Is something like below possible?
I can't test it by myself at the moment because there are exams at the
moment at our highschool.
I think they will kill me when the internet feed goes down now. :)
acl IMAGES urlpath_regex -i \.gif$
acl HTML urlpath_regex -i \.html$
tcp_outgoing_address 192.168.0.1 IMAGES
tcp_outgoing_address 192.168.0.1 HTML
tcp_outgoing_address 192.168.0.2 ALL
Regards,
Sander Winkel
----- Original Message -----
From: "Henrik Nordstrom" <hno@squid-cache.org>
To: "Sander Winkel" <s.winkel@roc-teraa.nl>
Cc: <squid-users@squid-cache.org>
Sent: Friday, March 21, 2003 3:35 PM
Subject: Re: [squid-users] Split trafiic over two interfaces
> Yes, by using tcp_outgoing_address (squid-2.5 only) you select which
> source IP address Squid should use when forwarding the request, then by
> using advanced routing in the kernel you route the traffic.
>
> If this is not what you want to do, please describe in more detail what
> it is you want to do.
>
> Regards
> Henrik
>
> fre 2003-03-21 klockan 12.50 skrev Sander Winkel:
> > I want to split traffic over two interfaces with acls.
> > For example, I want to send all requests for images to 192.168.0.1 and
all
> > other traffic to 192.168.0.2
> > I've look to tcp_outgoing_address but that don't helps me well.
> > I thought it was possible to do that with squid, isn't it?
> >
> > Regards,
> > Sander Winkel
> --
> Henrik Nordstrom <hno@squid-cache.org>
> MARA Systems AB, Sweden
>
Received on Fri Mar 21 2003 - 07:41:57 MST
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