divert-to is *only* for the localhost. To send this traffic to a
different host, you have to use rdr-to.
On 2013 May 04 (Sat) at 01:23:06 +1000 (+1000), John Tate wrote:
:I have a squid proxy listening in transparent mode on another faster
:system, but I can't seem to get packets there with pf.
On Sat, May 04, 2013 at 01:23:06AM +1000, John Tate wrote:
> I have a squid proxy listening in transparent mode on another faster
> system, but I can't seem to get packets there with pf. I tried simply
> modifying the other divert-to rule to use the IP address of that system. It
> doesn't seem to w
On 2013-05-03, John Tate wrote:
> I have a squid proxy listening in transparent mode on another faster
> system, but I can't seem to get packets there with pf. I tried simply
> modifying the other divert-to rule to use the IP address of that system. It
> doesn't seem to work, packets don't reach t
* John Tate [2013-05-03 17:23]:
> I have a squid proxy listening in transparent mode on another faster
> system, but I can't seem to get packets there with pf. I tried simply
> modifying the other divert-to rule to use the IP address of that system. It
> doesn't seem to work, packets don't reach t
John Tate wrote:
>I have a squid proxy listening in transparent mode on another faster
>system, but I can't seem to get packets there with pf. I tried simply
>modifying the other divert-to rule to use the IP address of that
>system. It
>doesn't seem to work, packets don't reach that system.
>
>#p
I have a squid proxy listening in transparent mode on another faster
system, but I can't seem to get packets there with pf. I tried simply
modifying the other divert-to rule to use the IP address of that system. It
doesn't seem to work, packets don't reach that system.
#pass in quick on $int_if in
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