Written by 22:30 06-06-99 -0500,Chris Dillon
>I use an external redirector that I wrote in PERL to do the job.
>There is a redirector written in C called Squirm that should work very
>well.
>In other words, if someone visits http://www.denied.com and your
>redirector then returns http://www.yoursite.com/blocked.html instead,
>Squid creates a cache object for http://www.denied.com with the data
>for http://www.yoursite.com/blocked.html in its place, which is wrong,
>IMHO.
Maybe you problem is that you only make a rewrite ie just change the url in
the redirector, and not make a redirect. Try change the redirector to
return 302:http://www.yoursite.com/blocked.html instead. This may solve
your problem because the client/browser then would be redirected to the
blocked-page without getting the redirect being cached.
I do see your point though and might agree with you that it is wrong that
squid caches the document as the original url and not the rewritten url. I
havent had any problems with it myself and it could be that there are some
clever thoughts (or a old hack) behind this behavior.
Regards
-- Ole M�ller olm@cybercity.dk, Sysadm CyberCity Internet Is reading in the bathroom considered Multi-Tasking?Received on Mon Jun 07 1999 - 03:38:58 MDT
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