On 18/11/2011 2:23 a.m., John Sayce wrote:
On Mon, 14 Nov 2011 14:50:02 +0000, John Sayce wrote:
I have squid configured and working fine with ntlm authentication,
however about once a week access to the throughput will slow and I
can
be presented with access denied messages. Restarting squid instantly
fixes the problem. My configuration is relatively simple as bellow.
I
don't have a large user base. There's only 60 users and the problem
is
instantly gone upon restarting squid which suggests to me that it's
not simply be a problem of load as the log would suggest. I wondered
if it was a single computer or application causing the issue but I'm
not sure how to find out.
http_port 8080
auth_param ntlm program c:/squid/libexec/mswin_ntlm_auth.exe
auth_param ntlm children 30
external_acl_type win_domain_group children=30 ttl=120 %LOGIN
c:/squid/libexec/mswin_check_lm_group.exe -G
acl all src 0.0.0.0/0.0.0.0
acl nocache dstdomain "C:\squid\etc\nocache_domains.acl"
acl unauthenticatednet src "C:\squid\etc\unrestrictedaddresses.acl"
acl blocked src "C:\squid\etc\restrictedaddresses.acl"
acl inetallowgroup external win_domain_group InternetAllow
acl inetrestrictgroup external win_domain_group InternetRestricted
acl localhost src 127.0.0.1/255.255.255.255
acl localnet proxy_auth REQUIRED src 192.168.0.0/255.255.255.0
The above ACL definition has never been valid.
Perhapse you wanted:
acl localnet src 192.168.0.0/24
acl login proxy_auth REQUIRED
http_access deny !localnet
http_access deny !login
The "deny !localnet" will prevent non-LAN users from logging in. If you
can do that great. It will prevent external machines flooding your proxy
with malicious login load.
The "deny !login" is to do the user login quickly and reject early if
they fail that. From your logs below I see 3x lookups being done, one
for each group check. All of which are failing due to invalid domain
name on the user credentials. Doing this "deny !login" will drop the
speed loss on the failure cases by more than 60%.
I've implemented this. I'd strugled to find documentation on the formating and syntax for ntlm authentication. Thanks.
acl denied_domains dstdomain "C:\squid\etc\denied_domains.acl"
acl allowed_domains dstdomain "C:\squid\etc\allowed_domains.acl"
acl allowed_addresses dst "C:\squid\etc\allowed_addresses.acl"
acl manager proto cache_object
always_direct allow nocache
http_access allow manager monitor
http_access deny localhost
http_access deny blocked
http_access allow unauthenticatednet
http_access allow allowed_domains
http_access allow allowed_addresses
NP: "allowed_addresses" requires DNS lookup. So slows every request
down to find the requested domains DNS entries.
Allowed addresses is actually a list of ip addresses and ranges that are allowed. I presume you mean allowed_domains which is a list of domains that are permited?
Nope I mean "allowed_addresses". The "dst" ACL type [destinaion IP]
does DNS lookup on the requested URL [destination domain] to find and
match its IPs against the ACL list of IPs.
In the majority of cases I can change this to use ip addresses if it will improve performance. The problem would come that in some cases I've allowed the top level domain because I want to allow all the sub domains also, mainly for applications that can't authenticate to get their updates. Is there a way round this or is the best practice to put the effort in and find the addresses for all the required subdomains as well?
"allowed_domains" is actually the better form, since Squid can test the
ACL quickly without locating external data in DNS. If you can convert
allowed_addresses IP entries into allowed_domains name entries that
would be a little faster.
http_access deny inetrestrictgroup denied_domains
Swap those ACLs order to:
denied_domains inetrestrictgroup
That will reduce the helper lookup load on the !denied_domains cases a
bit.
I thought it might be worth mentioning that denied_domains is actually empty. I put it in for future use. But I have swapped these anyhow.
Then it can never match and even better to have it ordered first and
save testing the whole line.
http_access allow inetrestrictgroup
http_access allow inetallowgroup
http_access deny all
cache_mem 500 MB
maximum_object_size_in_memory 1 MB
cache_dir ufs c:/squid/var/cache 7000 16 512
access_log C:\squid\var\logs\access.log squid.
My cache log would seem to suggest that it's related to the ntlm
helper processes. Eg
/mswin_check_lm_group.exe Can't find DC for local domain 'asd'
Your DC has disappeared, or some client is sending in a login domain
which is not yours.
Nothing the helpers can do about either case but reject. It does so,
after the horribly long lag it took to discover that problem.
It might be possible that there is a network issue but my dc is monitored by nagios and hasn't registered any issues with the checks I have in place. I'm going to see if I can audit the failed requests, which I would have hoped happened by default in active directory but apparently not.
The problem could be in DNS entries pointing Squid to the DC machine, in
the OS somewhere loosing records linking "asd" to the DC, or in packet
problems connecting to the DC. "Can't find" hints to me that it is one
of the earlier two problems, that Squid helper is unable to find a DC
machine to try connecting to.
Amos