Squid is a caching proxy for the Web supporting HTTP, HTTPS, FTP, and more. It reduces bandwidth and improves response times by caching and reusing frequently-requested web pages. Squid has extensive access controls and makes a great server accelerator. It runs on most available operating systems, including Windows and is licensed under the GNU GPL. http://www.squid-cache.org
This project provides scripts needed to recompile modern version of Squid on Ubuntu 22.04 LTS with support for HTTPS filtering and SSL inspection. Results of the compilation are available in the public repos hosted by diladele.com.
If you are installing Squid 6.10 for the first time from diladele.com repo, run the following commands:
# add diladele apt key
wget -qO - https://packages.diladele.com/diladele_pub.asc | sudo apt-key add -
# add new repo
echo "deb https://squid610.diladele.com/ubuntu/ jammy main" \
> /etc/apt/sources.list.d/squid610.diladele.com.list
# and install
apt-get update && apt-get install -y \
squid-common \
squid-openssl \
squidclient \
libecap3 libecap3-dev
If you have installed previous versions of Squid 6 from this repo then run "sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade". Also check that your current squid.conf file from previous version is not overwritten.
Older versions of Squid can also be installed from old versions of diladele.com repo using the following commands:
# add diladele apt key
wget -qO - https://packages.diladele.com/diladele_pub.asc | sudo apt-key add -
# add new repo
echo "deb https://squid57.diladele.com/ubuntu/ focal main" \
> /etc/apt/sources.list.d/squid57.diladele.com.list
# and install
apt-get update && apt-get install -y \
squid-common \
squid-openssl \
squidclient \
libecap3 libecap3-dev
If you have installed previous versions of Squid 5 from this repo then run "sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade". Also check that your current squid.conf file from previous version is not overwritten.
In case you need a high quality HTTP(S) web filtering/secure web gateway solution, consider taking a look at Web Safety.
Web Safety for Squid Proxy is an ICAP web filtering server/secure web gateway that integrates with Squid proxy server and provides rich content and web filtering functionality to sanitize Internet traffic passing into an internal home/enterprise network. It may be used to block illegal or potentially malicious file downloads, remove annoying advertisements, check downloaded files for viruses, prevent access to various categories of web sites and block resources with adult/explicit content.
Web Safety also has a user friendly Admin UI that you can use to manage your Squid proxy from the browser.
To try it out, have a look at Virtual Appliance ESXi/Hyper-v, deploy in Microsoft Azure or deploy in Amazon AWS
If your need a native Windows only web filtering solution consider taking a look at Web Filtering Proxy. Web Filtering Proxy for Microsoft Windows is a new implementation of web filtering proxy/secure web gateway running natively on Microsoft Windows. It can be easily integrated with Microsoft Active Directory, work as Secure Web Proxy, decrypt HTTPS traffic, filter HTTP requests and responses and inspect contents of HTML pages.
The proxy is installed natively on Microsoft Windows and can be managed by any administrator using Microsoft Management Console. The Admin Guide is available online.
In case full featured HTTPS decryption and web filtering is not possible in your network, consider using our lightweight DNS filtering solution https://www.diladele.com/dnssafety/. Dns Safety filter is a DNS forwarding server (like dnsmasq, pi-hole) with extensive filtering capabilities. It allows administrator to filter access to domain names by categories, easily block access to user specified domains and provides different access policies for different groups of machines in your network.
Dns Safety is supposed to be deployed as primary DNS server in your local network and can forward DNS requests to your ISP's DNS server, Google Public DNS, OpenDNS and other third party DNS providers. Internal DNS requests can be forwarded to internal DNS servers (for example Active Directory domain controllers).
The filter can be easily managed from full featured Web UI deployed on Debian 10 or Ubuntu 18. Other operating systems might be supported too in the near future.
All questions/comments and suggestions are welcome at [email protected] or in squid mailing list http://www.squid-cache.org/Support/mailing-lists.html. Squid documentation can be found at http://www.squid-cache.org
We admire people working on Squid Cache server, who spend their time free of charge and deliver great product to all of us.