Henrik Nordstrom>Generally blocking headers is a bad idea, and will make both sites and various HTTP extensions break. I have noticed that. Adding "header_access User-Agent allow all" fixed most of my problems with different media types and such. For example now Google Docs works fine. I think it could not detect the browser type so was not allowing it to work. Also flash and other media seems to be working Henrik Nordstrom>And since you already allow Cookie there is very little privacy to be gained from trying to limit headers at all.. When I originally setup Squid I was using "whatsmyip.org" to make sure things were working correctly. I noticed it was displaying my internal IP address, and proxy server name. I didnt like that so I found by restricting header access I was able to limit what internal info was given, and only allowed the public IP address to be collected. On Fri, Jul 31, 2009 at 7:31 AM, Henrik Nordstrom<henrik@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > tor 2009-07-30 klockan 15:21 -0700 skrev Justin Yaple: > >> I have configured our Squid proxy to hide some info about the clients >> behind it by restricting some headers, but its also caused some >> problems with certain content types to not work either. What headers >> should be allowed in addition to what I have already allowed? It >> seems that some flash, and java does not work 100%. > > Generally blocking headers is a bad idea, and will make both sites and > various HTTP extensions break. > > And since you already allow Cookie there is very little privacy to be > gained from trying to limit headers at all.. > > Regards > Henrik > >