<
World-Wide Web> A
proxy server for
HTTP requests.
Typically an HTTP
proxy or "web
proxy" accepts HTTP requests
containing
URLs with a special prefix. The
proxy removes
the prefix and looks for the resulting URL in its local
cache (if it is a caching
proxy). If found, it returns the
document immediately, otherwise it fetches it from the remote
server, saves a copy in its cache and returns it to the
requester. The cache will usually have an expiry
algorithm
which flushes documents according to their age, size and
access history.
The purpose is to reduce the amount of data flowing over the
proxy's Internet connection and to speed up clients' access to
frequently requested pages, e.g. at an
ISP or on a large
company's
firewall. The
proxy may also reject requests
where the URL or content matches certain conditions.
The
Apache HTTP server can be configured to act as a
proxy
server. Another popular software
proxy is
Squid.
(2008-07-01)