I think so. Here is the conf file: https://pastebin.com/DKMbwNV6
Felipe Arturo Polanco <felipeapola...@gmail.com> escreveu no dia quinta, 13/02/2020 à(s) 16:22: > Did you configure Squid to accept both HTTP and HTTPS ports? > > Please share your squid.conf file. > > Thanks, > > On Thu, Feb 13, 2020 at 12:18 PM Patrícia Sousa <psous...@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> Thanks for the tip, >> >> Enabling debug_options I can see that the wget from the machine computer >> to the Squid machine does not goes through the proxy. Any idea why? >> >> Felipe Arturo Polanco <felipeapola...@gmail.com> escreveu no dia quinta, >> 13/02/2020 à(s) 15:32: >> >>> Hi, >>> >>> For this, you need to use IPtables to block at the network level. >>> >>> SSH uses port 22/tcp but wget uses HTTP, it should have been blocked by >>> squid. >>> Enabled debug_options in squid to see why it was allowed. >>> >>> >>> >>> On Thu, Feb 13, 2020 at 11:10 AM Patrícia Sousa <psous...@gmail.com> >>> wrote: >>> >>>> I'm using the squid proxy and I'm trying to block some connections >>>> (incoming and outcoming traffic) from a certain ip address. However, for >>>> example, if I deny all the connections (http_access deny all) it only >>>> blocks the connections that I made to websites for example, but if I use >>>> another PC and try to ssh or wget the PC that owns the proxy squid, it is >>>> allowed. How can I block the traffic from and to a specific IP or DNS? It >>>> is possible to do this with Squid? >>>> >>>> If not, what is the best way to do this? >>>> >>>> Thank you. >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> squid-users mailing list >>>> squid-users@lists.squid-cache.org >>>> http://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users >>>> >>>
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