Thanks Kinkie! 

Since I am setting an "Expires" header, I did not
think this would work.
 
According to _Squid: The Definitive Guide_, 
"The refresh_pattern rules apply only to responses
without an explicit expiration time." 

Perhaps I should try anyway and see what happens...

Ken

--- Kinkie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> On Mon, 2005-01-17 at 03:14 -0800, Ken Ara wrote:
> 
> > I publish a large number of RSS feeds which I
> update
> > once a day. These are cached by Squid and bear
> > "Last-Modified", "Expires" and "Cache-Control"
> > headers. But some user agents (the 'feed
> aggregators')
> > ignore these; I understand this means they do not
> > implement 'conditional GET'. I need Squid to send
> back
> > a "304 Not Modified" reply instead of the "200 OK"
> for
> > any fresh files and never allow a
> CLIENT_REFRESH_MISS
> > for any files called 'rss.xml'.
> > 
> > I would appreciate any help!
> 
> You might want to check the refresh_pattern
> directive out.
> 
>       Kinkie
> 



                
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