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About:
Squid is a high performance Web proxy cache that can be arranged hierarchically for an improvement in response times and a reduction in bandwith usage. Squid runs on all popular Unix and Windows platforms.
Author:
Squid Hackers <info |at| squid |dash| cache |dot| org>
[contact developer]
Homepage:
http://www.squid-cache.org/
Tar/GZ:
http://www.squid-cache.org/[..]ersions/v2/2.6/squid-2.6.STABLE19.tar.gz
Tar/BZ2:
http://www.squid-cache.org/[..]rsions/v2/2.6/squid-2.6.STABLE19.tar.bz2
Changelog:
http://www.squid-cache.org/Versions/v2/2.6/changesets/
Trove categories:
[change]
Dependencies:
[change]
No dependencies filed
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» Rating:
8.54/10.00
(Rank 267)
» Vitality: 0.32% (Rank 595)
» Popularity: 15.93% (Rank 85)

(click to enlarge graphs)
Record hits: 133,313
URL hits: 117,078
Subscribers: 384
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Branches
Articles referencing this project
- Red Hat: Updated squid packages fix a security issue
by Patrick Lenz
,
in Security
Sun, Apr 13th 2008 15:05
- Debian: New squid packages fix denial of service
by Patrick Lenz
,
in Security
Sun, Feb 10th 2008 14:26
- Red Hat: Updated squid packages fix a security issue
by Patrick Lenz
,
in Security
Thu, Dec 27th 2007 14:29
- Red Hat: An updated squid package fixes a security vulnerability
by Patrick Lenz
,
in Security
Sun, Apr 8th 2007 01:56
- Red Hat: Updated squid package fixes a security vulnerability
by Patrick Lenz
,
in Security
Tue, Mar 7th 2006 08:53
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Comments
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Great software!
by Chris Horry - Mar 16th 2006 06:30:49
We have been using Squid for 5 years as a transparent proxy, it regularly
saves us about 10-25% of bandwidth. It's also a quick and easy solution to
stop those pesky users who insist on using IE!
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you want this
by Chouser - Feb 8th 2000 15:04:13
If you use a web browser, you want this. Its cacheing is noticably better
than Netscape's. It seems to do a good job of continuing downloads that
were interrupted.
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Squid
by kapella - May 20th 1999 08:16:37
We've been using Squid in a computer lab environment (3 labs
actually, all going through the same proxy server). We
generally see about 10-15% bandwidth savings, but a 3 to 4x
speed improvement between hits and misses.
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Squid
by lloydp - Feb 25th 2003 03:22:44
Here at work we run squid as a transparent proxy, caching everything but
.html cgi php asp etc etc etc - we notice a huge increase in speed.
With the introduction of NTDS authentication, squid far out ranks any
other proxy server.
We run squid on a P3-800 with 2gb of ram - We don't bother caching to disk
just directly to memory. Makes for super fast browsing and around 10% saved
bandwidth.
If you decide to use this i would recommend looking at something called
SquidGuard. These two combined produce a fantastic open source service.
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