Hi, First off apologies for top posting - This mail client (Zimbra webmail) doesn't work well with replies contained in the original mail. If you want to increase Squid's chances of caching WordPress then you could install a Wordpress cache plugin as well. I use Squid as a reverse proxy and on my WordPress installation I use the WP-SuperCache plugin. It creates static cached pages of your popular blog entries which are easily cached in turn by your webserver. It is available from here: http://ocaoimh.ie/wp-super-cache/ Regards -Frog ----- Original Message ----- From: "Dan Casey" <dcasey@xxxxxxxxxxx> To: squid-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Tuesday, 6 January, 2009 17:21:15 GMT +00:00 GMT Britain, Ireland, Portugal Subject: Squid 2.6 and Wordpress I'm running squid 2.6 from CentOS 5 repository, as an http accelerator for wordpress. I've got it working to a point using a configuration I found elsewhere (I'm not very familiar with squid yet, and most docs I've found are not relevant to this version). It is successfully caching the images as stuff and other static content, but I would like it cache some of dynamic pages as well. I've played around with the refresh_pattern's a little bit, but didn't have any luck. Here is an example from the access log. ping.php is specifically not cached, but the other one "?p=1" I would like to cache.