Chris, 

Thank you for your reply, but unless I'm unclear about the meaning of http code 
302, I still need to consider lines with code 302 as some contain legitimate 
site visits. Is there any way to configure squid to avoid these?

Peter Kulig
Information Services
Milwaukee Public Museum



-----Original Message-----
From: Chris Robertson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, October 06, 2006 1:56 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [squid-users] File type logging


Kulig, Peter wrote:
> Hello everyone, 
>
> Just a quick question: 
> Running SquidNT 2.6.STABLE3-NT mainly to track internet usage. Dispersed 
> through my access logs are entries that do not match the content type. For 
> example:
>
> 1159464511 192.168.3.15 mpm\gomez 
> http://www.tmj4.com/_content/about/img/spacer.gif GET 302 text/html
>
> As you can see, the spacer.gif is reported as text/html. I wrote an analysis 
> application that filters out non - html entries based on that last field, and 
> these entries make the output nearly unreadable.  
>
> Any ideas how to get rid of these?
>
> As always, thanks to everyone that keeps this list going.
>
> Peter Kulig
> Information Services
> Milwaukee Public Museum
>
>   
The response is a 302 (moved temporarily), so the served content type is 
not image/gif as the file name implies.

Perhaps your analysis would benefit from focusing strictly on status 
code 200 replies.

Chris

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