You CAN run squid on port 80!  You just can't run both squid AND your web
server on port 80.  Will squid do redirection?  Could you get it to redirect
queries intended for your local web server to another port and then run your
webserver on that other port?
OR
you could assign another IP address to your
webserver on the same interface.

 On Sun, 24 Mar 2002 admin at support.lctn.k12.mn.us wrote:
> The server is RedHAt 7.1. I am running the local www domain on port 80. It
> is using Iptables, but allows some basics, including port 80. On the
> surface it looks like I can't run squid on 80, since my initial post
> describes my woes. As mentioned, if I move squid back to port 3128, and
> leave the website on port 80, everything works great. The workstations
> (lots), have been hard set to run on 10.100.100.130:80. On IE, I could just
> do a regedit in my login script, but many have Netscape. So I'm guessing
> everyone agrees, I have no choice but to change the port on each
> workstation, or at least set each one to auto proxy???



-- 
Gerry Skerbitz
gsker at tcfreenet.org