RE: [squid-users] Domain & URL blacklists

From: Paul Cocker <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, 6 Nov 2007 08:09:36 -0000

Apologies for my ignorance, but what then does squidGuard add as I was
under the impression that filtering was its big job. Would I be right at
assuming then that squidGuard is faster at processing block lists?

Paul Cocker

-----Original Message-----
From: Amos Jeffries [mailto:squid3@treenet.co.nz]
Sent: 01 November 2007 22:09
To: Paul Cocker
Cc: jeff donovan; squid
Subject: RE: [squid-users] Domain & URL blacklists

> Just squid, it's running on a Windows box and I don't have the time
> currently to figure out how to run cygwin and squidguard together, so
> I'm looking simply to hook the most useful lists direct into squid and

> see how much it harms performance.
>
>
> Paul Cocker
> IT Systems Administrator
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: jeff donovan [mailto:donovan@beth.k12.pa.us]
> Sent: 01 November 2007 17:29
> To: squid
> Subject: Re: [squid-users] Domain & URL blacklists
>
>
> On Nov 1, 2007, at 10:23 AM, Paul Cocker wrote:
>
>> My bad, in fact from further analysis it seems that the domain files
>> are the mysite.com listings and URLs are things like
>> mysite.com/something/?somethingelse.htm. Does the later have any
>> relevance or use within Squid?

Squid can handle these by itself. With a regular "squid -k reconfigure"
after updating the files.

For the list of pure hostnames a "dstdomain" acl is the best.
For the list of URI snippets a "urlpath_regex" acl probably with "-i" is
needed.

If the domain/ip file is an pruned version of the domains with URI
entries, then the URI may not be useful as its all caught by the domain.
If they are different then yes both have a use.

Amos

>>
>> Paul Cocker
>> IT Systems Administrator
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Paul Cocker [mailto:paul.cocker@tntpost.co.uk]
>> Sent: 01 November 2007 13:23
>> To: squid-users@squid-cache.org
>> Subject: [squid-users] Domain & URL blacklists
>>
>> I am using elements of Shalla's blacklists to block content. However,

>> they ship in two files, domains and URLs, the former being IP
>> addresses and the later URLs. Since our squid proxy is running on
>> Windows I would need to experiment with cygwin to get SquidGuard
>> running, and that isn't something I have time for at the moment, so I

>> am trying to plug in what I can without crippling performance (and
>> what is the likely performance impact?).
>>
>> Do I call both files via acl {aclname} dstdomain {filepath}, or
>> should
>
>> IP lists be called using a different command?
>>
>> Paul Cocker
>> IT Systems Administrator
>>
>
> Hi paul are you using DansGuardian or SquidGuard ? or trying to do
> this with just squid?
>
> -jeff
>
>
>
>
> TNT Post is the trading name for TNT Post UK Ltd (company number:
> 04417047), TNT Post (Doordrop Media) Ltd (00613278), TNT Post Scotland

> Ltd (05695897),TNT Post North Ltd (05701709) and TNT Post South West
> Ltd (05983401). Emma's Diary and Lifecycle are trading names for
> Lifecycle Marketing (Mother and Baby) Ltd (02556692). All companies
> are registered in England and Wales; registered address: 1 Globeside
> Business Park, Fieldhouse Lane, Marlow, Buckinghamshire, SL7 1HY.
>
>

TNT Post is the trading name for TNT Post UK Ltd (company number: 04417047), TNT Post (Doordrop Media) Ltd (00613278), TNT Post Scotland Ltd (05695897),TNT Post North Ltd (05701709) and TNT Post South West Ltd (05983401). Emma's Diary and Lifecycle are trading names for Lifecycle Marketing (Mother and Baby) Ltd (02556692). All companies are registered in England and Wales; registered address: 1 Globeside Business Park, Fieldhouse Lane, Marlow, Buckinghamshire, SL7 1HY.
Received on Tue Nov 06 2007 - 01:09:41 MST

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