On 07/01/2025 14:55, Alex Rousskov wrote:
On 2025-01-07 04:49, Tony Albers wrote:
Is it possible in squid to ensure that a badly behaving backend
application doesn't eat up all squid resources?
Yes, especially if you know about that application behavior in advance.
You can configure
Hi guys,
Is it possible in squid to ensure that a badly behaving backend
application doesn't eat up all squid resources?
E.g.: at work we have an Apache reverse proxy in front of a number of
backend hosts. If one of the backend applications misbehaves, this can
result in all of apache's worker p
No, wait..
I think I'm actually in a position where use case #2 is relevant.
I know the origin server, actually there is only this single one.
I'll give it a try.
Thanks
On 13/04/2023 06:28, Tony Albers wrote:
Hi Alex,
Thanks for your answer. Too bad that squid can't do wh
Hi Alex,
Thanks for your answer. Too bad that squid can't do what I want.
Can you think of another way of doing this, or do you know of another
tool that can?
Thanks,
/tony
On 12/04/2023 15:55, Alex Rousskov wrote:
On 4/12/23 07:48, Tony Albers wrote:
What I want to do is &quo
Hiya,
I'm quite new to squid, so please bear with me.
OS is Debian Bullseye.
What I want to do is "hide" an application behind squid, so that the
application receives http traffic, and sends http traffic. This traffic
then goes through squid in both directions, so that squid receives https
o