I am using webmin interface to maintain my linux box. There is an option
under squid to re-initialize the cache.
And you can always tell squid to never cache some of the domains(like.
local domains) by going into squid configuration file. I don't remember
the name of the file. If you can not find it, mail me I can get it to you.
And, I guess you can go to your squid cache folder, delete everything
underneath it and restart squid(I remember doing this some time back,
before my webmin).
Cherrs!
Sundar
charlie bullen wrote:
> Sorry, I sent this from the wrong account
>
>
>
> Charlie
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> *From:*charlie bullen <mailto:charlie@swtravel.com>
>
> *To:*plug-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us
> <mailto:plug-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us>
>
> *Sent:* Tuesday, June 19, 2001 1:11 PM
>
> *Subject:* squid
>
> I am working on some web pages and am having some odd problems. The
> pages are hosted on a server running Redhat 7.0 and Apache, not sure
> what version. I FTP modifications to the server but the changes didn't
> seem to register since when I tried to view the pages locally I could
> only see the old page. I have had someone outside of our lan view the
> pages and they come up properly. Also I have telneted into the server
> itself and using lynx, viewed the page and it comes up properly then,
> no graphics of course.
>
>
>
> We are using squid, running on a Gateway microserver, which is
> actually a cobalt qube, running a modified version of Redhat 6.2, as a
> proxy server for our lan and I think that it may be storing the old
> pages in a cache and serving these cached pages to the lan instead of
> the new revsions. Does this make sense? How can I find out? If this is
> true, how can I get the cache to empty?
>
>
>
> Thanks
>
>
>
> Charlie
>