Re: [squid-users] How to allow traffic other than http

From: Colin Campbell <sgcccdc@dont-contact.us>
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 2002 08:38:32 +1000 (EST)

Hi,

On Thu, 14 Nov 2002, [koi8-r] Илья Шипицин wrote:

> Salut, Colin Campbell !
>
> On Wed, 13 Nov 2002, Colin Campbell wrote:
>
> > On Tue, 12 Nov 2002, Glen Spidal wrote:
> >
> > > I have servers set up as diagramed below. Proxied web traffic work fine.
> > > Email fails.
> > > I can send mail from the Linux box via Pine. Email server is at external
> > > ISP.
> >
> > Squid is an HTTP proxy. Either run an MTA (sendmail, postfix, exim, qmail,
> > ....) on the squid server or let the wintel clients talk to the ISP's mail
> > server by routing (and natting?) through the squid server.
>
> not only. squid is also https-proxy, it understands "CONNECT" method.
> If you don't know how to make use of CONNECT to implement those things
> like SMTP, IMAP, IRC, POP3, You'd better be keeping silence.
> It's no good to say "it's impossible for sure". If you don't know
> just "I don't know". And even better, don't say anything.

So, squid understands "CONNECT". Everyone, even me, and obviously you,
understands that, but as you, yourself point out in a later email, it's
totally useless to an email client. You have to run something else. Squid,
on its own is no use for email.

So, Glen's sensible options are:

        - run an MTA
        - run a SOCKS daemon
        - allow clients to talk SMTP to internet
        - run an SMTP "proxy" (eg smap from fwtk)

Oh yeah then he could also

        - run a proxy that mail clients talk to and have it talk to squid
        and use the CONNECT method

I know which way I'd go.

Colin

--
Colin Campbell
Unix Support/Postmaster/Hostmaster
CITEC
+61 7 3227 6334
Received on Thu Nov 21 2002 - 10:38:19 MST

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