Internet Express for Tru64 UNIX Version 6.10 Administration Guide (5900-1418, March 2011)

Configuring the Dante SOCKS Server
You configure the Dante SOCKS Server by editing the /etc/sockd.conf configuration file. This
file controls both access controls and logging and is divided into two parts, server settings and
rules.
To use the Dante SOCKS Server, you must specify valid information in the method, client
pass, and pass fields in /etc/sockd.conf. For example, to allow all users to connect without
authentication, you could specify:
method: none
To allow any connections from area 16 to any other address in area 16, you could specify:
client pass {
from: 16.0.0.0/255.0.0.0 port 1-65535 to: 0.0.0.0/0
}
pass {
from: 16.0.0.0/255.0.0.0 to:
16.0.0.0/255.0.0.0
log: connect error
}
Note:
These code examples are for illustration only. Your actual code would be much more restrictive.
For more information, see the sockd.conf(5) reference page.
The configuration file for the SOCKS client library, /etc/socks.conf, allows control over logging
and server selection. It is divided into two parts, miscellaneous settings and routes. See the
socks.conf(5) reference page for complete information.
Accessing Dante SOCKS Information
Documentation for the Dante SOCKS Server is available in the /usr/internet/docs/dante/
directory.
Configuration file examples can be found in /usr/internet/docs/dante/example.
Additional information about the Dante SOCKS Server can be found at the following Web site:
http://www.inet.no/dante
Squid Proxy/Caching Server Administration
Squid is a high-performance, proxy/caching server for clients that support FTP, Gopher, and HTTP
requests. Because the caching software never needs to fork (or copy) itself (except for FTP), it is
faster than most proxy servers. Squid has the following features:
Is implemented with nonblocking I/O
Caches metadata and hot objects in RAM
Supports nonblocking Domain Name System (DNS) lookups
Implements negative caching of both objects and DNS lookups
Can arrange caches hierarchically, which improves response time and reduces bandwidth
consumption
In Internet Express, the Squid subset consists of:
Squid and its associated programs.
A report-generating tool called Calamaris. Calamaris generates reports by parsing Squid log
files.
Squid is derived from the ARPA-funded Harvest project.
Squid Proxy/Caching Server Administration 191