>> I've sniffed a bit of the traffic and saw that Squid actually tries to
>> "cwd" through the whole path, one layer at a time, while all others
>> directly "cwd" into the target directory with one request.
> See RFC1738 "3.2.2. FTP url-path" for why...
>If you want to CWD directly into the diretory the /:es up to the last
>one before the file name needs to be URL-encoded indicating a single
>directory name with embedded / characters..
Well, that does of course not work with the IE (replaces the %2F before sending), which is unfortunately our companies only allowed one.
>> So, is that a bug, or is it seen as a special feature? As far as I know,
>> the rfc isn't very specific, but as all others do it the other way ...
>As you can see above the RFC is very specific on this. But most others
>do not care about the RFC on ftp:// URL format or interpretation, which
>is a problem...
Seems Squid is the only one caring for that. What about a possibility like with the underline containing domains? Meaning a config or compile time option to change the behaviour?
I am already fighting without much success to keep Squid around here, but that might very well be the last nail to its coffin. In the next weeks over 50% of our Squids will be replaced, as direct result of the feature freeze which kept for example ICAP out of the main branch. You must understand that a feature freeze of over 2 years and a non existing date for 3.0 is a real killer. Just to clearify that, I was originally hired to work solely on the Squid code, making it more stable/faster and feature complete. Because of the freeze I was not allowed to do anything for the community and I must say I am heavily frustrated. So, instead of pushing opensource with it, we pump half a million € in new hardware appliances (BlueCoats).
I doubt that too many other companies will keep up with that either.
Sorry for the rant,
Oliver Baumgaertel
Received on Thu Mar 23 2006 - 01:07:05 MST
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