On 25 February 2015 at 10:48, Yuri Voinov <yvoinov@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > 25.02.15 16:46, Greg пишет: > >> On 25 February 2015 at 03:30, Amos Jeffries <squid3@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>> On 2015-02-25 05:31, Greg wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> so, there's my proxy problem I couldn't crack, even after spending >>>>>> 2+ days tweaking-googling-debugging. :( >>>>>> >>>>>> The problem: my _new_ Squid installation (Ubuntu 14 LTS with Squid >>>>>> 3.3.8) won't cache most pages the old Squid does (old Fedora with >>>>>> Squid 3.1.15). >>>>> [...] >> >>> For the record this appears to be bug 3806 which was fixed in 3.3.12 just >>> over a year ago. 3.3.8 is just too old by ~4 months. >> [...] >> Now that I understand the problem I can think about a possible solution: >> - Try to convince the Ubuntu 14 LTS maintainers to merge the fixes ( >> http://bugs.squid-cache.org/attachment.cgi?id=2854&action=diff and >> http://bugs.squid-cache.org/attachment.cgi?id=2969&action=diff ). Not >> sure about my chances ;) > > Try it. They just men the same as we. > Got some fresh infos! The good news: Ubuntu acknowledges this as a bug important enough to merge it to their code. https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/squid3/+bug/1336742 The bad news: noone has stepped up so far to do the merging. Also, I was told their workflow is like they merge it to Ubuntu 15, then it's merged back to 14 - also, 15 has entered feature freeze so a "freeze exception" should be raised (which would likely be granted in this case, moar in https://wiki.ubuntu.com/FeatureFreeze ). I haven't programmed in C/C++ for a good while and don't have Squid programming experience anyway, also don't know the workflow, so I can't do it myself I'm afraid. It seems that what's needed is communication with Ubuntu maintainers, a merge against 15, maybe with some regression tests (?), a merge against 14 (or is it automerged? dunno), and basically pushing this all the way so the Ubuntu Server flagship version expected to be widely used for the next 5 years would have a supported Squid version that'd actually cache HTML-JS-CSS too. (Oh I wish!) Is there a good soul who'd be willing to do this now? Optionally I can offer a bit of a monetary compensation (yea that's cold hard cash) for you or the FLOSS project/charity of your choice, or that much of consultation/work for you in my area (web programming and startups), or some work on the Squid documentation (yes I'm looking at you debug_options). Best regards, Greg _______________________________________________ squid-users mailing list squid-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users