations, though (such as viewing the config and shutting down the cache) do require a password. Adam --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.237 / Virus Database: 115 - Release Date: 3/7/2001
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