On Sunday 10 September 2006 10:32, Stuart Henderson wrote: > On 2006/09/10 09:08, steve szmidt wrote: > > > Maybe it would help to post pfctl -sr -vv with the direct entry > > > (i.e. working) and table (i.e. not-working). Perhaps pfctl -sT -v > > > too. > > > > Since pflog0 tells me which rule was used I only include that rule. The > > first one is working and 2nd not. > > > > pass out log on $WAN proto tcp from any to any port $Web keep state > > oh, I thought you were putting the addresses in there (instead of > loading from a table), not "any".
I was until I finally got it that the rules are looking at IP's after - not before, NAT. :) > > If you prefer simpler and lower resource-use and don't need > caching, tinyproxy works nicely. I'm not sure how fine grained the control is. It needs to define allowed sites for different user groups (by IP). Something like this: 192.168.0.0/26 can access (list of web sites) 192.168.0.65/27 can access (list of web sites) 192.168.0.97/28 can access (any web site) -- Steve Szmidt "To enjoy the right of political self-government, men must be capable of personal self-government - the virtue of self-control. A people without decency cannot be secure in its liberty. From the Declaration Principles