On Monday 25 November 2013 at 15:50, alamb200 wrote: > I want to set in place a device to run squid proxy so that I can the reduce > bandwidth usage So, you want Squid to be configured as a caching proxy - that's not difficult, and there are lots of tutorials and guides around on the net to help with this. > and also so i can see what users are doing on the web. Assuming that it is legal to do this, wherever you are, then you want a logfile analysis tool - again there are several around, but you could start with http://squidalyser.sourceforge.net/ > So far I have tried a Windows solution but could not sort out the syslog > bit and a linux solution which I struggled with and had to give up. I would always recommend a Linux-based solution for Squid (and indeed for networked services in general), so it would be helpful if you could tell us: - which version (distribution) of Linux did you try? - which guidelines did you follow to get Squid working? - which aspects did you find yourself struggling with? - what didn't work satisfactorily, leading you to give up? What you're looking for is a relatively simple Squid setup, so hopefully it shoudn't be too hard to identify what problem you had, and people here can almost certainyl help you to solve it. Regards, -- "There has always been an underlying argument that we should open up our source code more broadly. The fact is that we are learning from open source and we are opening our code more broadly through Shared Source. Is there value to providing source code? The answer is unequivocally yes." - Jason Matusow, head of Microsoft's Shared Source Program, in response to leaks of Windows source code on the Internet. Please reply to the list; please don't CC me.