You know what it was, it needed to be bound to the loopback and not just the 
LAN, again I am still working on getting a core dump file manually. Will update 
once I get one. Chmod might be needed. 
Sent from my iPhone

> On Jun 12, 2024, at 06:13, Alex Rousskov <rouss...@measurement-factory.com> 
> wrote:
> 
> On 2024-06-11 23:32, Jonathan Lee wrote:
> 
>> So I just run this on command line SIGABRT squid?
> 
> On Unix-like systems, the command to send a process a signal is called 
> "kill": https://www.man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/kill.1p.html
> 
> For example, if you want to abort a Squid worker process that has OS process 
> ID (PID) 12345, you may do something like this:
> 
>    sudo kill -SIGABRT 12345
> 
> You can use "ps" or "top" commands to learn PIDs of processes you want to 
> signal.
> 
> 
>> also added an item to the Netgate forum to, but not many users are Squid 
>> wizards
> 
> Beyond using a reasonable coredump_dir value in squid.conf, the system 
> administration problems you need to solve to enable Squid core dumps are most 
> likely not specific to Squid.
> 
> 
> HTH,
> 
> Alex.
> 
> 
>> It’s funny as soon as I enabled the sysctl command and set the directory it 
>> won’t crash anymore. I also changed it to reside on the loopback before it 
>> was only on my lan interface. I run an external drive as my swap partition 
>> or a swap drive, it works I get crash reports when playing around with 
>> stuff. /dev/da0 or something it dumps to it and when it reboots shows in the 
>> var/crash folder and will display on gui report ready, again if anyone else 
>> knows pfSense let me know. I also added an item to the Netgate forum to, but 
>> not many users are Squid wizards so it might take a long time to get any 
>> community input over there.
> 
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