> Interestingly, the DNS server being used is the internal Windows DNS
> server, which is listed third in the resolv.conf after the two entries
> for OpenDNS's server, so I'm not sure what's going on there...
> I can ping the OpenDNS servers by their IP addresses and that works fine...
>
> I think
> OK, well I am pretty much out of ideas. You could try plugging it into a
> hub (not a switch, just a cheap nasty hub) and using another computer on
> the hub running wireshark to figure out at the packet level what sort of
> DNS queries it is doing.
It may come to that yet... but in the mean
LeeGroups wrote:
> Alan,
>
> I'm actually using OpenDNS's servers (after using the ISP's), what I
> really don't understand is how Apt is working perfectly, but Squid and
> Wget don't...
>
> I saw that post before, it's what I used to supposedly turn off IPv6.
>
> I can't run FF on the server, no
Alan,
I'm actually using OpenDNS's servers (after using the ISP's), what I
really don't understand is how Apt is working perfectly, but Squid and
Wget don't...
I saw that post before, it's what I used to supposedly turn off IPv6.
I can't run FF on the server, no gui installed...
Lee
> I th
I think from the description the squid thing is actually a red herring.
(to mix a fishy metaphore). It sounds like your proxy server is not
reliably resolving DNS when using IPV6. You will probably see this
problem if you run firefox on the server.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/netcf
Chaps...
Over the last couple of days I've been trying to build a proxy box for a
load of Windows PCs, using Squid on Ubuntu server 8.04.
I've had a few problems with it due to the wild/wacky filtered internet
connection we have there, but now I've hit a massive brick wall...
Using an upstream
On Tue, 2007-11-27 at 19:19 +, Michael Rimicans wrote:
> So if squid is running on a server which is connected to the internet
> and all the computers connect to squid proxy on (for example)port
> 8000, is squid sharing the internet connection or not?
>
>
>
> Kris Marsh wrote:
> > On Nov 26
Its funny when you read one item and all of a sudden every thing drops
into place.
Cheers for the info, it'll proper ding dang do and yep, it is a cheap
SOHO router ;)
People who I work for would never spend for Cisco switch at my level :(
Chris Rowson wrote:
I mean.
, I guess you
I mean.
>, I guess you could say that your SERVER is now 'sharing your
> internet connection'.
Also, I'm assuming that the router is cheapy bog standard SOHO router
and not a nice uber Cisco switch with it's own settings/routes etc
etc...
Chris
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>
> So if squid is running on a server which is connected to the internet and
> all the computers connect to squid proxy on (for example)port 8000, is squid
> sharing the internet connection or not?
>
Lets assume for the moment, that you have an office with a 12 port
router which is in turn conne
So if squid is running on a server which is connected to the internet
and all the computers connect to squid proxy on (for example)port 8000,
is squid sharing the internet connection or not?
Kris Marsh wrote:
On Nov 26, 2007 7:30 PM, Michael Rimicans <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Greetings,
On Nov 26, 2007 7:30 PM, Michael Rimicans <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> Quick question:
>
> Can squid proxy server also be used to share an internet connection over
> a small office network?
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
> https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu
Greetings,
Quick question:
Can squid proxy server also be used to share an internet connection over
a small office network?
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