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
On 11/14/07, Simon Jolle urandomdev@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@swissjabber.org
hi...Simon,
I thinks you can get your answer at http://www.google.com/support/analytics/ just have a search there ....
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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)
On 11/14/07, Simon Jolle sjolle urandomdev@gmail.com wrote:
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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
- --
Simon ... i just searched at the google support page ... this is what they say
http://www.google.com/analytics/urchin_software.html
If you have content behind a security firewall or on an intranet or internal network that prevents you from using the Google Analytics service, Urchin 5 software is for you.