other way, might be to run authentication, and change their password -
adding a datestamp to the end of it, when the program determines that they
have used too much... then at the end of the week/month remove the
datestamp... or a bunch of ***'s at the end would work, something not
likely to be in the password, just to make it eaiser...
Andrew Lowe
andrew@pccentre.com.au
The South Coast Professional Computing Centre
+ Hislora Website Hosting & Design
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Ph: 02 4423 7771
Fax: 02 4423 7772
email: sales@pccentre.com.au
On Tue, 13 Jun 2000, Martin Brooks wrote:
> At 10:48 13/06/00 +0800, Li Ni wrote:
> >But how can I forbid the user who has reach his max quota to use
> >squid proxy server any more?
>
> Short of disabling his/her account and/or writing specific blocking ACLs
> there is no easy way to do this. If someone is spending too much time
> surfing, get your HR department to LART them. :)
>
>
> Martin A. Brooks
> ------------------------------------
> The package said Windows NT 4 or better - I installed Linux.
>
Received on Tue Jun 13 2000 - 00:41:13 MDT
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