On 6/8/07, Chris Robertson <crobertson@gci.net> wrote:
> Santiago Del Castillo wrote:
> >
> > On 6/8/07, squid3@treenet.co.nz <squid3@treenet.co.nz> wrote:
> >> > That didn't work well
> >> >
> >> > I used \([1-9]|[1-4][0-9]|50\) and saw:
> >> >
> >> > 2007/06/07 18:23:10| Failed to select source for
> >> > 'http://www2.xxxxxx.com/2/AF/AA/Sol/last_photo.jpg'
> >> > 2007/06/07 18:23:10| always_direct = 0
> >> > 2007/06/07 18:23:10| never_direct = 0
> >> > 2007/06/07 18:23:10| timedout = 0
> >> >
> >> > The pattern I found is that it just fails with units ([1-9]) the rest
> >> > works OK. What it could be?
> >> >
> >> > Tried to use [123456789] and it also fails.
> >> >
> >> > Cheers,
> >> > Santiago
> >> >
> >>
> >> Um, maybe something to do with branches in the match
> >> give this a test and see if it works better
> >>
> >> \([1-4]\([0-9]\)?|50|[5-9]\)
> >>
> >> Amos
> > Didn't work either :(
>
> Please don't post your replies at the top of the message. It makes the
> archives hard to read.
>
> To be perfectly clear, can you repost your squid.conf (minus comments
> and blank lines*)? Perhaps there is a different configuration issue at
> play.
>
>
> * From a Unix-like host the following line (with the proper path to your
> squid.conf) will manage this:
>
> grep -v "^#" /path/to/squid.conf | sed -e '/^$/d'
>
Hi chris
didn't know that about posting on top of the message. Sorry about that!
I fixed the problem by usen visual REGEXP to make the regexp and I
deleted the backslashes from the parentheses... here's what I got and
works great:
acl flodeo dstdom_regex ^www(6|7|8|9|[1234][0123456789]?|50?)\.example\.com$
Thank you all for the help!!
Santiago
Received on Mon Jun 11 2007 - 06:58:06 MDT
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