Squid do not care how you mixes acl types, as long as you combine
them in a sensible manner using http_access.
But the same acl name can only have one type. You can't define an acl
named "allowed" using both dstdomain and dst.
Regards
Henrik
On Tuesday 21 May 2002 23:19, xenium@sbcglobal.net wrote:
> Hi Henrik,
>
> I have tried this, I had an aclname called allowed, and I seemed to
> run into a wall, since all the others were dsthost, it didn't seem
> to care for having the one dst.
>
> Although I never thought of adding it to the /etc/hosts file.
>
> Thanks for the suggestion,
>
> Chris
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Squid Support (Henrik Nordstrom)" <hno@marasystems.com>
> To: <xenium@sbcglobal.net>; "Squid Users"
> <squid-users@squid-cache.org> Sent: Tuesday, May 21, 2002 1:57 PM
> Subject: Re: [squid-users] how to allow an ip?
>
> > By using the dst acl type.
> >
> > You might also want to consider giving the internal web site a
> > good name by adding it to /etc/hosts on the Squid server..
> >
> > Regars
> > Henrik
> >
> > On Tuesday 21 May 2002 18:49, xenium@sbcglobal.net wrote:
> > > Hi all,
> > >
> > > I just recently set up squid here at work, and while it took me
> > > all day to figure out how to get it to work, I managed to do
> > > it.
> > >
> > > One thing I have been unable to figure out is how to configure
> > > it to allow access to an internal web address, that doesn't
> > > have a domain name. We have company based web pages at:
> > > 192.168.0.20, how do I tell squid to grant access to that
> > > address?
> > >
> > > Thanks in advance,
> > >
> > >
> > > Chris
> >
> > --
> > MARA Systems AB, Giving you basic free Squid support
> > Your source of advanced web reverse proxying solutions
> > http://www.marasystems.com/products/
Received on Wed May 22 2002 - 00:02:05 MDT
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