Intel 1520 ユーザーズマニュアル

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Intel NetStructure Cache Appliance Administrator’s Guide
Pull the articles for specified groups:
For all groups designated as pull, the appliance will retrieve the articles 
automatically and periodically. Pulling groups is useful when you do not 
want to or cannot set up a full or partial feed.
Dynamically subscribe to specified groups:
The appliance can monitor the usage pattern for groups, and those for which 
the overview database is very frequently accessed can be treated as pullover 
groups. Likewise, those for which the articles are very frequently accessed 
can be treated as pull groups.
Take a partial feed (push) for specified groups:
For all groups designated as push, the appliance verifies that it has any 
requested articles and retrieves them from the parent server if they are not 
available locally. Partial feeds are useful for groups where some articles are 
always accessed, or for shifting article transport to a time of day when 
bandwidth is cheaper or more plentiful.
Take a full feed for some or all groups:
For all groups designated as feed, the appliance does not connect to the parent 
news server, and instead acts like a conventional news server. In particular, if 
a cache miss occurs, the appliance does not forward the request to a parent 
news server. 
You can use full feeds for very high volume groups in which most or all the 
articles are accessed. You can also use them for shifting article transport to a 
time when bandwidth is cheaper or more plentiful.
    Caution
Taking a full feed is not recommended as the server will have no way to 
retrieve an article if it is lost for any reason (e.g. such as lack of space or 
hardware failure).
For information on how to configure update frequencies by using the Manager 
UI, see the Configure: Protocols page (Using the Protocols page‚ on page 30). 
For information on how to control the appliance’s caching behavior for specific 
news groups from the command-line interface, see Configuring NNTP servers‚ 
on page 65
.
Configuring Access control
You can configure different types of user authentication based on source domain, 
host name, or IP range from the command-line interface. See Configuring NNTP 
access‚ on page 69
 for more information.