[plug] List newbie asks dumb question - SQUID for home use?
David Buddrige
dbuddrige at hotmail.com
Thu Nov 12 10:59:04 WST 1998
SQUID is a Proxying program that also cache's... the reason I am using
it is:
a. RAM is plentiful on my intended proxy server (my 486) (SQUID cache's
as much data as possible in electonic RAM rather than purely being on
disk - hence increasing speed dramatically, but at the cost of high RAM
usage)
b. Since my wife usually goes to the same sites repeatedly (hotmail,
amazon, transperth and white-pages), it makes it faster for her if they
are cached locally rather than being downloaded fresh each time.
regards
David
>From: Tiwest JV <colinr at tiwest.com.au>
>To: "'plug at linux.org.au'" <plug at linux.org.au>
>Subject: [plug] List newbie asks dumb question - SQUID for home use?
>Date: Wed, 11 Nov 1998 17:46:05 +0800
>Reply-To: plug at linux.org.au
>
>Please excuse me (?flame me) if this issue has been covered before, but
I am puzzled as to why you would install SQUID for home use when there
is only one or perhaps two clients. Surely SQUID is primarily a caching
programme, not a proxy server (although perhaps it does "proxying" as
well).
>
>If there is only a small number of clients, wouldn't they prefer to get
"fresh" versions of the Web pages or files they are trying to access,
rather the same ones they got before? I know if I visit the same site
repeatedly it is because the site changes rapidly and I specifically
don't want a cached version.
>
>Perhaps (this is very likely) I have a fundamental misunderstanding
about the way SQUID operates...
>
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