Hi Centos Users I would like to allow outgoing traffic to Google Analytics servers (destination port 80). I wish to do a iptables rule. How to whitelist all Google Analytics servers? cheers Simon -- XMPP: sjolle at swissjabber.org
On 11/14/07, Simon Jolle <urandomdev at gmail.com> wrote:> > Hi Centos Users > > I would like to allow outgoing traffic to Google Analytics servers > (destination port 80). I wish to do a iptables rule. How to whitelist > all Google Analytics servers? > > cheers > Simon > > -- > XMPP: sjolle at swissjabber.org >hi...Simon, I thinks you can get your answer at http://www.google.com/support/analytics/ just have a search there .... -- shibucv at itmission.org True greatness is measured by how much freedom you give to others, not by how much you can coerce others to do what you want. --Larry Wall -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20071114/fc635142/attachment.html>
Simon Jolle "sjolle"
2007-Nov-14 17:28 UTC
[CentOS] IP range of Google Analytics server farm
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On 11/14/2007 05:01 PM, Shibu C Varughese wrote:> hi...Simon,Hi Shibu> I thinks you can get your answer at http://www.google.com/support/analytics/ > just have a search there ....I didn't found my answer there. Can you point me to the right page? I wish to add an outgoing iptables rule that allows Google Analytics. cheers Simon - -- actually, I think Windows Vista has done more than virtually any OS release to promote the use of Linux (Slashdot Kommentar, 4. Oct 07) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.6 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFHOzAmEMN/lNE/wrwRArnLAJ9GOWsGeOlIyNvpGaWPQSwSxtDtDgCbB0cI 7ahyQKZZdQAVL9AAiZL2cCs=JimG -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----