On 05/23/2018 10:25 AM, tstatue wrote:
> This is what I'm trying to do:
>
> 3 users:
> user1
> user2
> user3
>
> 9 outgoing ips:
> 192.168.1.2
> 192.168.1.3
> 192.168.1.4
> 192.168.1.5
> 192.168.1.6
> 192.168.1.7
> 192.168.1.8
> 192.168.1.9
> 192.168.1.10
>
> I would like only user1 to be able
Hello,
I been searching for few days but can't seem to find the answer - maybe it's
just not possible.
This is what I'm trying to do:
3 users:
user1
user2
user3
9 outgoing ips:
192.168.1.2
192.168.1.3
192.168.1.4
192.168.1.5
192.168.1.6
192.168.1.7
192.168.1.8
192.168.1.9
192.168.1.10
I would
Thanks @Amos and @Alex, I have been testing and playing with the
options, but all I get is 502 (Bad Gateway) responses in my local proxy.
Greetings.
El 21/05/18 a las 12:49, Amos Jeffries escribió:
On 22/05/18 04:22, Carlos Cesar Caballero Díaz wrote:
can I use cache_peer against a
parent
On 23/05/18 19:11, Ahmad, Sarfaraz wrote:
> Hi,
>
>
>
> I am using Squid as an explicit proxy (configured in the browsers) and
> have configured it to authenticate all users with Kerberos.
>
> Here are the relevant bits from squid.conf
>
>
>
> auth_param negotiate program /usr/lib64/squid/
Hi,
I am using Squid as an explicit proxy (configured in the browsers) and have
configured it to authenticate all users with Kerberos.
Here are the relevant bits from squid.conf
auth_param negotiate program /usr/lib64/squid/negotiate_kerberos_auth -r -s
HTTP/proxytest1.mydomain@mydomain.com