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Re: Transparent Proxy with https

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Henrik Nordstrom wrote:
On tor, 2007-09-27 at 14:26 -0400, fname lname wrote:
Can squid do transparent proxy with https requests yet or is there an
work around?

Why do you want to transparently proxy https?

Regards
Henrik
while I don't pretend to know the OP's situation, in ours, it could definitely be useful.

There are quite a few still-in-use versions of Java the fail to adequately detect that a proxy is to be used when the browser simply has "automatically detect proxy settings". The transparent proxy is useful for catching all the little applets that ignore this browser setting.
There are also quite a few SSL-based applets that ignore this as well.

A workaround would be to hardcode the proxy setting in every desktop but this has other drawbacks in our environment. We just finished cleaning up after a bunch of hardcoded proxy settings done by various past users, "sys-admins" and a few other proxy efforts. The attitude of the IT head now is to push for as little client-side configuration as possible for Java and browsers in the hopes of avoiding a sea of proxy settings, all different.

At the moment, we have a growing firewall ruleset of authorized https destinations and I would like to keep this from growing too large since many of sites at the other end of these SSL connections also do source address filtering and the external IP addresses of the proxies are different than the external IP addresses that our workstations get NATed to when entering the Internet. Of course, not all of this is documented which makes any external IP address change a lot of fun. Also, the group that manages firewall configs is separate from the group that manages the proxy configs.

Personally, I think that our entire network is a shining example of the road to hell being paved with good intentions, but it does work for us and has proven very robust over the years.

So being able to handle transparent proxying of https would be a definite plus for us, at the very least in allowing all "web" traffic to be managed and controlled by the same group.

Cheers,

/Jason

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