here's the relevant version info. its debian linux, that sarge2 flag shouldnt be scary its just security patches. compiled flags displayed below. ii squid 2.5.9-10sarge2 Internet Object Cache (WWW proxy cache) ii squid-common 2.5.9-10sarge2 Internet Object Cache (WWW proxy cache) - co callyroll:~# squid -v Squid Cache: Version 2.5.STABLE9 configure options: --prefix=/usr --exec_prefix=/usr --bindir=/usr/sbin --sbindir=/usr/sbin --libexecdir=/usr/lib/squid --sysconfdir=/etc/squid --localstatedir=/var/spool/squid --datadir=/usr/share/squid --enable-async-io --with-pthreads --enable-storeio=ufs,aufs,diskd,null --enable-linux-netfilter --enable-arp-acl --enable-removal-policies=lru,heap --enable-snmp --enable-delay-pools --enable-htcp --enable-poll --enable-cache-digests --enable-underscores --enable-referer-log --enable-useragent-log --enable-auth=basic,digest,ntlm --enable-carp --with-large-files i386-debian-linux On 11/27/06, Henrik Nordstrom <henrik@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
mån 2006-11-27 klockan 18:23 -1000 skrev Sean: > i was thinking 404 (not found), not 403 (forbidden). what in the > world would cause squid to 403 an object? TCP_MISS/403 means that whatever Squid talked to returned 403. You can see what Squid connected to in the hierarchy column. Access denials by Squid reads TCP_DENIED/403. Regards Henrik