That could work, I would just need to know at some point, if this event was
triggered.
Been playing with %st , %>qos , & % wrote:
> On 17/05/2016 6:37 a.m., J Green wrote:
> > Re logging, does this eventually get logged by Squid, somewhere?
> >
>
> I assume by &q
Sorry, I was looking for logging of traffic management events, where
maximum download/upload size has been violated. Thank you.
On Mon, May 16, 2016 at 12:39 PM, Alex Rousskov <
rouss...@measurement-factory.com> wrote:
> On 05/16/2016 12:37 PM, J Green wrote:
> > Re log
Re logging, does this eventually get logged by Squid, somewhere?
For this implementation, I was going to use pfSense. Turns out that Sarg
is no longer included in the package list for pfSense (current version).
On Tue, May 10, 2016 at 2:43 PM, J Green wrote:
> Very interesting, thank
gt; >
> >
> >
> > Eliezer Croitoru <http://ngtech.co.il/lmgtfy/>
> <http://ngtech.co.il/lmgtfy/>
> > Linux System Administrator
> > Mobile: +972-5-28704261
> > Email: elie...@ngtech.co.il
> >
> >
> >
> > *From:*squid-users [mailto:s
h connection at all and accounting at all. What, in my opinion, a bit
> crazy.
>
> 11.05.16 1:59, J Green пишет:
> > From what I understand, it is traffic policing, as opposed to traffic
> shaping.
> >
> > The goal is to block transfer of large files over various TCP p
gt;
> > > Still, this is off-topic. Anyways, consult your CIOS
> > documentation and good luck! :)
> >
> >
> >
> > > Regards,
> >
> >
> >
> > > Adam
> >
> >
> >
> > > On Mon
t; with the policy. The amount of downloads for my count analyzers logs, if
> management is interesting to read the reports independently.
>
> 10.05.16 23:25, J Green пишет:
> > So back to the intended use cases for HTTP, HTTPS, & FTP , how can you
> log violations of maximum download/
ED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA256
>
> Squid is not a proxy server every imaginable the TCP-usage protocol.
>
> AFAIK HTTP/HTTPS/FTP. That's all, folks.
>
>
> 09.05.16 23:07, J Green пишет:
> > Hello all:
> >
> > Can Traffic Management Settings be configured f
At the host level? Was hoping for something at the network level.
On Mon, May 9, 2016 at 10:06 PM, Amos Jeffries wrote:
> On 2016-05-10 06:05, J Green wrote:
>
>> Appreciate the response. Thought it might work if I added those ports
>> to the safe list.
>>
>
> Th
t % of total Bandwidth
> remainingpercent/ratio of the remaining bandwidth
>
> This is 2901, ISR G-2.
>
> 10.05.16 3:15, J Green пишет:
> > Here, re 'upload and download sizes', I meant the later 'dumb traffic
> limits'.
> >
> > We d
gt; latter "dumb traffic limits" problem, but if an "all-in-one executable"
> > is a critical requirement, one can make modern Squids to limit tunneled
> > TCP traffic that it does not understand.
> >
> > Alex.
> >
> >
> >> J Green:
&g
and-solutions/on-premise-secure-web-gateway
>
> 10.05.16 0:05, J Green пишет:
> > Appreciate the response. Thought it might work if I added those ports
> to the safe list.
> >
> > If not Squid, any idea how to accomplish this?
> >
> > Thank you.
>
xy server every imaginable the TCP-usage protocol.
>
> AFAIK HTTP/HTTPS/FTP. That's all, folks.
>
>
> 09.05.16 23:07, J Green пишет:
> > Hello all:
> >
> > Can Traffic Management Settings be configured for TCP protocols other
> than HTTP?
> >
> >
Hello all:
Can Traffic Management Settings be configured for TCP protocols other than
HTTP?
Would like to limit maximum upload and download sizes for other TCP
protocols: SMB, NFS, FTP, and RDP.
Is this possible? If so, how?
Thank you.
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