-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Chris,
This is not how I've _been_ doing this... > After you updated the domains file, did you: > > # Rebuild the domains.db file > squidGuard -C relative/path/to/domains/file > # Restart squid & squidGuard processes to take advantage of the new db > squid -k reconfigure What I've been doing is editing the db files (db/adult/domains, db/games/domains, etc.) and then I simply restart squid (/etc/rc.d/init.d/squid restart) and tail -f the squidguard log to make sure it restarts and parses the DB files. This has worked well in the last few times to add new sites that have been blocked. As a matter of fact, while I was searching I found that users will still able to access hotmail.com by going to hotmail.msn.com I added hotmail.msn.com to the "webmail" destination domain list and restarted squid. the site is now blocked. This just seems like a curious site. If what I've done is wrong, I'll be more than happy to try out the way you suggest. As a note, I never got squidGuard to behave properly until I configured it with ./configure --with-sg-config=/path/to/myconfig and since then I've been able use squidGuard without the -C /path/to/config Anyhow... If theres something I'm not doing right I am always happy to get right. Lemme know if you've had any other idea and I'll be more than happy to check it out. Thanks for all the help!! - -- Kevin White, Linux+, A+ -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (GNU/Linux) Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org iD8DBQE8fAF48exAN71BhY4RAvtuAJ0ZjPpsrQNNram5tEh/Bsd/1GHiVwCfb4HZ TIqQ6me+rzBV0RSsaCGJnyo= =7awd -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
