files were repository copied to www/squid11, then this commit brings it
to 1.1.b13. (This was Satoshi's idea :-) It preserves the history)
Squid-1.0 and 1.1 are under parallel development, kinda like when we had
2.1-stable and 2.2-current in parallel development. The 1.0 code is well
polished, and 1.1 is "on the bleeding edge" as such. The features and
performance are much improved, but it can be a bit hair-raising. I
personally have no major hassles with 1.1beta13.
Among the nicer things that this version has over 1.0:
- URL redirector.. ie: you can rewrite url's of sites with "mirrors"
so that you don't have 15 copies of the same files.
- optional ident logging
- improved acl's
- dramatically improved cache directory structure (scales much better with
gigantic disk caches)
- much improved DNS ttl handling (esp. with resolver hack)
- more control over neighbor status; parent, sibling etc.
- much improved refresh rules to help combat stupid sites that needlessly
set the Expires: field to zero when it doesn't need to be. (This is fine
when it's genuinely needed, but some sites really abuse it to to attempt
to negate caching to get inflated hit counts etc)
Reviewed by:
Submitted by:
Obtained from:
and stability measures.
This port installs in a "FreeBSD-native" tree (like apache) rather than
with a mini hierarchy under /usr/local/squid/{bin,etc,cache,logs,...}
(the default behavior seems to have changed between 1.0.0 and 1.0.20)
Also, build a rc.d/squid.sh script.
Cool wind in my hair
Warm smell of colitas
Rising up through the air
Up ahead in the distance
I saw a shimmering light
My head grew heavy and my sight grew dim
I had a new INDEX.
than usernames. This makes it much more difficult for somebody to "frame"
one of your users.
ie: instead of people getting:
connect from peter@spinner.DIALix.COM
in their syslogs, they will get this instead:
connect from [W+rNvCy5FuPV4xEj8thdXIlfD9qNIbzB]@spinner.DIALix.COM
The remote site will have to send it to you to decode it. When you are
given one of these cookies, you can know for sure it is not faked, and you
don't have to trust the word of the remote sysadmin when arranging your
local lame hacker-type user to meet with an unfortunate incident :-).
This feature is documented in the man pages.
Also, fix an apparent bug in the code that deals with this, but it might
be a feature of the version of libdes we have on FreeBSD.
Requested by: markm (a fair while ago)
Remove $Id$ from the patch file so the resulting fonts/Imakefile doesn't
confuse people. Note this patch file gives a fuzz factor of 1. W/o
removing $Id$, patch reports a fuzz factor of 2.
Reported by: ports mailing list
It is impossible to suppress initial HTML preamble for directories, i.e.
<HEAD><TITLE>Index of dir</TITLE></HEAD><BODY>
It means that it is impossible to change <TITLE> or add any
<META HTTP-EQUIV...> tags to <HEAD> section or change <BODY>
attributes without HTML syntax violation (.asis, cern_meta, etc.
not helps here too).
Fix:
I add "SuppressHTMLPreamble" option to "IndexOptions". When this option
is set _and_ HEADER.html (or what you set as it) is present and readable,
standard <HEAD><TITLE>Index of dir</TITLE></HEAD><BODY> preamble
will be suppressed assuming you have right HTML preamble in your
HEADER.html. It solves all problems mentioned above.