> From: Krist van Besien [mailto:krist.vanbes...@gmail.com]
> While apache can be used as a general web proxy it is not the best
> suited program for this.
>
> I'd look in to squid. You can install squid on all your local office,
> and configure it to use the central office as a "parent" cache. Sq
On Mon, Mar 23, 2009 at 10:28 AM, David Vaughan
wrote:
> As the local offices are international I was reluctant to employ SSL
> technology
> because of the associated import/export restrictions. Also, I'm not
> sure why you
> emphasise not to use Apache.
While apache can be used as a general we
Davide Bianchi wrote:
>Use your local firewall to implement a transparent proxy, configure
each
>local proxy to forward his request to the main proxy on a special port,
>filter on the main proxy with that port only and implement certificate
>authentication between the local and the central proxy.
David Vaughan wrote:
> I have a number of networks (think of them as being in local offices),
> each of which is connected to the internet via a NAT'ed firewall. Users
> on these networks access the internet via an Apache server acting as a
> forwarding proxy. These local office proxies are then c
I have a number of networks (think of them as being in local offices),
each of which is connected to the internet via a NAT'ed firewall. Users
on these networks access the internet via an Apache server acting as a
forwarding proxy. These local office proxies are then chained to a
single central f