Last changed
Get notified of upcoming product changes, critical vulnerability notifications and patches and more.
Sign InSquid Proxy is an open-source, high-performance, and highly configurable caching and forwarding web proxy. It is widely used for speeding up web servers by caching web, DNS, and other computer network lookups for a group of people sharing network resources, and for aiding security by filtering traffic.
The image is available on cgr.dev
:
Squid Proxy is compatible with a wide range of operating systems including Linux, *BSDs, macOS, and Windows. It supports HTTP, HTTPS, FTP, and more. For detailed compatibility information, refer to the specific version documentation.
This image provides a high-performance Squid proxy server suitable for a wide range of caching and forwarding requirements. It is a drop-in replacement for traditional Squid proxy images but is enhanced for security and minimized to reduce its attack surface. Ideal for both development and production environments where a proxy server is required.
Note: We are running this image as non-root user called squid
by default for more security.
To run the squid-proxy container with default settings:
You will get a 403 response on this very likely, because of ACL on the default /etc/squid.conf
. Access Control Lists (ACLs) in squid.conf
are a crucial part of Squid's configuration. They allow you to define rules that grant or deny access to internet resources based on various criteria such as source IP, destination IP, URLs, protocols, and more.
Log may not be visible with default configuration, you can set it using the below custom configuration.
Add the following lines to the 'squid.conf' to redirect the logs to the '/dev/stdout':
For custom configurations, mount your squid.conf file into the container:
For working in Kubernetes, you can also run a parallel container in a pod containing squid container. This container will tail these (/var/log/squid/{cache,access}.log or any other) logs on its stdout.
For more detailed instructions and advanced configurations, refer to the Squid Official Documentation.
Chainguard Images contain software packages that are direct or transitive dependencies. The following licenses were found in the "latest" version of this image:
Apache-2.0
BSD-3-Clause
GCC-exception-3.1
GPL-2.0-only
GPL-2.0-or-later
GPL-3.0-or-later
LGPL-2.0-or-later
For a complete list of licenses, please refer to this Image's SBOM.
Software license agreementThis is a FIPS validated image for FedRAMP compliance.
This image is STIG hardened and scanned against the DISA General Purpose Operating System SRG with reports available.
Learn more about STIGsGet started with STIGs