Fw: [squid-users] network design

From: Rodney Richison <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, 22 Feb 2003 01:56:15 -0600

> >A hosts file should take care of this as well.

 I'm rather new to linux. I tested the nt port first, then ditched windows
and went with redhat. The windows port had an entry for the host_file.

 I entered my info in the /etc/hosts to no avail and after finding no entry
 in the linux version for host_file I discover it uses internal dns and
won't
 do a hosts file. (Tell me if I'm all mixed up here). Not having compiled a
 linux program before, and having it working so very well right now.. I'm
 leary of attempting to recompile. But, in the end, would that be the best
 thing to do and disable the internal dns?

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Rodney Richison [mailto:rodney@rcrcomputing.com]
> Sent: Friday, February 21, 2003 8:11 PM
> To: squid-users@squid-cache
> Subject: [squid-users] network design
>
>
> I have my squid working transparantly for my local network. Works just
> great. My network sits behind a sonicwall firewall. Squid cannot resolv
> the local servers because of this.
>
> I know I'm supposed to create an ACL for this, but I'm getting a
> headache attempting to achive it.
>
> Best case seniario would be get all request incoming for 65.16.101.124
> to 192.168.1.2 which is my internal web that hosts several sites. This
> would make a good rule if it'd work. Ideas?
>
>
>
> Highest Regards,
>
> Rodney
> www.rcrnet.net
> 918-358-1111
>
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Received on Sat Feb 22 2003 - 00:56:16 MST

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