> Amos Jeffries wrote: >>> Hi >>> >>> I installed Squid 2.6 on Centos 5.1 X86_64 system about a week ago - >>> and >>> it worked fine for the first few days. >>> I have set all clients to use the Squid Proxy for all external (non >>> private 192.168.0.0/24) ip addresses. The only squid config settings I >>> changed from default were ACL changes to allow proxy access to >>> everyone >>> on the local network. >>> >>> I now have the following situation on this client: >>> 1) I can browse local addresses fine (as they are direct) >>> 2) I can browse a few non local addresses fine. I can refresh my ISPs >>> usage data OK for example, and it is clearly refreshing the live data >>> via squid. >>> 3) If I browse most arbitrary web addresses - the firefox tab hangs >>> indefinitely with the little circular animation on the tab. >>> 4) If I revert to direct access (Non proxy) - everything works fine. >>> 5) I have deleted the entire cache - and maybe that helped for a bit - >>> but the problem returned very soon after. >>> 6) I have checked CPU and memory usage on the centos machine - and >>> everything looks fine - almost nothing happening. >>> 7) I did make some router changes to try to prevent direct access from >>> clients - but I have since reverted these changes because the router >>> did >>> not behave as expected. It is now back to the starting point - but the >>> problem persists. >>> 8) I have recently installed sarg, Calamaris and Webalizer - but I >>> doubt >>> these could be responsible for the problem. >>> >>> Can anyone suggest what might be going on here, and if so - how to fix >>> it? >>> If not - can anyone advise diagnostic steps? >>> >> >> It sounds like you are hitting one of the interception catch-22s. Only >> you >> don't mention interception. >> Do you have any FW entries specifically for the proxy box? >> >> What exactly do your ACL and access lines look like now? >> >> > Thanks Amos. Interestingly - whatever the problem was seems to time out > after several hours. All is working OK this morning. I don't > intentionally have any "interceptions". > > I did try to set up firewall rules for the proxy box - but my > firewall/router is a Netgear DG834G - and there seems to be something > wrong with its outgoing rules implementation. Specifically - I set up > the following rules - in order. > > always allow any port outgoing from proxy IP. > always disallow any port outgoing from all IPs. Um, I think the problem there is that these rules should only refer to destination port 80 traffic, not 'any port outgoing'. > > When I set this up - I had very erratic behaviour. Some web pages came > up slowly - and some not at all. There were also problems with fetchmail > (running on the same box as squid) downlaoding mail. I attributed this > to a problem in the router. When I removed these rules - things reverted > to normal - but then a bit later - I had this apparent proxy problem. Okay, my comment above should help with those side-effects. But your rules as given would be unrelated to the slow proxy problem. > > Given the fact that the problem appears to time out after several hours > - I am wondering if there is a DNS issue. I have seen some references to > SQUID caching DNS info - but I don't know much about it. If there was a > temporary DNS problem at some time - would squid (or something else) > cache the DNS "miss" - and continue returning the "miss" after the > problem was resolved? > > While the problem was occurring - I did test the DNS server (bind) > running on the SQUID box - and it was able to resolve the addresses > which were failing via squid. If there is a DNS problem - I don't think > it is in the bind server. > Squid runs a very simple DNS client (A,PTR,SOA records only). It will cache both positive and negative DNS results according to the public DNS SOA records given it by your bind. If your bind was working normally, I would not expect a problem in Squid. Sounds like probably a user request taking up more than it should have for a few hours. (Maybe windows updates range-requests from several clients hitting crunch point?) Amos