Yep. Quoting Jakob Curdes <jc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>: > Dwayne Hottinger schrieb: > > >If you have 'root' access their should be a sarg.conf file. You can look > there > >to see if the password is turned on. > > > To my best knowledge there is no password option in sarg.conf nor would > I know what effect it should have. > > > In addition you should have a httpd.conf > >file somewhere that controls who can access what. It should be a line there > >dealing with .htaccess files. > > > OK but this is way out of squid support. We are all here to help but > without knowing which OS, Web server, Distribution etc. > it is very hard to give help that is of any use. Even if you find the > .htaccess file you know what to put in there, how to generate passwords > and users etc pp. > This is all OS and Web server dependent and it is a question that can > best be answered on a webserver support mailing list, if not by reading > the manuals for the webserver. > > If you do not want to work out how your http server protects these files > there is an easy workaround : put everything in a TAR file, transfer > them by sftp or ftp to a windows machine and view them there without > webserver via the file dialog. You can automate this via cron and you do > not have to dig into http configuration issues. (Naturally you can view > these files on the sarg machine as well provded it has a graphic > workspace and a browser). > > Yours, > Jakob Curdes > -- Dwayne Hottinger Network Administrator Harrisonburg City Public Schools