> From: Shaun Mumford [SMTP:smumford@internet.co.zw]
>
> The squid version was installed by my ISP, probably because of support and
> stability reasons.
>
I think inertia is more likely; it has no support at all.
> I know it's not a firewall, but Messenger requires a setting to specify a
> proxy
>
I imagine this setting is not required.
> and then a SOCKS setting. I have tried leaving out the proxy which should
> work
>
> with a transparant proxy server which I assume squid is, but the help says
>
Squid can act as a transparent proxy for HTTP only, and
only with support from the routers; it is not advisable to
run *any* transparent proxy unless you understand the liberties
that are being taken with TCP/IP. Some protocols are even more
difficult to proxy transparently.
> 'make sure that outgoing TCP Port 1863 is open.' and I am not sure how to
> do that. You then specify no proxy in use.
>
This could mean:
- open the port on the real firewall;
- permit HTTP requests to http://domain:1863/...
- permit HTTP CONNECT method usage to port 1863.
The first is completely outside of squid's control. The
second requires an adjustment to safe_ports in the current
version's configuration file and the latter requires an
adjustment to the secure/SSL ports.
The proxy referenced may well be a Messenger proxy, not an
HTTP one.
You need to find out this information from the Messenger people.
Received on Mon Dec 13 1999 - 10:14:03 MST
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