* Robert Relyea:
>>> I've seen proposals for this kind of gateway back in the early 90's as
>>> a way of providing secure email access for browsers which did not
>>> support https:.
>>>
>>
>> IIRC, Netscape 3 or 4 had some kind of "extend trust to proxies" option.
>>
> Not when it comes to
Florian Weimer wrote:
> * Robert Relyea:
>
>
>>> Oh, how unfortunate. Is it possible to disable all certificate checks?
>>>
>
>
>> So the question naturally arises: "why do you want this?".
>>
>
> I want to get rid of the HTTPS confirmation dialogs for testing
> automation purpos
* Robert Relyea:
>> Oh, how unfortunate. Is it possible to disable all certificate checks?
> So the question naturally arises: "why do you want this?".
I want to get rid of the HTTPS confirmation dialogs for testing
automation purposes, preferably without patching the source code. (The
latter
Nelson Bolyard wrote:
Robert Relyea wrote:
NOTE2: None of the proxy nelson mentioned will work if the user is using
SSL client auth.
I would say two things about that:
1) SSL client auth is generally controlled by the server, not the client.
correct. (of course).
2) There are re
Robert Relyea wrote:
> NOTE2: None of the proxy nelson mentioned will work if the user is using
> SSL client auth.
I would say two things about that:
1) SSL client auth is generally controlled by the server, not the client.
2) There are reverse proxy products that will do SSL client auth, IIRC.
Florian Weimer wrote:
* Nelson Bolyard:
Florian Weimer wrote, On 2007-12-07 02:54:
Is it possible to configure NSS (or, more precisely, Firefox) to
terminate SSL connections on the web proxy, so that the proxy receives
requests in the clear (and handles the certificate verification)?
* Nelson Bolyard:
> Florian Weimer wrote, On 2007-12-07 02:54:
>> Is it possible to configure NSS (or, more precisely, Firefox) to
>> terminate SSL connections on the web proxy, so that the proxy receives
>> requests in the clear (and handles the certificate verification)?
>
> I think, but am not
Bruce:
You may want to look at Paros. Its an open source proxy where you can
see the HTTPS traffic in plain text.
Best Regards.
Umesh.
- Original Message -
From: "Bruce Keats" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Monday, December 10, 2007 9:28 PM
Subject: Re: Terminatin
Bruce Keats wrote, On 2007-12-10 07:58:
> I was curious about the last scenario.
>
> 2. The Server Side Proxy (a.k.a., Reverse Proxy)
>
> Public Internet Intranet
> [browser]-[proxy]--[server]
> SSL plain
I was curious about the last scenario.
2. The Server Side Proxy (a.k.a., Reverse Proxy)
Public Internet Intranet
[browser]-[proxy]--[server]
SSL plain
In this case, does the proxy have to convert the URIs
Florian Weimer wrote, On 2007-12-07 02:54:
> Is it possible to configure NSS (or, more precisely, Firefox) to
> terminate SSL connections on the web proxy, so that the proxy receives
> requests in the clear (and handles the certificate verification)?
I think, but am not certain, that you're descri
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