you can do a port mapping using rinetd to redirect the request to different port.
On Friday 18 July 2003 07:35 am, Adam wrote: > Henrik wrote: > > Binding Squid to low ports is not a good reason why to have to start > > Squid as root. There is no good reason why a proxy should need to run > > on a low port, or why it should not be allowed to when started as a > > non-root user on a dedicated proxy server. > > I totally agree but some companies have been using the same port for many, > many years (back in the Netscape Proxy days) and it is just > fixed/hard-coded everywhere. So if you are dealing with an Enterprise wide > change, it is not so easy to say "it's better to run squid on a high port > and so we all need to change." However, as soon as our company migrates to > their new ActiveDirectory/Exchange stuff and things settle down, I would > like to work with the desktop guys to change the port but I point this out > as I imagine other medium to large companies are also stuck with a > low-numbered legacy port for historical reasons. > > adam
