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Squid Proxy Server 3.1: Beginner's Guide

You're reading from   Squid Proxy Server 3.1: Beginner's Guide Reduce bandwidth use and deliver your most frequently requested web pages more quickly with Squid Proxy Server. This guide will introduce you to the fundamentals of the caching system and help you get the most from Squid.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2011
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849513906
Length 332 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Squid Proxy Server 3.1 Beginner's Guide
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Getting Started with Squid 2. Configuring Squid FREE CHAPTER 3. Running Squid 4. Getting Started with Squid's Powerful ACLs and Access Rules 5. Understanding Log Files and Log Formats 6. Managing Squid and Monitoring Traffic 7. Protecting your Squid Proxy Server with Authentication 8. Building a Hierarchy of Squid Caches 9. Squid in Reverse Proxy Mode 10. Squid in Intercept Mode 11. Writing URL Redirectors and Rewriters 12. Troubleshooting Squid Pop Quiz Answers Index

Time for action – denying miss_access to neighbors


To force other proxy servers to use our proxy server as a sibling proxy server, we have an access rule miss_access . Let's say we have two neighbor proxy servers, namely, 192.0.2.25 and 198.51.100.25, in our network. Now, we don't mind if 192.0.2.25 uses our proxy server as a parent proxy server, but we don't want to allow 198.51.100.25 to fetch MISS(s) via our proxy server. So, we can have the following configuration:

acl good_neighbour src 192.0.2.25
acl bad_neighbour src 198.51.100.25
miss_access allow good_neighbour # This line is not needed. Why?
miss_access deny bad_neighbour
miss_access allow all

The default behavior is to allow all proxy servers to fetch MISS(s) via our proxy server. In the previous configuration line, the first allow rule is not needed because we have the allow all rule at the end. The allow rule was just used to draw your attention towards the nature of miss_access directive.

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