This seems not to work. I have the following directive: acl ALLOWED_HOSTS src "/etc/squid/Allowed_hosts" url_rewrite_access deny ALLOWED_HOSTS url_rewrite_access allow all In the file "/etc/squid/Allowed_hosts" I have the following entry: 10.xx.xx.xx/32 But on the Redirector-Logfile, I can see, that websites, called from the host listed in the file "Allowed_hosts", are blocked. So this host isn't bypassing the redirector. Thanks. Tom 2010/6/24 Amos Jeffries <squid3@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>: > Tom Tux wrote: >> >> Hi >> >> With the following acl >> >> acl ALLOWED_HOSTS src "/etc/squid/Allowed_hosts" >> >> I set a list of hosts, which should be able, to get webaccess without >> passing the url_rewrite_program. I read, that I can use the >> "url_rewrite_access"-directive to make a kind of bypassing the >> redirector. >> >> How do I have to understand the url_rewrite_access-directive? Does >> "deny" mean, that the host passes or bypasses the redirector? >> >> I set the directive like this: >> url_rewrite_access allow ALLOWED_HOSTS >> With that, the Hosts listed in the file "/etc/squid/Allowed_hosts" are >> allowed to get internet-access. But, other clients can now access >> websites, which should normally blocked. It seems, that the >> url_rewrite_access-directive bypasses now all requests. >> >> Is there an explanation for this behavior? > > url_rewrite_access does neither permit nor deny access to websites. > > It determines which requested URL get sent to the url_rewrite_program for > alteration before being passed on. > > Your first instinct was correct to set: > url_rewrite_access deny ALLOWED_HOSTS > url_rewrite_Access allow all > > Amos > -- > Please be using > Current Stable Squid 2.7.STABLE9 or 3.1.4 >