On 22 Jul 1999, Ramin Motakef wrote:
> > % squidclient http://www.netscape.com/ > test
> >
> You have to set permissions in /etc/squid.conf. Look for something
> like:
> http_access allow "some acl"
> To get started: "http_access allow all" as last entry.
OK, this test seems to work so far
Andreas Tille <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> % squidclient http://www.netscape.com/ > test
>
> Unfortunately I get a
>HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden
> message with each server I try, also with http://localhost/. To
> make it clear, I append the file "test".
>
You have to set permissions in /
On Wed, 21 Jul 1999, Shao Zhang wrote:
> apache is a really a web server. AFAIK, it has very limited features to
> be a proxy server.
> If you are using debian, make sure the module is installed.
>
> For a better proxy server, I suggest you to try out squid. There is a
> debia
Hi,
apache is a really a web server. AFAIK, it has very limited features to
be a proxy server.
If you are using debian, make sure the module is installed.
For a better proxy server, I suggest you to try out squid. There is a
debian package for it.
Hope this helps
Someone correct me if I am wrong, but the proxy-server apache module
would use a proxy server to speed up the serving of apache web pages.
Squid is designed to do _exactly_ what you want, and I've heard very
good things about it.
--
Stephen Pitts
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
webmaster - http://www.mschess.o
Hello,
I want to set up my Apache seerver as Proxy host.
I'm really unexperienced in this topic and at first I
want to describe my environment:
There are different departments in our institute.
The main department has a fast internet connection and
uses a firewall and a proxy server.
I work in a
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