Angelo Höngens wrote: > > Henrik Nordstrom wrote: >> The problem is minimum_expiry_time in your squid.conf: >> >> minimum_expiry_time 3600 seconds >> refresh_pattern . 3600 100% 3600 ignore-no-cache ignore-reload >> override-expire override-lastmod >> >> There is a corner issue with minimum_expiry_time that the expiry time >> needs to be 1 second more for the object to be accepted. But I seriously >> suspect you have misunderstood the meaning of this directive. Most >> likely you want to have it set to 0 or left at the default 60 seconds. >> >> http://www.squid-cache.org/Versions/v3/3.0/cfgman/minimum_expiry_time.html > > > I guess you're right, I do not know what the minimum_expiry_time means.. > thanks for the link, but I just got the O'Reilly book by mail, I'm > taking it with me on my holiday, so I can read, and git a bit more info > about the big picture. > > Hope to be back on the list in August to come back to this issue. Thank > you all for your support so far. > > > -- > > > Met vriendelijke groet, > > Angelo Hongens > > I was having a similar problem and as I look through this message thread, don't see that someone else has pointed in the direction of my solution so: My problem was a missing Expires header. This can be added in several ways. I add it using a servlet Filter. However, if you are using Apache, the link has http://www.askapache.com/htaccess/apache-speed-expires.html instructions . -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/can%27t-get-squid-to-cache-tp18350846p18695218.html Sent from the Squid - Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com.