And what if i dont need/care about the last modified ?
In my point of view, if once the file was fully retrieved from the site, it
should be in the cache.
Or maybe a configuration of 'x' hours that it will be in the cache.
Is is possible to configure squid to behave like that ?
Thanks.
-----Original Message-----
From: Dave J Woolley [mailto:DJW@bts.co.uk]
Sent: Thursday, August 26, 1999 2:52 PM
To: squid-users@ircache.net
Subject: RE: "Squid" failed to cache from FTP sites that does not
support RESUME
> I think so. I _have_ seen this sort of behaviour before. I can think of
> three possible causes:
>
I still think that a directory listing format that it
can't parse is a real possibility; although I think there
are still some Unix ftpd's that don't support the
REST <byte-offset> hack, you are more likely to find
them on non-Unix systems, either because the system doesn't
have the simple Unix model of file structures (VMS?, IBM
mainframes) or because the feature was missed out in an
attempt to get to market quickly.
Unless it can parse the directory listing, it can't
get a useable last modified date.
Received on Thu Aug 26 1999 - 10:06:55 MDT
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